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This book places the insurgent group Boko Haram, which has
terrorised northeastern Nigeria through the last six years, in an
historical and cultural context. It examines cultural changes in
the lands south of Lake Chad through deep time, showing how these
ancient processes can help us think about Boko Haram's activities
in the present. The archaeological and documentary record for this
area is unusually rich for sub-Saharan Africa, and allows us to
understand Boko Haram within an historical narrative that stretches
back directly five centuries, with cultural origins that stretch
even deeper into the past. One important way to understand Boko
Haram is as a frontier phenomenon, the most recent manifestation of
processes of horrific violence, identity production and wealth
creation that have been part of political relationships in this
area of Central Africa through the last millennium. In striking
ways, Boko Haram resembles the slave-raiders and warlords who
figure in precolonial and colonial writings about the southern Lake
Chad Basin. In modern times, these accounts are paralleled by the
activities of smugglers, bandits (coupeurs de route, 'road
cutters') and tax evaders, illegal actors who stand in complex
relationships to the governments of modern African nation-states.
The borderlands of these states are often places where the state
refuses to exercise its full authority, because of the profits and
opportunities that illegal and semi-legal activities afford, among
others to state officials and bureaucrats. For local people, Boko
Haram's actions are thus to a great extent understood in terms of
slave-raids and borderlands. Those actions are not some mysterious,
unprecedented eruption of violence and savagery: they can be
understood within local contexts of politics and history. This book
is written to counter exoticised portrayals of Boko Haram's
activities, and of the region as a whole.
The dry stone structures that are the subject of this book are
located in the Mandara mountains of the Extreme North province of
Cameroon and are known to the Mafa who live among them as
diy-geo-bay, best glossed as ruins of chiefly residence. This
studyu presents excavation reports from two such "DGB" sites, as
well as a summary of evidence from the other identified sites, and
a typology. The discussion centres on the means by which they were
constructed, and the effect their construction had on social
organization.
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