Skip to main content
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

In Other Times: Apocalypse, Temporality, Spatiality in Eastern India

Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
SpaceTime of the Imperial
This chapter is in the book SpaceTime of the Imperial
© 2016 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2016 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. “… this smooth space of Empire … ” 1
  4. Reflecting on Narrative Othering through Imperial TimeSpaces
  5. Introduction. Reflecting on Narrative Othering through Imperial TimeSpaces 21
  6. Enchantments and Incitements: Modernity, Time/Space, Margins 25
  7. Imperiality, Deep Time, and Indigenous Landmark Epistemologies in North America 48
  8. In Other Times: Apocalypse, Temporality, Spatiality in Eastern India 71
  9. Gender in the Empire
  10. Introduction. Gender in the Empire 95
  11. “If I were King” – Photographic artifacts and the construction of imperial masculinities in the Philippine-American War (1899–1902) 100
  12. Beyond Blindness, Bias, and Marginalisation 132
  13. Europe, Spatiotemporal Orientation, and the Imperial
  14. Introduction. Europe, Spatiotemporal Orientation, and the Imperial 171
  15. Die neuzeitliche Narration „Europa“ und ihr imperialer Anspruch 174
  16. Alexander von Humboldt’s Interest in America: In the Service of Empire or of Humanity? 204
  17. Zum Pol 220
  18. God(s) in the Empire: Mapping Imperial Religion
  19. Introduction. Empire and Religion 247
  20. Early Christian Martyrology, Imperial Thirdspace and Mimicry 254
  21. Die Macht des Schicksals? 285
  22. Ästhetische Formationen der RaumZeit 302
  23. Cartographies of the Imperial Age
  24. Introduction. Spatiotemporalities of Cartographic Empire-Building 333
  25. The Spatial Anxieties of Everyday Colonial Rule and the History of Cartography: Connecting the Dots 338
  26. Mapping a Distant Empire: Bruno Hassenstein’s Atlas of Japan (1885/87) 367
  27. Void into Meaning: Geophysics and Imperial Cartography in the High Arctic 394
  28. Media Narratives on Königsberg/Kaliningrad: Spatiotemporalities of the Displaced
  29. Introduction. Temporal and Spatial Displacement: German and Russian Persons, Names and Cities in Königsberg/Kaliningrad 415
  30. Post-Imperial Narratives of Displacement in Germany around 1951 422
  31. Displacement and its Nationalist Totalitarian Compensations in Puschdorf/Pushkino 446
  32. Der Traum von Klein-Moskau im Westen 474
  33. About the authors 489
  34. Index of persons 497
  35. Index of places and spaces 502
Downloaded on 11.5.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110418750-005/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button