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as Fryer points out, ‘racism was not confined to a handful of cranks. Virtually every sci-
entist and intellectual in nineteenth-century Britain took it for granted that only people
with white skin were capable of thinking and governing’ (1984: 169). In fact, it was
probably only after the Second World War that racism finally lost its scientific support.
In the nineteenth-century racism could even make colonial conquest appear as if
directed by God. According to Thomas Carlyle, writing in 1867, ‘The Almighty Maker
appointed him [“the Nigger”] to be a Servant’ (quoted in Fryer, 1984: 172). Sir Harry
Johnston (1899), who had worked as a colonial administrator in South Africa and
Uganda, claimed that ‘The negro in general is a born slave’, with the natural capacity
to ‘toil hard under the hot sun and in unhealthy climates of the torrid zone’ (173).
Even if the hot sun or the unhealthy climate proved too much, the white Europeans
should not overly concern themselves with possibilities of suffering and injustice.
Dr Robert Knox, for example, described by Philip Curtin as ‘one of the key figures in
the general Western . . . pseudo-scientific racism’ (1964: 377), was very reassuring on
this point: ‘What signify these dark races to us? . . . [T]he sooner they are put out of the
way the better. . . . Destined by the nature of their race, to run, like all other animals, a
certain limited course of existence, it matters little how their extinction is brought
about’ (quoted in Fryer, 1984: 175).
Knox is certainly extreme in his racism. A less extreme version, justifying imperial-
ism on grounds of a supposed civilising mission, was expressed by James Hunt.
Founder of the Anthropological Society of London in 1863, Hunt argued that although
‘the Negro is inferior intellectually to the European, [he or she] becomes more human-
ised when in his natural subordination to the European than under any other circum-
stances’ (177). In fact, as he makes clear, ‘the Negro race can only be humanised and
civilised by Europeans’ (ibid.). Colonial secretary Joseph Chamberlain (1895) offers a
wonderful summary of this argument: ‘I believe that the British race is the greatest of
governing races the world has ever seen. I say this not merely as an empty boast, but as
proved and shown by the success which we have had in administering vast dominions
...and I believe there are no limits accordingly to its future’ (183).
Orientalism
Edward Said (1985), in one of the founding texts of post-colonial theory, shows how
a Western discourse on the Orient – ‘Orientalism’ – has constructed a ‘knowledge’ of
the East and a body of ‘power–knowledge’ relations articulated in the interests of the
‘power’ of the West. According to Said, ‘The Orient was a European invention’ (1).
‘Orientalism’ is the term he uses to describe the relationship between Europe and the
Orient, in particular, the way ‘the Orient has helped to define Europe (or the West) as
its contrasting image, idea, personality, experience’ (1–2). He ‘also tries to show that
European culture gained in strength and identity by setting itself off against the Orient
as a sort of surrogate and even underground self’ (3).