Nationalism and Territoriality in Barue and Mozambique: Independence, Belonging, Contradiction: Afrika-Studiecentrum Series, cartea 39
Autor André Van Dokkumen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 mai 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004428416
ISBN-10: 9004428410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Afrika-Studiecentrum Series
ISBN-10: 9004428410
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Afrika-Studiecentrum Series
Cuprins
Preface and Acknowledgements
Acronyms, Abbreviations, Symbols and Names
List of Maps, Figures and Tables
1 Introduction and Outline of the Argument
1 Data Collection: Written Historical Data; Aspects of Fieldwork; Oral Data
2 Theoretical Aspects
3 Terminology
3.1 The Concept of ‘Nation’ and Mozambique
3.2 State
3.3 Ethnicity and Different Manifestations of Nationalism in Postcolonial Africa
4 Outline of the Book
2 The Kingdom of Barue: The Desire for Independence
1Introductory Comments
1.1 Dynastic Politics
1.2 Beliefs about Spirit Mediums
1.3 Languages and Ethnic Groups
1.4 Economic Aspects
1.5 Open Questions
2 Borders, Capital, and Population of the Kingdom of Barue
2.1 Borders
2.2 Capital
2.3 Population Numbers; Fighting Force of the Army
3 The Mutapa State and the Formation of the Kingdom of Barue
4 The Arrival of the Portuguese at the Lower Zambezi; the Prazos
5 Barue as an Independent State
6 Makombe Gunguru
7 After Gunguru until the Mid-Nineteenth Century
8 The Efforts to Maintain Independence c. 1853–1918
8.1 Genealogical Aspects
8.2 Activities and Defeat of Chipapata/Kabudu Kagoro
8.3 Activities of Kanga until 1890
8.4 Barue’s Independence, 1890/1892–1902
8.5 The Interbellum 1902–1917
8.6 The Barue Revolt of 1917–1918
9 Reflections on Barue as a State
Intermezzo– From Precolonial Barue to Postcolonial Mozambique
3 Frelimo and other Anticolonial Organizations until 1975
1 Early Frelimo History
1.1 Early Activities
1.2 The Mueda Massacre
1.3 manu, udenamo, and unami, and the Frelimo Merger
1.4 Mondlane’s Rise as Frelimo Leader
1.5The Consolidation Meeting
1.6 Frelimo’s First Congress
1.7 Some Preliminary Notes on ‘Definitions of the Enemy’
2 Developments within Frelimo 1962–1966
3 The October 1966 Meeting of the Central Committee
4 Frelimo’s Difficulties with Students in 1967 and 1968
5 The Assaults on Frelimo’s Office in May 1968
6 Frelimo’s Second Congress
6.1 Planning for the Second Congress
6.2 Procedural Aspects and Results of the Second Congress
6.3 The Presidential Vote at the Second Congress
7 Aftermath of the Second Congress
7.1 The Second Session of the Central Committee
7.2 Nkavandame’s Expulsion from Frelimo
8 Mondlane’s Assassination and Subsequent Developments within Frelimo
9 ‘Race’, Ethnicity, and Nationality with Frelimo and Mondlane
9.1 ‘Race’
9.2 Ethnicity
9.3 Nationalism with Mondlane, Dos Santos, and Machel
9.4 Nationhood: the Case of Rumbézia
10 Mondlane and Marxist Ideology
11 Conclusions Concerning Frelimo’s Internal Crisis
12 coremo and Other Non-Frelimo Anticolonial Organizations
13 Portuguese and Western International Reactions to the Anticolonial Insurrection
14 Euro-American Reactions to the 1966–1970 Crisis within Frelimo
15 Conclusion
4 After Independence: Frelimo’s Struggle for a One-Party Nation
1 The End of the New State and Related Events
2 Multipartyism, State-Building, and the ‘Third Wave’ Hypothesis
3 Suspension of Habeas Corpus and the Nachingwea proceedings
4 Events Shortly after Independence
5 Frelimo and Hereditary Leaders in Rural Areas
6 The Emergence and Development of Renamo, 1976–1986
7 Other Developments 1977–1987
8 The Peace Process
9 Constitutional Change
10 Legislation on ‘Traditional Authorities’ and ‘Community Authorities’
11 The Earliest Multiparty Elections
11.1 The 1994 General and Presidential Elections
11.2 The 1998 Local Elections
11.3 The 1999 General and Presidential Elections
11.4 Credibility of Elections
12 The Emergence of mdm and the Re-emergence of Frelimo/Renamo Hostilities
13 Conclusion
intermezzo– Barue District’s Political Predicaments
5 Chiefdom Politics in Barue District
1 Administrative Developments
2 Spirit Mediums
3 Mpanze
4 Sanhantamba
5 Sanhatunze
6 Samanhanga
7 The Former Tangwena Chiefdom in Barue
8 Seguma
9 Sabão
10 Bango/Macufa (Chôa)
11 Sahatsiro
12 Sanhamáuè
13 The Chôa Area Leadership Competition Problem and Involvement of the Populatio
14 Saluanza
15 Conclusion
6 Aspects of Frelimo Party Politics in Barue District
1 Background of the Cell/Circle System
2 Leadership in Cells and Circles, and Party-Political Representativeness of a Sample of Cells
3 Circle Secretaries of Tongogara and Sabão
4 Community Leaders (Líderes Comunitários)
5 Other Local Leaders within the Frelimo Party or the Government
