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Family Identity and the State in the Bamako Kafu, c. 1800-c. 1900 (Hardcover)
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Family Identity and the State in the Bamako Kafu, c. 1800-c. 1900 (Hardcover)
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This groundbreaking book explores the history and the cultural
context of family claims to power in the Bamako kafu, or state
(located in contemporary Mali in West Africa), primarily during the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Perinbam argues that the
absence of precise information on the Bamako kafu's political
status during this period empowered families to manipulate the
myths, rituals, and ancestral legends?as well as belief systems?so
that their claims to state power appeared incontrovertible. The
French, on reaching the region, accepted these representations of
power.Although the author's historical data focus mainly on the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, mythical recountings beyond
this historical grid?ranging across approximately one thousand
years and including large-scale migrations throughout the West
African Sahel?provide insights into the processes by which many of
these ethnic identities were subject to reconfiguration and
reinvention. Within this historical-mythical matrix, Perinbam
offers new insights into the reconstruction of Mande identities,
their cultures (material and otherwise), political systems, and
various social fields, as well as their past. Instead of rigid
ethnic identities?sometimes identified in the historical and
anthropological literature as ?Mandingo,? ?Malinke,? or
?Bambara??the author argues that variable ethnographic identities
were more often than not mediated in accordance with a number of
mythic and historical contingencies, most notably the respective
states into which the families were drawn, as well as state
formation, maintenance, and renewal, not to mention meaning
sensitive to political, generational, and gender challenges. With
the arrival of the French in the late nineteenth century and the
Mande incorporation into the French colonial state, familial
identities once more readjusted.The careful research and original
scholarship of Family Identity and the State in the Bamako Kafu
make it a significant contribut
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