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Yale University Press

Race and the Scottish Enlightenment: A Colonial History, 1750-1820

Race and the Scottish Enlightenment: A Colonial History, 1750-1820

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How colonialism shaped the Scottish Enlightenment's conception of race and humanity

In the decades after 1750, an increasing number of former medical students from the University of Edinburgh construed humanity as a subject of both intellectual curiosity and colonial interest. They drew on a shared educational background, blending medicine with natural history and moral philosophy, in a range of encounters with non-European and Indigenous peoples across the globe whom they began to classify as races. Focusing on a surprising number of these understudied students, this book reveals the gradual predominance of race in Scottish Enlightenment thought.

Teaching provided a toolbox of concepts and theories for students who went on to careers as military and naval surgeons, colonial administrators, and natural historians. While some, such as Mungo Park--who traveled in Africa--are well known, many others such as the long-term residents in the Russian Empire, Matthew Guthrie and his wife, Maria Guthrie, or the Caribbean botanist Alexander Anderson are less remembered. Among this group were those such as the Pacific traveler Archibald Menzies and the circumnavigator of Australia, Robert Brown, who are known primarily as botanists rather than as ethnographers. Together they formed a global network of colonial travelers and natural historians sharing a common educational background and a growing interest in race.

Author: Linda Andersson Burnett,Bruce Buchan
Binding Type: Hardcover
Publisher: Yale University Press
Published: 08/19/2025
Series: The Lewis Walpole Eighteenth-Century Culture and History
Pages: 304
Weight: 1.15lbs
Size: 8.90h x 6.10w x 1.20d
ISBN: 9780300264388
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