Mfecane Aftermath: Reconstructive Debates in Southern African History

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Carolyn Hamilton
Indiana University Press, 1995 - 493 Seiten
A guide for interpreting the mfecane's role in history Was the mfecane a figment of historians' imagination as Julian Cobbing contends? How large a responsibility do Shaka and the Zulu people bear for the social turbulence in South-central and South-east Africa in the early decades of the 19th century? These are some of the issues explored in this collection, which is designed as a response to the radical critique of Dr. Cobbing and other scholars. The mfecane, suggests Cobbing, must be seen as a myth lying at the root of a set of interlinked assumptions and distortions that have seriously twisted our understanding of the main historical processes of late 18th- and early 19th-century Southern Africa. Contributors to this collection assess the implications of this critique for scholars from a range of disciplines, notably history, anthropology, archaeology, history of art and African languages. But the book is not only about the debate over Cobbing's work; it is also an indicator of the state of current scholarship in Southern Africa in the 18th and 19th centuries and, because it raises questions about the nature of sources and, indeed, about the nature of historical debate itself, it is also about historiography. This book should provide a useful guide for students starting out in this field, as well as a resource for established scholars seeking their way through the textual intricacies of varied editions and secondary texts that become the primary sources for historiographical debate.

Im Buch

Inhalt

Putting the Mfecane Controversy into Historiographical Context
13
Untapped Sources
16
PreCobbing Mfecane Historiography 21
21
Old Wine in New Bottles
35
Maps
44
HunterGatherers Traders and Slaves
51
Language and Assassination
71
Beyond the Concept of the Zulu Explosion
107
Unmasking the Fingo
241
Fingo entry into the Cape colony
260
The Mfecane Survives its Critics
277
The time of troubles
301
Archaeological Indicators for Stress in the Western
307
The Transvaal showing archaeological sites
310
Prelude to Difaqane in the Interior of Southern Africa
323
Conflict in the Western HighveldSouthern Kalahari
351

The coast of southeastern Africa
122
The DelagoaMzimkhulu region
162
Political Transformations in the ThukelaMzimkhulu
163
The Character and Objects of Chaka
183
Matiwanes Road to Mbholompo
213
The position of African peoples 1834
240
The highveld in the early nineteenth century
362
Hungry Wolves
363
The central and northern highveld
394
Overland trade routes in southwestern Africa up to 1840
418
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Autoren-Profil (1995)

Carolyn Hamilton is the South African Research Chair in Archive and Public Culture at the University of Cape Town. She is the author of Terrific Majesty, and co-editor of Refiguring the Archive, The Cambridge History of South Africa and Babel Unbound.

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