Academic literature on the topic 'Fashoda Crisis'

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Journal articles on the topic "Fashoda Crisis"

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Shapovalov, Mikhail S. "The History of One Telegram: Palestine, the Fashoda Incident, and Kaiser Wilhelm II." Herald of an archivist, no. 2 (2018): 443–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2073-0101-2018-2-443-454.

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The article studies historical sources (diplomatic notes, correspondence, telegrams of the employees of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs) and presents a content analysis and a systematization. Most documents are being introduced into scientific use for the first time. The information basis is formed by previously unpublished materials of the Political Archive from the Archive of the Foreign Policy of the Russian Empire. The article attempts to characterize the documentary sources found in the archival file ‘The Journey of Emperor Wilhelm to Palestine’ that are dedicated to the Fashoda incident. The validity of the hypotheses of relevance of microhistorical plots in objective evaluation of crucial historical events is verified by traditional methods of historical research: comparative historical analysis, chronological approach, retrospective and perspective methods. The method of historical reconstruction helps to narrate the episode of Emperor Nicholas II’s telegram to Kaiser Wilhelm II in the circumstances of the developing Fashoda crisis. The author takes into account the assessments found in Russian sources. A variety of official and unofficial documents allows to clarify and to correct existing ideas about the resolution of the Fashoda question in 1898. The article is the first to examine the history of the Fashoda crisis in the diplomatic correspondence between Nicholas II and Wilhelm II. The correspondence focuses on the role of Russian consul-general in Beirut K. N. Lishin. The author concludes that Lishin's excessive diligence and fear to harm his own career bolstered the diplomatic incident concerning the telegram and compounded the diplomatic situation around Fashoda. The archival file ‘The Journey of Emperor Wilhelm to Palestine’ yet again demonstrates a strong connection between the event and the policies of the great powers in the Middle East and Europe. To understand the history of international relations it is important to research not just the relevant topics and cases, but to study the whole complex of diplomatic sources of the period.
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Peterson, Susan. "How democracies differ: Public opinion, state structure, and the lessons of the Fashoda crisis." Security Studies 5, no. 1 (September 1995): 3–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09636419508429251.

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Guiffan, Jean. "L’anglophobie en France dans la culture savante et dans la culture populaire des années 1880 à la Seconde Guerre mondiale." Recherches anglaises et nord-américaines 39, no. 1 (2006): 133–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ranam.2006.1764.

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From the last two decades of the nineteenth century, when Great Britain and France were two rival colonising powers, to the end of the Second World War, anglophobia in France can be discerned in high and low cultures alike, although it differed in its modes of manifestation. If it was particularly virulent at the time of the Fashoda crisis and during the Boer war, it almost disappeared after the signature of the Entente Cordiale in April 1904. It reappeared after the First World War, because of the difficulties to settle the conflict, and in the thirties, especially in far-right groups. Under the Vichy regime, anglophobia is exploited for propaganda purposes as a way to support the government’s collaboration with Nazi Germany, but it did not have any actual influence over general opinion.
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Zaks, Sherry. "Relationships Among Rivals (RAR): A Framework for Analyzing Contending Hypotheses in Process Tracing." Political Analysis 25, no. 3 (July 2017): 344–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/pan.2017.12.

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Methodologists and substantive scholars alike agree that one of process tracing’s foremost contributions to qualitative research is its capacity to adjudicate among competing explanations of a phenomenon. Existing approaches, however, only provide explicit guidance on dealing with mutually exclusive explanations, which are exceedingly rare in social science research. I develop a tripartite solution to this problem. The Relationships among Rivals (RAR) framework (1) introduces a typology of relationships between alternative hypotheses, (2) develops specific guidelines for identifying which relationship is present between two hypotheses, and (3) maps out the varied implications for evidence collection and inference. I then integrate the RAR framework into each of the main process-tracing approaches and demonstrate how it affects the inferential process. Finally, I illustrate the purchase of the RAR framework by reanalyzing a seminal example of process-tracing research: Schultz’s (2001) analysis of the Fashoda Crisis. I show that the same evidence can yield new and sometimes contradictory inferences once scholars approach comparative hypothesis testing with this more nuanced framework.
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Demicheva, T. M. "A British Colonizer in Pages of ‘Le Petit Journal’ Newspaper." Nauchnyi dialog 13, no. 1 (January 30, 2024): 316–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2024-13-1-316-331.

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The article is dedicated to the study of the image of the “Other” colonizer, the British, who were rivals of France in the colonial race. The methodology proposed by Edward Said is used. For the first time in the history of the study of colonial empires, research is based on the construction and analysis of the image of the rival in colonial expansion, based on materials from the French press. One of the most popular newspapers of the Third Republic of the late 19th century, “Le Petit Journal”, served as material for the study. Notes devoted to British presence in India, the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882, the Fashoda Crisis, the Anglo-Boer Wars, the “Great Game”, influence in China, and others are considered. The concepts that formed the image of the “Other” colonizer for France are analyzed. The article describes the notions of “exploitation” and “cruelty of colonization”, the image of the “noble savage”, opposition “civilization — barbarism”, subjectivity, as well as personal qualities of the “Other” colonizer, such as British rejection of human rights and private property, which formed the construct of the “Other” colonizer. In conclusion, it is concluded that creating this image of the “Other” colonizer contributed to promoting France’s own ideas of colonization.
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Dumett, Raymond E. "A West African ‘Fashoda’: Expanding Trade, Colonial Rivalries and Insurrection in the Côte d'Ivoire/Gold Coast Borderlands: The Assikasso Crisis of 1897–98." Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 41, no. 5 (December 2013): 710–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2013.768093.

