Robert Gordon and the Rubies of Mogok: Industrial Capitalism, Imperialism and Technology in Conjunction

Announcing: Walsh, John, “Robert Gordon and the Rubies of Mogok: Industrial Capitalism, Imperialism and Technology in Conjunction,” Asian Culture and History, Vol.3, No.1 (2011), pp.94-100, available at: http://journal.ccsenet.org/index.php/ach/article/view/6995/6558.

Abstract:

Robert Gordon’s trip to the Mogok ruby mines in northern Burma, as reported in his testament to the Royal Geographical Society in 1888, represents one of the most blatant uses of travel as empire building in the Mekong Region. While European explorers and adventurers had been travelling to and along the region for centuries, most had been intent on mapping, surveying and categorizing its contents for purposes of their own profit, in one way or another. Gordon, while of course not unmindful of his own career, represents the traveller aiming to be of service to the greater power. He was strongly motivated by the desire  to bring the ruby mines of Mogok into the reach of the British Empire through the building of a railway and the necessary infrastructure to pacify the countryside and its people, thereby enabling the enclosure of another type of commons.

Keywords:

Capitalism, Imperialism, British Empire, Burma, Ruby mining

They Seem to be Incapable of Acting Together

This is the abstract for the paper which I propose to present at the forthcoming 4th ICTL in a couple of weeks:

“They seem to be Incapable of Acting Together:” Robert Gordon and the European Categorizers of the Mekong Region

Abstract

Robert Gordon’s trip to the Mogok ruby mines in northern Burma, as reported in his testament to the Royal Geographical Society in 1888, represents one of the most blatant uses of travel as empire building in the Mekong Region. While European explorers and adventurers had been travelling to and along the region for centuries, most had been intent on mapping, surveying and categorizing its contents for purposes of their own profit, in one way or another. Gordon, while of course not unmindful of his own career, represents the traveller aiming to be of service to the greater power. As such, what were the ways he visualized and described the various features most commonly exercising the gentlemen tourists of the times: the hazards of disease, alienation and women principal among them. This paper draws upon a number of accounts of travellers to the Mekong Region with a view to understanding how and why they made their arduous efforts and what it profited them.

I think this is an interesting subject and that I might be able to write something interesting about it – but I do have to find some time actually to sit down and write it.