It sets out the idea that more developed countries should share their knowledge with less developed ones. From our more modern perspective we'd be more concerned about whether the less developed country wanted that kind of help.
The concept of the white man's burden justified European Imperialism by suggesting that it was the duty of the "civilized" white Europeans to educate and uplift the "uncivilized" indigenous peoples they colonized. It perpetuated the idea that non-white societies needed to be controlled and guided by European powers for their own supposed benefit, while exploiting their resources and labor. This notion helped rationalize the colonization and exploitation of non-European territories by framing it as a benevolent mission to civilize and modernize the "inferior" peoples.
The white man's burden is the outdated belief that white westerners had the responsibility of ruling of territories inhabited by 'colored people.' It was taken from the concept that there were essentially 2 types of race - those capable of ruling and those who could only be subject peoples. Africans were generally considered to be subject peoples, although most Asian races weren't. Examples of this concept were the British, Portuguese, German and French Empires.
The burden aspect came from the fact that many of the subject peoples territories didn't provide much (if any) financial return to the colonizers. Whilst many colonies were exploited, many benefited greatly (in terms of infrastructure, social and economic development) from colonization, despite it being a humiliation for the subject peoples. The costs of empires are also shown by the massive losses of life of the colonizers from disease and attacks - It is estimated that about 1 in 3 of the French and British soldiers deployed to West Africa would die from disease.
The White Man's Burden was a poem written by Rudyard Kipling that justified imperialism as a "duty" to civilize inferior races:
Take up the White Man's Burden-
Send forth the best ye breed-
Go bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives' need:
To wait in heavy darkness
On fluttered folk and wild-
Your new-caught, sullen peoples
Half-devil and half-child.
- Rudyard Kipling (1899)
His stories and poems during this era seem to glorify imperialism and present it as a romantic adventure.
There was a very arrogant view that Europeans had a duty to make the peoples of Africa and Asia 'civilized'. This view sometimes served as an excuse for imperialism.
white mans burden
The audience for "The Black Man's Burden" include people who have some educational background and the imperialists.
The civilizing mission
Another name for "white man's burden" was "civilizing mission."
Both ideas sought to justify imperialism and colonialism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Social Darwinism argued that only the fittest societies would survive, legitimizing the dominance of Western empires. The White Man's Burden similarly justified Western colonization as a moral duty to civilize and uplift non-Western societies.
white mans burden
im a goon
The rhyme scheme for the poem "The White Man's Burden" by Rudyard Kipling is ABAB CDCD EFEF GHGH.
A lack of resistance to tropical diseases.
white mans burden
white mans burden
the white mans burden was about the u.s. wanting to improve and continue our growth and militarism so we were number one. And so we would not get our heads chopped off by Russian solders.