- Introduction
-
Technology, Knowledge, Worldviews
- Early Modern Authority
- Feedback Patterns in 19th-Century Ideologies
- The Railroad & Photography
- Competition in the Development of R&D
- Op-Ed: The Internet and Information
- Op-Ed: Photography, Editing, and the Destabilization of Truth
- Op-Ed: The Effects of Technological Immersion
- Op-Ed: Artificial Intelligence Is a New Kind of Technological Beast
- Technology, Empire, War
-
Technology, Popular Culture, Gender
- Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe
- The Trial of Marion Gage
- Nando's
- Women and Magazines in the Nineteenth Century
- Cold War Propaganda and Television
- Reproductive Repression
- Op-Ed: The Theatre Experience in the Age of Streaming
- Op-Ed: Compulsory Sterilization in Women's Prisons
- Op-Ed: The Future of Meat
- Creating Lives
- The Toolbox of Invention
- A&SC Highlights
From the Cape to Cairo
Dublin Core
Title
From the Cape to Cairo
Subject
British Imperialism
Description
The illustration depicts a British female figure, standing for civilization, leading a military that consists of British men in a charge against foreign, primitive barbarians.
Creator
Udo J. Keppler
Source
Prints & Photographs
Publisher
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division
Date
December 10, 1902
Format
Originally a chromolithograph, but now stored as a JPEG on this website.
Language
English
Files
Citation
Udo J. Keppler, “From the Cape to Cairo,” Technohistory!, accessed October 18, 2024, https://technohistory2017.lmu.build/items/show/38.