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Acholi Intellectuals: Knowledge, Power, and the Making of Colonial Northern Uganda, 1850–1960: New African Histories

Autor Patrick William Otim
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 feb 2024
Acholi Intellectuals draws on the writings of homespun historians, interviews with elderly men and women who remember the last days of colonial rule, and government and missionary archives to illuminate the intellectual and political history of the colonial transition in northern Uganda. The book focuses on Acholiland, a place that has been chronically understudied in comparison to Uganda’s rich, fertile, and well-documented south. Southerners there—following the depictions of colonial officials and missionaries—have often regarded northerners as uncultured people lacking ideas. Acholi Intellectuals challenges this prejudice, bringing into view a whole category of men (and a few women) who mediated between indigenous and colonial knowledge systems and inaugurated a new kind of politics. Patrick William Otim studies a category of people—known as healers, messengers, war leaders, poet-musicians, and diplomats—who possessed prestige and power in an older Acholi political logic and who, in the dawning days of colonial government, came to occupy positions of power in the British administration. Otim argues that these Acholi intellectuals were not simply creatures of British colonial self-interest; neither was their power invented by the coercive logic of indirect rule. He asserts instead that people who held moral and social power in the older system were able to transform that strength, under colonial administration, into a new form of political legitimacy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780821411469
ISBN-10: 0821411462
Pagini: 302
Ilustrații: 1
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Editura: Ohio University Press
Colecția Ohio University Press
Seria New African Histories


Recenzii

“An important project … an impressive achievement.”', Joel Cabrita, author of Text and Authority in the South African Nazaretha Church

"A compelling piece of original research.” —Leslie James, author of George Padmore and Decolonization from Below: Pan-Africanism, the Cold War, and the End of Empire, 1939–1959

Patrick William Otim has written a fascinating, innovative, and meticulously documented account of Acholi history. He shows that intellectuals who played major roles before conquest worked to create an Acholi-inflected version of colonial society. We were mistaken to imagine that the most important post-conquest transformations revolved around chiefs. Instead, people who were already influential in the realm of symbolism and knowledge reimagined and recreated their own society. —Steven Feierman, University of Pennsylvania
A landmark study in African intellectual history. Patrick William Otim’s Acholi Intellectuals puts the acquisition and deployment of erudition and skill at the center of the contradictions and ironies shaping this region’s political-cultural history. In accessible prose and well-chosen detail, Otim demonstrates that complex networks of elder men and women cultivated skill and ambition among a small number of exceptional Africans who reinvented power in a fractious nineteenth century, a short colonial century of administration and bureaucracy, and a later twentieth century of nationalist frictions. —David Schoenbrun, Northwestern University
Engagingly and intimately written, Acholi Intellectuals reveals how Acholi cultivated talent across a broad sweep of nineteenth and twentieth century East African history, and how historical actors both seized the opportunities and navigated the perils that successive political regimes offered. Focused on the lives of healers, war leaders, and royal messengers—who became clerks, translators, converts, writers, and elders—Patrick William Otim has written a masterful study that sets a new standard for the study of exemplary individuals in African history. —Daniel Magaziner, Yale University

Notă biografică

Patrick William Otim is an associate professor of history at Bates College and affiliated faculty at the Africana Program. He is a historian of East Africa with a particular interest in northern Uganda. His work has appeared in the Journal of Eastern African Studies, Critical African Studies, International Journal of African Historical Studies, Canadian Journal of African Studies, History in Africa, and Stichproben-Vienna Journal of African Studies, among other places.

Cuprins

List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction The Forgotten Acholi Intellectuals 1
Chapter 1 Acholiland, 1850–1911: An Overview 27
Chapter 2 Power and Authority: The Making of Acholi Intellectuals 48
Chapter 3 The Roles of Court Officials: Acholi Intellectuals and the Functioning of Their Chiefdoms 75
Chapter 4 The Introduction of Christianity: Acholi Intellectuals and the Spread of the New Religion 101
Chapter 5 The Demise of the Old Order: Acholi Intellectuals and the Spread of Colonial Rule 141
Chapter 6 The Intellectual Lives of the Transitional Acholi, 1920s–1960 173
Epilogue The Destruction of Acholi Intellectuals 204
Glossary of Selected Local Terms 215
Source Abbreviations 219
Notes 221
Bibliography 267
Index 279

Descriere

Patrick William Otim argues that the Acholi people of northern Uganda, who helped Europeans spread colonial rule and Christianity, were far more politically savvy than previously understood.