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Over the last 30 years, a substantial literature on the history of
American and European prisons has developed. This collection is
among the first in English to construct a history of prisons in
Africa. Topics include precolonial punishments, living conditions
in prisons and mining camps, ethnic mapping, contemporary refugee
camps, and the political use of prison from the era of the slave
trade to the Rwandan genocide of 1994. Precolonial societies
generally ignored incarceration as a punitive device, while
colonial governments jailed Africans on a massive scale to impose
taxes, labors, and white domination. The installation of the prison
contributed to urban planning, architectural designs, and an array
of penal policies that reveal much about the colonial project.
After achieving independence, African states appropriated colonial
penitentiaries and developed a new language of power and
delinquency. Today, all African judicial orders rely on the
penitentiary.
In 2005, following the death of two youths of African origin,
France erupted in a wave of violent protest. More than 10,000
automobiles were burned or stoned, hundreds of public buildings
were vandalized or burned to the ground, and hundreds of people
were injured. Charles Tshimanga, Didier Gondola, Peter J. Bloom,
and a group of international scholars seek to understand the causes
and consequences of these momentous events, while examining how the
concept of Frenchness has been reshaped by the African diaspora in
France and the colonial legacy.
In Colonial Transactions Florence Bernault moves beyond the racial
divide that dominates colonial studies of Africa. Instead, she
illuminates the strange and frightening imaginaries that colonizers
and colonized shared on the ground. Bernault looks at Gabon from
the late nineteenth century to the present, historicizing the most
vivid imaginations and modes of power in Africa today: French
obsessions with cannibals, the emergence of vampires and witches in
the Gabonese imaginary, and the use of human organs for fetishes.
Struggling over objects, bodies, agency, and values, colonizers and
colonized entered relations that are better conceptualized as
"transactions." Together they also shared an awareness of how the
colonial situation broke down moral orders and forced people to use
the evil side of power. This foreshadowed the ways in which people
exercise agency in contemporary Africa, as well as the
proliferation of magical fears and witchcraft anxieties in
present-day Gabon. Overturning theories of colonial and
postcolonial nativism, this book is essential reading for
historians and anthropologists of witchcraft, power, value, and the
body.
In Colonial Transactions Florence Bernault moves beyond the racial
divide that dominates colonial studies of Africa. Instead, she
illuminates the strange and frightening imaginaries that colonizers
and colonized shared on the ground. Bernault looks at Gabon from
the late nineteenth century to the present, historicizing the most
vivid imaginations and modes of power in Africa today: French
obsessions with cannibals, the emergence of vampires and witches in
the Gabonese imaginary, and the use of human organs for fetishes.
Struggling over objects, bodies, agency, and values, colonizers and
colonized entered relations that are better conceptualized as
"transactions." Together they also shared an awareness of how the
colonial situation broke down moral orders and forced people to use
the evil side of power. This foreshadowed the ways in which people
exercise agency in contemporary Africa, as well as the
proliferation of magical fears and witchcraft anxieties in
present-day Gabon. Overturning theories of colonial and
postcolonial nativism, this book is essential reading for
historians and anthropologists of witchcraft, power, value, and the
body.
Fin observateur de la soci t , Jules Renard a tenu son fameux
Journal de 1887 jusqu' sa mort en 1910. Vingt-trois ann es durant
lesquelles il a observ ses contemporains, parisiens et provinciaux.
Il a ainsi crit des centaines de pages avec des citations tant t
cruelles, tant t tendres ou po tiques qui font toujours mouche. Des
centaines de pages dans lesquelles le lecteur peut plonger,
n'importe o , n'importe quand, picorant quelques r flexions,
observations, de-ci de-l , reposant le livre pour le reprendre le
lendemain ou quelques jours plus tard pour nouveau butiner au
hasard. Dans ce livre, le lecteur trouvera des extraits du Journal
de Jules Renard. Ces morceau choisis ont t r pertori s par grands
th mes: la litt rature, les femmes, les oiseaux, les arbres, les
crivains, la mort, le talent, le bonheur... Puisse cet ouvrage
inciter le lecteur se plonger dans l'oeuvre compl te de Jules
Renard.
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