Dividing Dar: Race, Space, and Colonial Construction in German Occupied Daressalam, 1850–1920

· Africa in Global History Book 10 · Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Ebook
263
Pages
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About this ebook

How did a diversity of intermediaries shape not only the everyday divisions but also the dynamics and growth of the colonial city? This is the central question of Dividing Dar. Focusing on South Asian elites, Askari soldiers and police, and a minority of European settlers, the book illustrates how three continents converged to produce the colonial city in East Africa. Dividing Dar shows how negotiations, ranging from contestation to anti-colonial resistance, derailed German colonial plans to transform African "cosmopolitanism" into neatly divided races and city spaces.

Dividing Dar offers a novel approach to colonial urban history. In contrast to the traditional focus on top-down urban planning, knowledge production, and municipal politics, the book builds on a growing body of literature on colonial intermediaries and urbanism "from the middle" to address questions of historical agency, the construction of sociocultural hierarchies, and the mutations of African urbanism under the forces of German colonial occupation.

About the author

Patrick C. Hege, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin/Ethnological Museum Berlin, Germany.

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