Colonial Mixed Blood

Colonial Mixed Blood
Author: Allan Russell Juriansz
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 435
Release: 2013
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 149171364X

COLONIAL MIXED BLOOD The navies built by the Arabs and King Solomon plied the oceans long ago. The Portuguese, Dutch, and British followed suit, and eventually the oceans were mastered. The colonial age came into being and brought with it increased movements of people and the mixing of genes. In Colonial Mixed Blood, author Allan Russell Juriansz, who was born in Sri Lanka, provides an account of this occurrence with reference to the Portuguese, Dutch, and British who colonized Sri Lanka for the period of the past five hundred years. The story begins in Riga, Latvia, in the late 1400s and centres on the Ondatjes and the Juriansz clan, their love story, their immersion in Christianity, and their struggles to survive the forces of colonialism and find happiness. A blend of history and fiction, Colonial Mixed Blood provides a background of the religious forces at work during this time in Europe and outlines the genealogy and life experiences of Juriansz’s family as part of the colonial activity of the Dutch East India Company in Sri Lanka. They inherited an adventurous spirit from their first Dutch ancestors, and this spirit inspired their diaspora. But it was one hundred and fifty years of intense British influence that transformed them into loyal British subjects.

The Burghers

The Burghers
Author: J. B. Müller
Publisher:
Total Pages: 394
Release: 2006
Genre: Burghers (Sri Lankan people)
ISBN:

Articles on the Burghers (Sri Lankan people).

The Jam Fruit Tree

The Jam Fruit Tree
Author: Carl Muller
Publisher: Penguin UK
Total Pages: 199
Release: 2000-10-14
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9351180255

Winner of the Gratiean Memorial Prize for the best work in English Literature by a Sri Lankan for 1993 Hilarious, affectionate, candid and moving, this is the story of the Burghers of Sri Lanka... Who are the Burghers? Descended from the Dutch, the Portuguese, the British and other foreigners who arrived in the island-nation of Sri Lanka (and 'mingled' with the local inhabitants), the Burghers often stand out because of their curiously mixed features—grey eyes in an otherwise Dravid face, for instance.... A handsome and guileless people, the Burghers have always lived it up, forever willing to 'put a party'. Carl Muller, a Burgher himself, writes in this quasi-fictional, engaging biography of the lives of his people; they emerge, at the end of his story, as a race of fun-loving, hardy people, much like the jam fruit tree which simply refuses to be contained or destroyed.

Rodin

Rodin
Author: Ruth Butler
Publisher: Yale University Press
Total Pages: 612
Release: 1993-01-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780300064988

Biografi om den franske billedhugger, der levede 1840-1917

Art and the Brain

Art and the Brain
Author: Joseph Goguen
Publisher: Imprint Academic
Total Pages: 214
Release: 1999
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780907845454

Science of art - commentary on Ramachandran and Hirstein - Art and the Brain - The Emergence of Art and Language in the Human Brain - Cave Art, autism, and the evolution of the human mind - On aesthetic perception

Embracing the Other

Embracing the Other
Author: Dunja M. Mohr
Publisher: Rodopi
Total Pages: 341
Release: 2008
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9042023775

In the wake of addressing multiculturalism, transculturalism, racism, and ethnicity, the issue of xenophobia and xenophilia has been somewhat marginalized. The present collection seeks, from a variety of angles, to investigate the relations between Self and Other in the New Literatures in English. How do we register differences and what does an embrace signify for both Self and Other? The contributors deal with a variety of topics, ranging from theoretical reflections on xenophobia, its exploration in terms of intertextuality and New Zealand/Maori historiography, to analyses of migrant and border narratives, and issues of transitionality, authenticity, and racism in Canada and South Africa. Others negotiate identity and alterity in Nigerian, Malaysian, Australian, Indian, Canadian, and Caribbean texts, or reflect on diaspora and orientalism in Australian–Asian and West Indian contexts.