Intermediaries, Interpreters, and Clerks

Intermediaries, Interpreters, and Clerks

Author: Benjamin N. Lawrance

Publisher: Univ of Wisconsin Press

Published: 2006-09-29

Total Pages: 352

ISBN-13: 9780299219505

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

As a young man in South Africa, Nelson Mandela aspired to be an interpreter or clerk, noting in his autobiography that “a career as a civil servant was a glittering prize for an African.” Africans in the lower echelons of colonial bureaucracy often held positions of little official authority, but in practice these positions were lynchpins of colonial rule. As the primary intermediaries among European colonial officials, African chiefs, and subject populations, these civil servants could manipulate the intersections of power, authority, and knowledge at the center of colonial society. By uncovering the role of such men (and a few women) in the construction, function, and legal apparatus of colonial states, the essays in this volume highlight a new perspective. They offer important insights on hegemony, collaboration, and resistance, structures and changes in colonial rule, the role of language and education, the production of knowledge and expertise in colonial settings, and the impact of colonization in dividing African societies by gender, race, status, and class.


Biographies Between Spheres of Empire

Biographies Between Spheres of Empire

Author: Achim von Oppen

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-10-16

Total Pages: 234

ISBN-13: 1351329928

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Biographical research can illuminate imperial and colonial history. This is particularly true of Africa, where empires competed with one another and colonial society was characterised by rigid divisions. In this book, five biographical studies explore how, in the course of their lives, interpreters, landowners, students and traders navigated the boundaries between the various spaces of the colonial world. With a focus on African life worlds, the authors show the disruptions and constraints as well as the new options and forms of mobility that resulted from colonial rule. This book was originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth Studies.


Education as Politics

Education as Politics

Author: Kelly M. Duke Bryant

Publisher: University of Wisconsin Pres

Published: 2015-05-19

Total Pages: 255

ISBN-13: 0299303047

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Education as Politics argues that colonial schooling remade Senegalese politics during the transition to French rule, creating political spaces that were at once African and colonial, and ultimately leading to the historic 1914 election of a black African representative from Senegal to the French National Assembly.


Muslim Interpreters in Colonial Senegal, 1850–1920

Muslim Interpreters in Colonial Senegal, 1850–1920

Author: Tamba M'bayo

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 2016-07-01

Total Pages: 237

ISBN-13: 1498509991

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book investigates the lives and careers of Muslim African interpreters employed by the French colonial administration in Saint Louis, Senegal, from the 1850s to the early 1920s. It focuses on the lower and middle Senegal River valley in northern Senegal, where the French concentrated most of their activities in West Africa during the nineteenth century. The Muslim interpreters performed multiple roles as mediators, military and expeditionary guides, emissaries, diplomatic hosts, and treaty negotiators. As cultural and political powerbrokers that straddled the colonial divide, they were indispensable for French officials in their relations with African rulers and the local population. As such, a central concern of this book is the paradoxical and often contradictory roles the interpreters played in mediating between the French and Africans. This book argues that the Muslim interpreters exemplified a paradox: while serving the French administration they pursued their own interests and defended those of their local communities. In doing so, the interpreters strove to maintain some degree of autonomy. Moreover, this book contends that the interpreters occupied a vantage position as mediators to influence the construction of colonial discourse and knowledge, because they channeled the flow of information between the French and the African population. Thus, Muslim interpreters had the capacity to shape power relations between the colonizers and the colonized in Senegal.


Cooperation and Empire

Cooperation and Empire

Author: Tanja Bührer

Publisher: Berghahn Books

Published: 2017-08-01

Total Pages: 392

ISBN-13: 178533610X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

While the study of “indigenous intermediaries” is today the focus of some of the most interesting research in the historiography of colonialism, its roots extend back to at least the 1970s. The contributions to this volume revisit Ronald E. Robinson’s theory of collaboration in a range of historical contexts by melding it with theoretical perspectives derived from postcolonial studies and transnational history. In case studies ranging globally over the course of four centuries, these essays offer nuanced explorations of the varied, complex interactions between imperial and local actors, with particular attention to those shifting and ambivalent roles that transcend simple binaries of colonizer and colonized.


Essai d’histoire locale by Djiguiba Camara

Essai d’histoire locale by Djiguiba Camara

Author: Elara Bertho

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2020-05-11

Total Pages: 445

ISBN-13: 9004424873

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Dans Essai d’histoire locale, Djiguiba Camara, un intermédiaire colonial et un interprète, décrit l’histoire de la Haute Guinée, de l’empire de Samori Touré et des résistances anticoloniales. In Essay on Local History, Djiguiba Camara, a colonial intermediary and interpreter, describes the history of Upper Guinea, with emphasis on the Empire of Samori Touré and of anticolonial local resistance.


Multiracial Identities in Colonial French Africa

Multiracial Identities in Colonial French Africa

Author: Rachel Jean-Baptiste

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2023-06-08

Total Pages: 321

ISBN-13: 1108808492

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Despite increasingly hardened visions of racial difference in colonial governance in French Africa after World War I, interracial sexual relationships persisted, resulting in the births of thousands of children. These children, mostly born to African women and European men, sparked significant debate in French society about the status of multiracial people, debates historians have termed 'the métis problem.' Drawing on extensive archival and oral history research in Gabon, Republic of Congo, Senegal, and France, Rachel Jean-Baptiste investigates the fluctuating identities of métis. Crucially, she centres claims by métis themselves to access French social and citizenship rights amidst the refusal by fathers to recognize their lineage, and in the context of changing African racial thought and practice. In this original history of race-making, belonging, and rights, Jean-Baptiste demonstrates the diverse ways in which métis individuals and collectives carved out visions of racial belonging as children and citizens in Africa, Europe, and internationally.


Ethnicity and the Colonial State

Ethnicity and the Colonial State

Author: Alexander Keese

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2015-11-30

Total Pages: 387

ISBN-13: 9004307354

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ethnicity and the Colonial State compares the choices of community leaders in three different West African groups (Wolof, Temne, and Ewe), with regard to “selling” their identifications to the colonial rulers. The book thereby addresses ethnicity as a factor in global history.


Highlife Saturday Night

Highlife Saturday Night

Author: Nate Plageman

Publisher: Indiana University Press

Published: 2012-12-19

Total Pages: 303

ISBN-13: 025300733X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The story of highlife music and the culture that revolved around it in Ghana, before and after independence—includes links to audiovisual content. Highlife Saturday Night captures the vibrancy of Saturday nights in Ghana—when musicians took to the stage and dancers took to the floor—in a penetrating look at musical leisure during a time of social, political, and cultural change. Framing dance band “highlife” music as a central medium through which Ghanaians negotiated gendered and generational social relations, Nate Plageman shows how popular music was central to the rhythm of daily life in a West African nation. He traces the history of highlife in urban Ghana during much of the twentieth century and documents a range of figures who fueled the music’s emergence, evolution, and explosive popularity. This book is generously enhanced by audiovisual material on the Ethnomusicology Multimedia website.