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Anthropology of Africa

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Title: Anthropology of Africa


1
Anthropology of Africa
  • SY26C
  • Week 5

2
Colonialism
  • While often depicted as a progressive and
    modernising force, colonialism in fact was based
    on autocratic and frequently oppressive foreign
    rule.

3
Colonialism
  • Definition
  • A system of political, economic, and cultural
    domination forcibly imposed by a technologically
    advanced foreign minority on an indigenous
    majority justifying itself through ideologies
    proclaiming the superiority of coloniser and the
    inferiority of colonised.

4
Colonialism
  • Why colonialism?
  • Requirements of an expanding world capitalist
    system
  • Political reasons nationalist rivalries and
    balance of power politics
  • Economic reasons need to acquire and control new
    markets and sources of raw materials

5
Colonialism the conquest
  • Effective occupation armies
  • Ethiopia no conquest
  • Resistance e.g. Samori Toure Hehe
  • Cooperation
  • Advantages in alliances with Europeans
  • Superior strength
  • Divide and conquer

6
Colonialism
  • Colonial polices determined by
  • Previous colonial experience
  • Nature of the African society
  • Assessment of pre-existing African trade and
    political administrations

7
Colonialism
  • Heavy reliance on local rulers
  • Ideal ruler
  • loyal
  • maintained law and order
  • collected taxes
  • encouraged labour
  • provided cheap labour pool
  • Legacy of colonial rule in current conflicts

8
Colonialism French rule
  • Very centralised, bureaucratic
  • Assimilation political representation,
    education
  • Political structure
  • Lieutenant Governor
  • Appointed advisory council
  • Accommodation to local situations
  • Algeria destroyed local systems BUT Morocco,
    kept structures sultan remained prominent
    political figure
  • Other parts of Africa (e.g. Mauritania, Upper
    Volta, Chad, Niger) where French had little
    presence, governed through pre-existing political
    structures

9
Colonialism French rule
  • Mariage à la mode du pays cement relations
  • Indigenat (1887) summary punishment for, e.g.
    refusal to pay taxes, disrespect for French
    authority
  • Enlistment of African soldiers e.g. tirailleurs
    (1857) Senegalese, Sudan

10
Colonialism British rule
  • Decentralised, no assimilation policy
  • Flexible, great variation
  • More liberal in W. Africa limited African
    political participation
  • W. African colony
  • Colony British law
  • Protectorate native administration
  • E. and C. Africa white settler population led to
    harsher administration

11
Colonialism British Indirect Rule
  • Buganda
  • Weakened state, authority of kabaka
  • 1894 protectorate
  • kabaka to collect taxes in exchange for
    continuation of ruling hierarchy (under British
    authority)
  • Division of land
  • British established general policy
  • Buganda made day-to-day regulations

12
Colonialism British Indirect Rule
  • Northern Nigeria
  • Emir at Sokoto continued Muslim courts and
    bureaucracy
  • British resident as advisor on fulfilling
    colonial regulations
  • British ensured the emirs cooperation
  • British non-interference with Muslim culture

13
Colonial state
  • Small number of administrators
  • Aims
  • law and order
  • obedience and loyalty
  • defend and promote political and economic
    interests of metropole
  • Autocratic
  • before 1945, less than 1 had full political,
    civil rights
  • Some areas outside of colonial control
  • e.g. Tuareg in Mauritania, Algeria, Mali

14
Colonialism Economics
  • International trade oriented towards metropole
  • Europeans controlled most important sectors of
    colonial export economy
  • Colonial development policies reflected interests
    of metropolitan banks, import-export houses,
    shipping firms, mining companies, white settler
    population
  • Colonial system ensured metropole had outlet for
    its manufactured goods, raw materials for its
    industries, tropical products for metropolitan
    consumers on advantageous terms

15
Colonialism Economics
  • Regional differences in economic policies
  • Africa of the colonial trade economy (French and
    British W. Africa)
  • Cash cropping
  • Traditional subsistence farmers ? export crops
    (palm oil, cocoa, cotton, rubber)
  • Africa of the labour reserves (Malawi,
    Mozambique, Upper Volta)
  • Less easily accessible resources less potential
    for peasant production of exports
  • Pool of labour migrants esp. for mines in
    Belgian Congo, SA, Northern Rhodesia

16
Colonialism Economics
  • Africa of the concession-owning companies (Gabon,
    Congo, CAR, Belgian Congo)
  • Environmental constraints, low population
    density, thus cash cropping not profitable
  • Controlled by companies
  • Brutal
  • White settler Africa (parts of Kenya, Tanganyika,
    Sn Nn Rhodesia)
  • Export crops
  • European settlers expropriated most of fertile
    land, displaced traditional African farmer groups