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ROBERTS, TREVOR WYN. "THE COMITÉ DE L'AFRIQUE FRANÇAISE, THE CHAD PLAN, AND THE ORIGINS OF FASHODA." Historical Journal, April 20, 2020, 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x20000023.

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Abstract The Comité de l'Afrique française, founded in 1890, is often regarded as the epitome of colonial nationalism. On closer examination, however, the Comité and its signature policy, the Chad plan, can be shown to have acted as instruments of choice for financial and commercial lobbies with particular interests in the Congo. The Chad plan and its successor and complement, the Upper Nile policy, were primarily intended to advance the interests of King Leopold and his French sympathizers. The unavoidable clash with British strategic and commercial interests in the region that ensued helped to unleash the forces of nationalism and led, ineluctably, to the Fashoda crisis and the conquest of Chad.
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"Continental crisis: The lagos plan of action and africa's future. Edited by David Fashole Luke and Timothy M. Shaw United Press of America and Dalhousie University Centre for African Studies, Latham, New York and London, 1984,230 pp." Public Administration and Development 6, no. 2 (April 1986): 205–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pad.4230060210.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Fashoda Crisis"

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Rhode, Benjamin. "'The living and the dying' : the rise of the United States and Anglo-French perceptions of power, 1898-1899." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e77338b1-b465-4d65-a6d3-d6d5d4f2314f.

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This thesis examines Anglo-French perceptions of power within the context of the rise of the United States of America. It uses several overlapping events falling within a moment at the end of the nineteenth century (1898-1899) - the Spanish-American War, the Dreyfus Affair and the Fashoda crisis - to explore various British and French actors' perceptions of national power, decline, and international competition. It draws heavily on diplomatic material, but its methodology is primarily cultural. It examines ways in which various cultural assumptions affected perceptions of power and global events. It takes a particular interest in the relationship between ideas about gender and dimensions of national power. It focuses on contemporary preoccupations and assumptions, whether spoken or unspoken, and argues that they could prove determinative. External realities were refracted into perceptions that in turn drove prescriptions and policy. The thesis juxtaposes perspectives from multiple states, thereby contextualizing or comparing British, French and occasionally American preoccupations with those of their transatlantic contemporaries. It draws upon archival sources which previously have been under-examined or approached from different perspectives and research priorities. Its exploration of the cultural dimensions of thought about national power and success is grounded in an awareness of the analysis and actions of certain diplomats and politicians involved in the more practical business of international affairs. Conversely, diplomatic and other records are situated within their cultural milieu, to better understand the context in which views about the international order were shaped. The thesis necessarily makes excursions into the history of emotions, since its actors' political analyses at times appear entangled and aligned with their emotional responses. The thesis therefore serves as an example of an international history that integrates diplomatic with cultural and emotional elements and demonstrates their mutual illumination.
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Hennlichová, Marcela. "Entente Cordiale: vývoj britsko-francouzských vztahů na cestě k Srdečné dohodě, 1898-1904." Doctoral thesis, 2019. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-393810.

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The mutual Anglo-French Relations at the turn of the 19th and 20th century were complicated. The Fashoda Crisis of 1898 placed both powers at the brink of war, which was finally turned away due to the withdrawal of the French Minister of Foreign Affairs Delcassé. With the arrival of a new French ambassador to London, Paul Cambon, the mutual Anglo-French Relations entered a new era, which eventually led to the signature of the Entente Cordiale six years later. The aim of this thesis was to analyse the genesis of the Anglo-French Relations from 1898 to 1904 and to discover which factors enabled both Powers to come to the general agreement. Through the signature of the Entente cordiale on April 8, 1904 France and Great Britain settled their colonial disputes and started a mutual cooperation, which inaugurated the formation of the blocks that clashed in the First World War in 1914.
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Books on the topic "Fashoda Crisis"

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Paul, Webster. Fachoda: La bataille pour le Nil. Paris: Editions du Félin, 2001.

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L, Lewis David. The race to Fashoda: Colonialism and African resistance. New York: Henry Holt, 1995.

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Smith, Hillas. The unknown Frenchman: The story of Marchand and Fashoda. Lewes: Book Guild, 2001.

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L, Lewis David. The race to Fashoda: European colonialism and African resistance in the scramble for Africa. New York: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1987.

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1864-1917, Baratier Albert, ed. La grande traversée de l'Afrique: 1896-1899 : Congo, Fachoda, Djibouti. [Paris]: LBM, 2010.

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Race to Fashoda. Henry Holt & Company, 2001.

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The Race to Fashoda. Grove Pr, 1988.

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L, Lewis David. The Race to Fashoda. Bloomsbury c, 1988.

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9

Fachoda et la mission Marchand: 1896-1899. [Paris]: Perrin, 2011.

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10

Fachoda: Guerre sur le Nil. [Paris]: Larousse, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Fashoda Crisis"

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Brooke-Smith, Robin. "The Fashoda Crisis." In The Scramble for Africa, 87–100. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-08995-6_7.

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"Chapter Four. The Fashoda Crisis And The Development Of A Modern Navy." In The Jeune École, 143–75. BRILL, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/ej.9789004157231.i-242.23.

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