Feasts and Riot

Feasts and Riot
Author: Jonathon Glassman
Publisher: Heinemann Educational Publishers
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1995
Genre: Education
ISBN:

In 1888, a handful of German adventurers bungled and attempt to conquer the Muslim towns of the East African coast. Their intrusion sparked a political crisis that led to the collapse of all civil authority in the Swahili towns.

Feasts and Riot

Feasts and Riot
Author: Jonathon Glassman
Publisher: James Currey
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1995
Genre: History
ISBN:

This work, which draws on substantial interviews, is a study of economic history from below. It focuses on the cultural and social history of Indians in Durban, exploring such topics as: why did the Indian peasantry rise and decline like the African peasantry, but with a different chronology?; what was the economic logic of the Indian family and to what extent do new interests in the politics and economics of gender help us to understand that logic?; why did Indian workers become intensely militant and why did this military subside?; and, above all, what can this history tell us about the changing nature of South African capitalism in the 20th century? This concern underlies the whole book.

Domesticating the World

Domesticating the World
Author: Jeremy Prestholdt
Publisher: Univ of California Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2008-01-15
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0520254236

“ Ingeniously stands the study of globalization and trade on its head.”—Edward Alpers, Chair of Department of History, UCLA

The Surface of Things

The Surface of Things
Author: Prita Meier
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2024-10-15
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0691201870

"The first history of photography from Africa's Swahili coast, revealing the images' complicated relationships to colonialism and global influence"--

On the Frontiers of the Indian Ocean World

On the Frontiers of the Indian Ocean World
Author: Philip Gooding
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2022-08-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 1009302477

This is the first interdisciplinary history of Lake Tanganyika and of eastern Africa's relationship with the wider Indian Ocean World during the nineteenth century. Philip Gooding deploys diverse source materials, including oral, climatological, anthropological, and archaeological sources, to ground interpretations of the better-known, European-authored archive in local epistemologies and understandings of the past. Gooding shows that Lake Tanganyika's shape, location, and distinctive lacustrine environment contributed to phenomena traditionally associated with the history of the wider Indian Ocean World being negotiated, contested, and re-imagined in particularly robust ways. He adds novel contributions to African and Indian Ocean histories of urbanism, the environment, spirituality, kinship, commerce, consumption, material culture, bondage, slavery, Islam, and capitalism. African peoples and environments are positioned as central to the histories of global economies, religions, and cultures.

Buying Time

Buying Time
Author: Thomas F. McDow
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Total Pages: 535
Release: 2018-05-25
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0821446096

In Buying Time, Thomas F. McDow synthesizes Indian Ocean, Middle Eastern, and East African studies as well as economic and social history to explain how, in the nineteenth century, credit, mobility, and kinship knit together a vast interconnected Indian Ocean region. That vibrant and enormously influential swath extended from the desert fringes of Arabia to Zanzibar and the Swahili coast and on to the Congo River watershed. In the half century before European colonization, Africans and Arabs from coasts and hinterlands used newfound sources of credit to seek out opportunities, establish new outposts in distant places, and maintain families in a rapidly changing economy. They used temporizing strategies to escape drought in Oman, join ivory caravans in the African interior, and build new settlements. The key to McDow’s analysis is a previously unstudied trove of Arabic business deeds that show complex variations on the financial transactions that underwrote the trade economy across the region. The documents list names, genealogies, statuses, and clan names of a wide variety of people—Africans, Indians, and Arabs; men and women; free and slave—who bought, sold, and mortgaged property. Through unprecedented use of these sources, McDow moves the historical analysis of the Indian Ocean beyond connected port cities to reveal the roles of previously invisible people.

War of Words, War of Stones

War of Words, War of Stones
Author: Jonathon Glassman
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Total Pages: 414
Release: 2011-02-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 025322280X

The Swahili coast of Africa is often described as a paragon of transnational culture and racial fluidity. Yet, during a brief period in the 1960s, Zanzibar became deeply divided along racial lines as intellectuals and activists, engaged in bitter debates about their nation's future, ignited a deadly conflict that spread across the island. War of Words, War of Stones explores how violently enforced racial boundaries arose from Zanzibar's entangled history. Jonathon Glassman challenges explanations that assume racial thinking in the colonial world reflected only Western ideas. He shows how Africans crafted competing ways of categorizing race from local tradition and engagement with the Atlantic and Indian Ocean worlds.

Plantation Slavery in the Sokoto Caliphate

Plantation Slavery in the Sokoto Caliphate
Author: Mohammed Bashir Salau
Publisher: Rochester Studies in African H
Total Pages: 248
Release: 2018
Genre: History
ISBN: 1580469388

A work of synthesis on plantation slavery in nineteenth century Sokoto caliphate, engaging with major debates on internal African slavery, on the meaning of the term "plantation," and on comparative slavery

Violent Intermediaries

Violent Intermediaries
Author: Michelle R. Moyd
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Total Pages: 351
Release: 2014-07-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0821444875

The askari, African soldiers recruited in the 1890s to fill the ranks of the German East African colonial army, occupy a unique space at the intersection of East African history, German colonial history, and military history. Lauded by Germans for their loyalty during the East Africa campaign of World War I, but reviled by Tanzanians for the violence they committed during the making of the colonial state between 1890 and 1918, the askari have been poorly understood as historical agents. Violent Intermediaries situates them in their everyday household, community, military, and constabulary roles, as men who helped make colonialism in German East Africa. By linking microhistories with wider nineteenth-century African historical processes, Michelle Moyd shows how as soldiers and colonial intermediaries, the askari built the colonial state while simultaneously carving out paths to respectability, becoming men of influence within their local contexts. Through its focus on the making of empire from the ground up, Violent Intermediaries offers a fresh perspective on African colonial troops as state-making agents and critiques the mythologies surrounding the askari by focusing on the nature of colonial violence.