17
Colonialism Economics
  • Expropriation of traditional communal lands
  • Prevented competition with European farmers
  • e.g. withholding credit in Senegal
  • prohibition of coffee (etc) production in Kenya
  • used non-Africans as middlemen (Lebanese/Asians)
  • Most economic exploitation in settler societies
  • Economic exploitation most systematic in SA
  • took best land
  • established Native Reserve system and colour bar

18
Colonialism Economics
  • Mining, plantation agriculture ? great demand for
    labour
  • sourced from areas where people forced to work
    elsewhere to pay taxes - e.g. Mozambiqueans had
    to go to SA mines/farms in Rhodesia
  • But large parts of Africa untouched by these
    changes
  • esp. deserts and forest zones
  • traditional modes of production, merchants and
    artisans, trade continued

19
Colonialism Impact
  • End of political, economic, cultural autonomy
  • Colonial subjects with few political, civil
    rights
  • Foreign economic domination
  • Decline and denigration of traditional values and
    authority
  • New ethnic, gender, class relationships

20
Colonialism Impact
  • Ethnic identity
  • Previously dispersed autonomous communities
    adopting a common ethnic identity for political,
    economic reasons
  • Bangala of Léopoldville in Belgian Congo
  • Explorer Henry Morton Stanley called Bangala the
    people who lived in villages between Congo and
    Ubangi rivers
  • Used to distinguish themselves in the eyes of
    whites (industrious and reliable)
  • Larger group called themselves Bangala with
    Lingala language

21
Colonialism Impact
  • Ethnic conflict
  • Colonial favouritism ? ethnic conflict and
    competition, into post-colonial period
  • e.g. Guinea
  • French favoured Fula
  • Mandinka leader Sekou Toure led an anti-Fula
    alliance that brought him to power
  • After independence, Fula fled Guinea

22
Colonialism Impact
  • Decline in womens status
  • e.g. Igbo female counterparts of male chiefs
    (obi) not made a salaried official (unlike the
    male chief)
  • Less access to land and labour and share of
    household income
  • Many women moved to towns ? market women/petty
    traders/ domestics
  • Some ? property owners, others ? illegal
    activities like prostitution/beer brewing

23
Colonialism Impact
  • Social relationships disrupted
  • e.g. Wolofs warrior caste destroyed
  • Loss of land
  • Decline in economic power
  • e.g. artisans (blacksmiths, jewellers, weavers)
    migrated to towns/farming
  • in towns took on jobs that resembled their
    previous one (eg blacksmiths became mechanics)
  • uprooted, badly paid urban and rural proletariat
  • Very limited opportunities for social mobility
    cos economic development slow

24
Colonialism Impact
  • Beneficiaries
  • chiefs, religious leaders opportunity to produce
    cash crops (cocoa, coffee, cotton) where
    Europeans not allowed large tracts of land (W.
    Africa, Uganda)
  • urban areas educated Africans (civil servants,
    clerks, bookkeepers, etc) female property owners

25
Colonialism Impact
  • Underdevelopment of Africa
  • Modern underdevelopment expresses a particular
    relationship of exploitation.All of the
    countries named as underdeveloped in the world
    are exploited by others and the underdevelopment
    with which the world is now pre-occupied is a
    product of capitalist, imperialist and
    colonialist exploitation. (Walter Rodney)

26
Colonialism Responses
  • Political participation
  • N. Africa mass nationalist politics
  • W. Africa small educated African elite trying
    for full rights for educated Africans, decreasing
    power of appointed chiefs
  • Rebellions often due to repressive land, labour,
    tax policies
  • e.g. Zulus in SA 1906 anti-poll tax
  • Tanganyika, Maji-Maji insurrection against German
    rule 1905
  • Resistance through religious movements
  • where few formal political outlets

27
Colonialism Responses
  • Womens resistance
  • market women in Dahomey rioted against high taxes
    and colonial authorities harassment
  • Urban associations
  • Based on ethnicity, place of origin, economic
    activities, class
  • e.g. savings associations, burial societies,
    craft guilds, market womens groups

28
Colonialism
  • But some African support for European governance
  • grateful for release from slavery
  • privileges from association with Europeans
  • Europeans considered civilising force that
    provided opportunities for social mobility
    regardless of previous status

29
Christianity
  • Allies of colonialists vs. allies of Africans
  • Teaching of white superiority vs. providing
    nationalists with tools for confronting system
  • Established hospitals, medicines, refugee camps
    vs. destruction of African customs
  • Independent African churches
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