رکورد قبلیرکورد بعدی

" Contested Foreignness: "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1063528
Doc. No : LA107157
Call No : ‭10.1163/15692108-12341378‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Francis Musoni
Title & Author : Contested Foreignness: [Article] : Indian Migrants and the Politics of Exclusion in Early Colonial Zimbabwe, 1890 to 1923\ Francis Musoni
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : African and Asian Studies
Date : 2017
Volume/ Issue Number : 16/4
Page No : 312–335
Abstract : The British South Africa Company’s conquest of Zimbabwe in the 1890s opened the country to settlement by immigrants from Europe, South Africa, India and other regions. Using their position as benefactors of the emerging colony, the British-born settlers deployed various notions of foreignness to marginalize the indigenous populations and other groups. Focusing on thirty-three years of company rule in Zimbabwe, this article examines how Indian immigrants contested the British attempts to foreignize them in the emerging colony. Rather than presenting Indian migrants as passive victims of discrimination and marginalization, the study emphasizes their creativity and determination to establish their own destiny, against all odds. It also shows that foreignness in colonial Zimbabwe was a key factor in the politics of power, identity formation and nation-state building. In that respect, the article explores the constructed-ness as well as the malleability of foreignness in processes of nation-state formation in Africa. The British South Africa Company’s conquest of Zimbabwe in the 1890s opened the country to settlement by immigrants from Europe, South Africa, India and other regions. Using their position as benefactors of the emerging colony, the British-born settlers deployed various notions of foreignness to marginalize the indigenous populations and other groups. Focusing on thirty-three years of company rule in Zimbabwe, this article examines how Indian immigrants contested the British attempts to foreignize them in the emerging colony. Rather than presenting Indian migrants as passive victims of discrimination and marginalization, the study emphasizes their creativity and determination to establish their own destiny, against all odds. It also shows that foreignness in colonial Zimbabwe was a key factor in the politics of power, identity formation and nation-state building. In that respect, the article explores the constructed-ness as well as the malleability of foreignness in processes of nation-state formation in Africa.
Descriptor : African Studies
Descriptor : Asian Studies
Descriptor : British settlers
Descriptor : colonial Zimbabwe
Descriptor : foreignness
Descriptor : General
Descriptor : Indian immigrants
Descriptor : Middle East and Islamic Studies
Descriptor : Social Sciences
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15692108-12341378‬
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