Global Politics of Welsh Patagonia
Settler colonialism from the margins
Abstract
Inspired by decolonial thinking, this book challenges romantic images of Y Wladfa, the Welsh Patagonian settlement founded in 1865. Drawing on archival sources written in Spanish, Welsh and English, it exposes the complex human relationships of this settler colony, and in particular disrupts the myth of Welsh–Indigenous friendship by foregrounding Indigenous experience and revealing less familiar accounts in the record. A newly-developed framework applies three logics – possession, racialization/barbarisation, and assimilation – to make sense of settler colonialism in Patagonia and to debate Wales’s complex position as both colonised and coloniser. A new analysis of contemporary cultural products (television, film, textbooks) further demonstrates how the romantic view continues to shape racial stereotypes today, concluding that such settler origin countries as Wales are vital sites of decolonial debate.
Keywords
Patagonia;Politics;History;nineteenth centuryDOI
10.16922/globalpoliticswelshpatagoniaISBN
9781837722181, 9781837722167, 9781837722174Publisher
University of Wales PressPublication date and place
Cardiff, 2025Series
Race, Ethnicity, Wales and the World,Classification
19th century, c 1800 to c 1899
History
Colonialism and imperialism