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Transient Workspaces - Technologies of Everyday Innovation in Zimbabwe (Paperback)
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Transient Workspaces - Technologies of Everyday Innovation in Zimbabwe (Paperback)
Series: The MIT Press
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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An account of technology in Africa from an African perspective,
examining hunting in Zimbabwe as an example of an innovative mobile
workspace. In this book, Clapperton Mavhunga views technology in
Africa from an African perspective. Technology in his account is
not something always brought in from outside, but is also something
that ordinary people understand, make, and practice through their
everyday innovations or creativities-including things that few
would even consider technological. Technology does not always
originate in the laboratory in a Western-style building but also in
the society in the forest, in the crop field, and in other places
where knowledge is made and turned into practical outcomes. African
creativities are found in African mobilities. Mavhunga shows the
movement of people as not merely conveyances across space but
transient workspaces. Taking indigenous hunting in Zimbabwe as one
example, he explores African philosophies of mobilities as
spiritually guided and of the forest as a sacred space. Viewing the
hunt as guided mobility, Mavhunga considers interesting questions
of what constitutes technology under regimes of spirituality. He
describes how African hunters extended their knowledge traditions
to domesticate the gun, how European colonizers, with no remedy of
their own, turned to indigenous hunters for help in combating the
deadly tsetse fly, and examines how wildlife conservation regimes
have criminalized African hunting rather than enlisting hunters
(and their knowledge) as allies in wildlife sustainability. The
hunt, Mavhunga writes, is one of many criminalized knowledges and
practices to which African people turn in times of economic or
political crisis. He argues that these practices need to be
decriminalized and examined as technologies of everyday innovation
with a view toward constructive engagement, innovating with
Africans rather than for them.
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