6 Bureaucratic Devices Employed by Frelimo to Control the Population
7 Other Forms of Checking the Population
8 Conclusion 1
7 Conclusion
Appendix 1 Nations as Human Collectivities: Some Theoretical Considerations
1 Culture and Nation as Possibly Contested
2 Delineations of ‘Nation’
Appendix 2 The Wieschhoff/Shungano list of the Makombe dynasty
Appendix 3 Partial overview of reigning Makombes
Appendix 4 The 1999 presidential election in Mozambique
1 Approach
2 Data
3 Trends in the Data
4Brancos in included editais
5 Excluded Editais
6 Reconstructing Excluded Editais
7 Conclusion
Maps
References
Index
Acronyms, Abbreviations, Symbols and Names
List of Maps, Figures and Tables
1 Introduction and Outline of the Argument
1 Data Collection: Written Historical Data; Aspects of Fieldwork; Oral Data
2 Theoretical Aspects
3 Terminology
3.1 The Concept of ‘Nation’ and Mozambique
3.2 State
3.3 Ethnicity and Different Manifestations of Nationalism in Postcolonial Africa
4 Outline of the Book
2 The Kingdom of Barue: The Desire for Independence
1Introductory Comments
1.1 Dynastic Politics
1.2 Beliefs about Spirit Mediums
1.3 Languages and Ethnic Groups
1.4 Economic Aspects
1.5 Open Questions
2 Borders, Capital, and Population of the Kingdom of Barue
2.1 Borders
2.2 Capital
2.3 Population Numbers; Fighting Force of the Army
3 The Mutapa State and the Formation of the Kingdom of Barue
4 The Arrival of the Portuguese at the Lower Zambezi; the Prazos
5 Barue as an Independent State
6 Makombe Gunguru
7 After Gunguru until the Mid-Nineteenth Century
8 The Efforts to Maintain Independence c. 1853–1918
8.1 Genealogical Aspects
8.2 Activities and Defeat of Chipapata/Kabudu Kagoro
8.3 Activities of Kanga until 1890
8.4 Barue’s Independence, 1890/1892–1902
8.5 The Interbellum 1902–1917
8.6 The Barue Revolt of 1917–1918
9 Reflections on Barue as a State
Intermezzo– From Precolonial Barue to Postcolonial Mozambique
3 Frelimo and other Anticolonial Organizations until 1975
1 Early Frelimo History
1.1 Early Activities
1.2 The Mueda Massacre
1.3 manu, udenamo, and unami, and the Frelimo Merger
1.4 Mondlane’s Rise as Frelimo Leader
1.5The Consolidation Meeting
1.6 Frelimo’s First Congress
1.7 Some Preliminary Notes on ‘Definitions of the Enemy’
2 Developments within Frelimo 1962–1966
3 The October 1966 Meeting of the Central Committee
4 Frelimo’s Difficulties with Students in 1967 and 1968
5 The Assaults on Frelimo’s Office in May 1968
6 Frelimo’s Second Congress
6.1 Planning for the Second Congress
6.2 Procedural Aspects and Results of the Second Congress
6.3 The Presidential Vote at the Second Congress
7 Aftermath of the Second Congress
7.1 The Second Session of the Central Committee
7.2 Nkavandame’s Expulsion from Frelimo
8 Mondlane’s Assassination and Subsequent Developments within Frelimo
9 ‘Race’, Ethnicity, and Nationality with Frelimo and Mondlane
9.1 ‘Race’
9.2 Ethnicity
9.3 Nationalism with Mondlane, Dos Santos, and Machel
9.4 Nationhood: the Case of Rumbézia
10 Mondlane and Marxist Ideology
11 Conclusions Concerning Frelimo’s Internal Crisis
12 coremo and Other Non-Frelimo Anticolonial Organizations
13 Portuguese and Western International Reactions to the Anticolonial Insurrection
14 Euro-American Reactions to the 1966–1970 Crisis within Frelimo
15 Conclusion
4 After Independence: Frelimo’s Struggle for a One-Party Nation
1 The End of the New State and Related Events
2 Multipartyism, State-Building, and the ‘Third Wave’ Hypothesis
3 Suspension of Habeas Corpus and the Nachingwea proceedings
4 Events Shortly after Independence
5 Frelimo and Hereditary Leaders in Rural Areas
6 The Emergence and Development of Renamo, 1976–1986
7 Other Developments 1977–1987
8 The Peace Process
9 Constitutional Change
10 Legislation on ‘Traditional Authorities’ and ‘Community Authorities’
11 The Earliest Multiparty Elections
11.1 The 1994 General and Presidential Elections
11.2 The 1998 Local Elections
11.3 The 1999 General and Presidential Elections
11.4 Credibility of Elections
12 The Emergence of mdm and the Re-emergence of Frelimo/Renamo Hostilities
13 Conclusion
intermezzo– Barue District’s Political Predicaments
5 Chiefdom Politics in Barue District
1 Administrative Developments
2 Spirit Mediums
3 Mpanze
4 Sanhantamba
5 Sanhatunze
6 Samanhanga
7 The Former Tangwena Chiefdom in Barue
8 Seguma
9 Sabão
10 Bango/Macufa (Chôa)
11 Sahatsiro
12 Sanhamáuè
13 The Chôa Area Leadership Competition Problem and Involvement of the Populatio
14 Saluanza
15 Conclusion
6 Aspects of Frelimo Party Politics in Barue District
1 Background of the Cell/Circle System
2 Leadership in Cells and Circles, and Party-Political Representativeness of a Sample of Cells
