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6 - Colonialism: The Hand of Man

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Summary

TO GRAHAM, THE MORE insidious consequence of imperialism was its impact on indigenous peoples and the environment through colonisation, not simply by foreign settlement, but by the imposition of foreign ideas, lifestyles, and economics. During his early political career he rarely looked overseas, but this would change after his electoral defeat in 1892, when his writings would become dominated by the destructive impact of the hand of man, and what he ironically termed ‘progress’.

His first reference to this encroachment appeared in the Labour Elector in January 1890, where he wrote about the emigration scandals and corruption in Argentina, which already had 2,700 miles of railway, and was experiencing a huge influx of poor European immigrants, who were being confined in ever-expanding cities:

I, for one, would rather have seen the country in the possession of the gauchos, and the Spanish provinces now depopulated inhabited by the poor creatures who, to escape taxes and sweaters in Spain, have been made the unwilling instruments both of their own ruin and the destruction of both Indians and gauchos. I cannot see why, until Europe is cultivated like China, there is a necessity for emigration at all.

As a precursor to this, between leaving the Labour Elector, and just prior to contributing to the People’s Press, Graham had a story published in a short-lived journal called Time, edited by Belfort Bax, entitled ‘Horses of the Pampas’. In his own words, ‘these rambling and incoherent reminiscences’ were prompted by a letter from a friend in Argentina, which caused his thoughts on the Eight Hours Bill to become ‘vaguer and dimmer’. Here is the first occasion on which he wrote nostalgically of his earlier life in South America, which could hardly be more different than his current circumstances. The piece was described by Watts and Davies as:

an essay which, while recalling affectionately the way of life that Graham had seen in South America, lamented its inevitable demise. Perhaps his attack on the ugliness of industrial civilization does have a tenuous connection with the Eight Hour Bill … but it is clear that for the first but certainly not the last time, Graham’s memories have taken control. His career as a writer, indeed, is the story of an irrepressible rememberer trying to discipline his reminiscences without sacrificing their subversive power.

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R. B. Cunninghame Graham and Scotland
Party, Prose, and Political Aesthetic
, pp. 74 - 76
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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