Interlopers of Empire

Interlopers of Empire
Author: Andrew Arsan
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2014
Genre: History
ISBN: 0199333386

First comprehensive history of Lebanese communities of Francophone West Africa in the colonial period.

Asian Entreprenuerial Minorities

Asian Entreprenuerial Minorities
Author: Christine Dobbin
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2013-01-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 113610562X

Advances the theoretical understanding of the behaviour of entrepreneurial minorities and draws a vivid picture of how various imperial powers came to rely on local entreprenuerial minorities to establish their hegemony in Asia.

Constructing History, Culture and Inequality

Constructing History, Culture and Inequality
Author: Sandra Evers
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2021-10-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9004492410

During the early 20th century, a group of ex-slaves established a frontier society in the no-man’s-land of the extreme Southern Highlands of Madagascar. First settlers skilfully deployed a fluid set of Malagasy customs to implant a myth of themselves as tompon-tany or “masters of the land”. Eventually, they created a land monopoly to reinforce their legitimacy and to exclude later migrants. Some of them were labelled andevo (“slave” or “slave descent”). The tompon-tany prohibited the andevo from owning land, and thereby from having tombs. This book focuses on the plight of the tombless andevo, and how their ascribed impurity and association with infertility, illness, death and misfortune made them an essential part of the tompon-tany world-view.

Subject Catalog

Subject Catalog
Author: Library of Congress
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1024
Release: 1980-10
Genre: Subject catalogs
ISBN:

Challenging Authorities

Challenging Authorities
Author: Arne S. Steinforth
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 471
Release: 2021-09-20
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 3030769240

When the notion of ‘alternative facts’ and the alleged dawning of a ‘postfactual’ world entered public discourse, social anthropologists found themselves in unexpectedly familiar territory. In theirempirical experience, fact—knowledge accepted as true—derives its salience from social mechanisms of legitimization, thereby demonstrating a deep interconnection with power and authority. In thisperspective, fact is a continually contested and volatile social category. Due to the specific histories of their colonial and post-independence experience, African societies offer a particularly broad array of insights into social processes of juxtaposition, opposition, and even outright competition between different postulated authorities. The contributions to the present volume explore the variety of ways in which authority is contested in Southern and Eastern Africa, investigating localized discourses on which institution, what kind of knowledge, or whose expertise is accepted as authoritative, thus highlighting the specificities and pluralities in ‘modern’ societies. This edited volume engages with larger theoretical questions regarding power and authority in the context of (post)colonial states (neo)traditional authority, claiming space, conflict and (in)justice, and contestations of knowledge. It offers in-depth critical analyses of ethnographic data that put contemporary African phenomena on equal footing with current controversies in North America, Europe, and other global settings.