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The collective inquiries in this volume address ethnicity in
ancient Africa as social fact and political artifact along numerous
dimensions. Is ethnicity a useful analytic? What can archaeology
say about the kinds of deeper time questions which scholars have
asked of identities in Africa? Eleven authors engage with
contemporary anthropological, historical and archaeological
perspectives to examine how ideas of self-understanding, belonging,
and difference in Africa were made and unmade. They examine how
these intersect with other salient domains of social experience:
states, landscapes, discourses, memory, technology, politics, and
power. The various chapters cover broad geographic and temporal
ground, following an arc across Senegal, Mali, Nigeria, Cameroon,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and East Africa, spanning
from prehistory to the colonial period.
The collective inquiries in this volume address ethnicity in
ancient Africa as social fact and political artifact along numerous
dimensions. Is ethnicity a useful analytic? What can archaeology
say about the kinds of deeper time questions which scholars have
asked of identities in Africa? Eleven authors engage with
contemporary anthropological, historical and archaeological
perspectives to examine how ideas of self-understanding, belonging,
and difference in Africa were made and unmade. They examine how
these intersect with other salient domains of social experience:
states, landscapes, discourses, memory, technology, politics, and
power. The various chapters cover broad geographic and temporal
ground, following an arc across Senegal, Mali, Nigeria, Cameroon,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and East Africa, spanning
from prehistory to the colonial period.
This volume investigates the material production and expression of
colonial experiences in Africa. It combines archaeological,
historical, and ethnographic sources to explore the diverse
pathways, practices, and projects constructed by Africans in their
engagement with the forces of colonial modernity and capitalism.
This volume is situated in ongoing debates in archaeological and
anthropological approaches to materiality. In this respect, it
seeks to target archaeologists interested in the conceptual issues
provoked by colonial enfoldments. It is also concerned with
increasing the visibility of relevant African archaeological
literature to scholars of colonialism and imperialism laboring in
other fields. This book brings together an array of junior and
senior scholars, whose contributions represent a rich sample of the
vibrant archaeological research conducted in Africa today, blending
conceptual inspiration with robust fieldwork. The chapters target a
variety of cultural, historical, and colonial settings. They are
driven by a plurality of perspectives, but they are bound by a
shared commitment to postcolonial, critical, and material culture
theories. While this book focuses on western and southern Africa -
the sub-regions that boast the deepest traditions of historical
archaeological research in the continent - attention was also
placed on including case-studies from traditionally less
well-represented areas (East African and Swahili coasts,
Madagascar), whose material pasts are nevertheless essential to a
wider comprehension of variability and comparability of 'modern'
colonial conditions. Consequently, this volume lends a unique
wide-ranging look at African experiences across the tangle of
imperial geographies on the continent, with case-studies focusing
on Anglophone, Francophone, and Dutch-speaking contexts. This
volume is an exciting opportunity to present this work to wider
audiences and foster conversations with a wide community of
scholars about the material fashioning of colonial life, relations,
and configurations of power.
This volume investigates the material production and expression of
colonial experiences in Africa. It combines archaeological,
historical, and ethnographic sources to explore the diverse
pathways, practices, and projects constructed by Africans in their
engagement with the forces of colonial modernity and capitalism.
This volume is situated in ongoing debates in archaeological and
anthropological approaches to materiality. In this respect, it
seeks to target archaeologists interested in the conceptual issues
provoked by colonial enfoldments. It is also concerned with
increasing the visibility of relevant African archaeological
literature to scholars of colonialism and imperialism laboring in
other fields. This book brings together an array of junior and
senior scholars, whose contributions represent a rich sample of the
vibrant archaeological research conducted in Africa today, blending
conceptual inspiration with robust fieldwork. The chapters target a
variety of cultural, historical, and colonial settings. They are
driven by a plurality of perspectives, but they are bound by a
shared commitment to postcolonial, critical, and material culture
theories. While this book focuses on western and southern Africa -
the sub-regions that boast the deepest traditions of historical
archaeological research in the continent - attention was also
placed on including case-studies from traditionally less
well-represented areas (East African and Swahili coasts,
Madagascar), whose material pasts are nevertheless essential to a
wider comprehension of variability and comparability of 'modern'
colonial conditions. Consequently, this volume lends a unique
wide-ranging look at African experiences across the tangle of
imperial geographies on the continent, with case-studies focusing
on Anglophone, Francophone, and Dutch-speaking contexts. This
volume is an exciting opportunity to present this work to wider
audiences and foster conversations with a wide community of
scholars about the material fashioning of colonial life, relations,
and configurations of power.
West African history is inseparable from the history of the
Atlantic slave trade and colonialism. According to historical
archaeologist Francois Richard, however, the dominance of this
narrative not only colors the range of political discourse about
Africa but also occludes many lesser-known--but equally
important--experiences of those living in the region. Reluctant
Landscapes is an exploration of the making and remaking of
political experience and physical landscapes among rural
communities in the Siin province of Senegal between the late 1500s
and the onset of World War II. By recovering the histories of
farmers and commoners who made up African states' demographic core
in this period, Richard shows their crucial--but often
overlooked--role in the making of Siin history. The book also
delves into the fraught relation between the Seereer, a minority
ethnic and religious group, and the Senegalese nation-state, with
Siin's perceived "primitive" conservatism standing at odds with the
country's Islamic modernity. Through a deep engagement with oral,
documentary, archaeological, and ethnographic archives, Richard's
groundbreaking study revisits the four-hundred-year history of a
rural community shunted to the margins of Senegal's national
imagination.
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