Robert Fletcher
Robert Fletcher works in the fields of imperial and global history and focuses on histories of British imperialism, arid environments, nomadic peoples, and maritime exchange. He is the author of British Imperialism and ‘the Tribal Question’: Desert Administration and Nomadic Societies in the Middle East, 1919-1936 (Oxford, 2015) and The Ghost of Namamugi: Charles Lenox Richardson and the Anglo-Satsuma War (Amsterdam, 2019). His essays have appeared in Past and Present, The English Historical Review, Journal of Historical Geography, and Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. He is co-editor, most recently, of Inlands: Empires, Contested Interiors, and the Connection of the World (Columbia University Press, 2024).
University of Missouri
Session
During the interwar years, British East Africa and Japan became linked through a set of commercial, informational, and cultural entanglements that unfolded with remarkable speed. Within a decade, Japanese trading companies opened direct shipping lines to Mombasa, entered regional distribution networks, and transformed everyday material life: East Africans adopted Japanese shoes, clothing, enamelware, and other household goods. By the early 1930s, Japanese manufacturers were displacing British products across the region, unsettling established commercial hierarchies and prompting British officials to reassess the security of imperial markets.
Scholarship has largely approached this encounter through British archives, which portray Japan as a threatening intruder into “protected” imperial space. Yet Japanese sources—trade journals, consular reports, industrial surveys, and exporters’ writings—reveal a far more complex set of relationships. They illuminate how Japanese actors interpreted African societies, evaluated British colonial rule, and positioned themselves within a global order characterized by shifting imperial rivalries and intensifying South–South connections.
This panel asks how Japan’s presence reshaped British East Africa—and, equally, how East Africa reshaped Japanese understandings of empire, markets, and civilizational hierarchy. Taking Japan not simply as a competitor but as a trans-imperial actor operating within the British imperial economy while remaining outside its governing structures, the panel interrogates the multiple roles Japan occupied: competitor, collaborator, interpreter, and catalyst. Collectively, the papers argue that Japanese activities exposed vulnerabilities within the British Empire, generated new forms of knowledge about African markets, and opened spaces for East African consumer agency.
By foregrounding the reciprocal production of information, the civilizing discourses embedded in manufactured goods, and the co-creation of new material cultures, the panel contributes to emerging debates in world and imperial history on trans-imperialism, global commodity circuits, and the role of non-Western empires in shaping African colonial economies.