Before and After the Wheel: Precolonial and Colonial States and Transportation in Mainland Southeast Asia and West Africa

Main author: Charney, Michael W.
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-22906
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description The present article seeks to demonstrate the important influence pre-colonial roads and overland transportation had on the emergence of modern transportation systems in modern Africa and Southeast Asia. To do so, it examines the pre-colonial and colonial transition and the relationship of the court and colonial administration respectively to changing transportation technologies and geographies of movement. It argues that certain pre-colonial attitudes regarding movement, transportation, and traffic had an important influence on emerging colonial transportation networks. The article examines central political attention to mobility, transport, and traffic (or not) and attention to the thinking about the act of governing them (or not) to reveal continuities attitudes that are invisible when looked at through the lens of technological and regime change alone. It is also suggested that these continuities provide one of a number of the inside stories of state formation and change from the pre-colonial to colonial eras in examples drawn from West Africa and Southeast Asia (including Sri Lanka) for the purpose of this paper. Ultimately, these continuities may help to partially explain other aspects of the directions these two examples took after independence.
format Journal Article
author Charney, Michael W.
author_facet Charney, Michael W.
authorStr Charney, Michael W.
author_letter Charney, Michael W.
title Before and After the Wheel: Precolonial and Colonial States and Transportation in Mainland Southeast Asia and West Africa
publisher Lund University
publishDate 2016
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/22906/