Agency through Otherness: Portraits of Performers in Circus Route Books, 1875-1925

McClintock, Anne. Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest

Anne McClintock explains the Victorian era viewpoint that positioned people from non-Western cultures as inherently other and operating outside modern society in the following way: “Since indigenous peoples are not supposed to be spatially there—for the lands are “empty”—they are symbolically displaced onto what I call anachronistic space… According to the trope, colonized people … do not inhabit history proper but exist in a permanently anterior time within the geographic space of the modern empire as anachronistic humans, atavistic, irrational, bereft of human agency—the living embodiment of the archaic “primitive.” Anne McClintock, Imperial Leather: Race, Gender, and Sexuality in the Colonial Contest (New York, NY: Routledge, 1995).


Pages cited: 30

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