Identity Conflicts can Violence Be Regulated
The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference
Publication
, Chapter
Ching, LTS
January 1, 2017
From all aspects, their brutality was truly detestable…. But I personally felt, somehow with virtuous persuasion and proper guidance, I would want to have them on the front line as part of the military under our command for future emergency. I remember this kind of idea came naturally to me.
Duke Scholars
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Ching, L. T. S. (2017). The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference. In Identity Conflicts can Violence Be Regulated (pp. 43–62). https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203789285-3
Ching, L. T. S. “The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference.” In Identity Conflicts Can Violence Be Regulated, 43–62, 2017. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203789285-3.
Ching LTS. The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference. In: Identity Conflicts can Violence Be Regulated. 2017. p. 43–62.
Ching, L. T. S. “The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference.” Identity Conflicts Can Violence Be Regulated, 2017, pp. 43–62. Scopus, doi:10.4324/9780203789285-3.
Ching LTS. The Musha Rebellion as Unthinkable: Coloniality, Aboriginality, and the Epistemology of Colonial Difference. Identity Conflicts can Violence Be Regulated. 2017. p. 43–62.