3 Circle Secretaries of Tongogara and Sabão
4 Community Leaders (Líderes Comunitários)
5 Other Local Leaders within the Frelimo Party or the Government
6 Bureaucratic Devices Employed by Frelimo to Control the Population
7 Other Forms of Checking the Population
8 Conclusion 1
7 Conclusion
Appendix 1 Nations as Human Collectivities: Some Theoretical Considerations
1 Culture and Nation as Possibly Contested
2 Delineations of ‘Nation’
Appendix 2 The Wieschhoff/Shungano list of the Makombe dynasty
Appendix 3 Partial overview of reigning Makombes
Appendix 4 The 1999 presidential election in Mozambique
1 Approach
2 Data
3 Trends in the Data
4Brancos in included editais
5 Excluded Editais
6 Reconstructing Excluded Editais
7 Conclusion
Maps
References
Index
Notă biografică
André van Dokkum, Ph.D. (2015), VU University Amsterdam, is Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Macau. He published two edited volumes on Africanist topics, with G.J. Abbink: Verdeeld Afrika (AMB, 2008) and Dilemmas of Development (African Studies Centre, 2008).
Recenzii
'André van Dokkum’s book on the precolonial and postcolonial history of Barue and Mozambique is, in some ways, several different books in one: a detailed history of the precolonial Kingdom in Barue; an analysis of political infighting within Mozambique’s ruling party, FRELIMO, as it accumulated power before and after decolonization; a close study of how chiefs and FRELIMO exercise power in present-day Mozambique; and atheoretical attempt to locate both precolonial Barue and postcolonial Mozambique within a matrix of different definitions of the nation-state'.
[...]'Overall, the depth of the book’s research will make it important reading for scholars interested in comparative political analyses of precolonial and postcolonial Mozambique'.
Zachary Kagan Guthrie, University of Mississippi, in IJAHS 54, No. 2 (2021), pp 254-256.
"[...] rôle de modèle pour tous les politologues qui seraient tentés de suivre son exemple pour comparer différents types de nationalismes africains"
René Pélissier in Africana Studia 2020 (34), pp 196-198
'The book displays a timeline of Barue and Mozambique's historical interactions in a very innovative manner. The author is successful in accomplishing his goal of providing a thorough framework for comprehending Mozambique's nationalism and state creation. The book will be invaluable to Mozambicans, and indeed to anyone who has an interest in Mozambique politics and history. More significantly, it is a historical record that Mozambicans concerned in the future of their homeland should study and examine. Overall, the book is well written, extremely well organized, and clearly meets the author’s stated purpose. Very few studies have undertaken such an exercise which is engaging and interesting'.
Prem Kumar Bharti, University of Delhi in African Studies Quarterly, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2022), pp 84-86
[...] a most recommended reading. Comparisons of independent precolonial statehood with postcolonial state formation are rare. Van Dokkum’s book is a vanguard research monograph' [...]Petr Skalník in Anthropology Southern Africa 45:4 (2022), pp 248-251
[...]'Overall, the depth of the book’s research will make it important reading for scholars interested in comparative political analyses of precolonial and postcolonial Mozambique'.
Zachary Kagan Guthrie, University of Mississippi, in IJAHS 54, No. 2 (2021), pp 254-256.
"[...] rôle de modèle pour tous les politologues qui seraient tentés de suivre son exemple pour comparer différents types de nationalismes africains"
René Pélissier in Africana Studia 2020 (34), pp 196-198
'The book displays a timeline of Barue and Mozambique's historical interactions in a very innovative manner. The author is successful in accomplishing his goal of providing a thorough framework for comprehending Mozambique's nationalism and state creation. The book will be invaluable to Mozambicans, and indeed to anyone who has an interest in Mozambique politics and history. More significantly, it is a historical record that Mozambicans concerned in the future of their homeland should study and examine. Overall, the book is well written, extremely well organized, and clearly meets the author’s stated purpose. Very few studies have undertaken such an exercise which is engaging and interesting'.
Prem Kumar Bharti, University of Delhi in African Studies Quarterly, Vol. 21, Issue 1 (2022), pp 84-86
[...] a most recommended reading. Comparisons of independent precolonial statehood with postcolonial state formation are rare. Van Dokkum’s book is a vanguard research monograph' [...]Petr Skalník in Anthropology Southern Africa 45:4 (2022), pp 248-251