Making Martial Races
Gender, Society, and Warfare in Africa
Herausgeber: Osborne, Myles
Making Martial Races
Gender, Society, and Warfare in Africa
Herausgeber: Osborne, Myles
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Featuring contributions by new and established Africanist scholars, this volume is the first book-length treatment of â martial raceâ in Africa.
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Featuring contributions by new and established Africanist scholars, this volume is the first book-length treatment of â martial raceâ in Africa.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- War and Militarism in African History
- Verlag: Ohio University Press
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 150mm x 229mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 494g
- ISBN-13: 9780821426180
- ISBN-10: 0821426184
- Artikelnr.: 68886917
- War and Militarism in African History
- Verlag: Ohio University Press
- Seitenzahl: 348
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 150mm x 229mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 494g
- ISBN-13: 9780821426180
- ISBN-10: 0821426184
- Artikelnr.: 68886917
Myles Osborne is an associate professor of history at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He is the author of Ethnicity and Empire in Kenya: Loyalty and Martial Race among the Kamba, c. 1800 to the Present, coauthor of Africans and Britons in the Age of Empires, 1660-1980, and editor of The Life and Times of General China: Mau Mau and the End of Empire in Kenya .
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Martial Races in African History MYLES OSBORNE
1 In Mombasa They Are “Like Prisoners” to the Mijikenda: Martiality, Trade,
and Inland Influences on a Swahili Port City DAVID BRESNAHAN
2 Martial Races in Alawite and French Protectorate Morocco: Black Soldiers,
Slavery, and Women’s Labor in the Abid al-Bukhari and Tirailleurs
Sénégalais SARAH J. ZIMMERMAN
3 A Question of Interpretation: Warfare and Martial Race Theory in West
Africa SARAH DAVIS WESTWOOD
4 “Black Skin, White Heart:” The Construction of the Martial Race Category
in French West Africa STÉPHANIE SOUBRIER
5 Women, Militarism, and Martial Identities among the Acholi of Northern
Uganda, 1800–1962 LUCY TAYLOR
6 “To Cool the Hot Blood of a Martial Race:” Balancing Zulu Martiality and
British Colonial Anxieties, 1879–1906 LIZ TIMBS
7 “Brotherhood That Binds the Brave:” Sudanese Soldiers and the Paradox of
Martial Identities in the Age of Empire RON LAMOTHE and MICHELLE MOYD
8 From “Savage” to “Serviceable:” Changing Attitudes toward a Martial
African Society in German East Africa STEVEN FABIAN
9 The Yoruba as a “Martial Race:” The History of an Idea and Its
Alternatives, 1890–1960 OLIVER COATES
10 From Martial Races to a People’s Army: Decolonization and Martial
Identity in Tanzania CHARLES G. THOMAS
Afterword: Martial Races in Africa and India HEATHER STREETS-SALTER
Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Martial Races in African History MYLES OSBORNE
1 In Mombasa They Are “Like Prisoners” to the Mijikenda: Martiality, Trade,
and Inland Influences on a Swahili Port City DAVID BRESNAHAN
2 Martial Races in Alawite and French Protectorate Morocco: Black Soldiers,
Slavery, and Women’s Labor in the Abid al-Bukhari and Tirailleurs
Sénégalais SARAH J. ZIMMERMAN
3 A Question of Interpretation: Warfare and Martial Race Theory in West
Africa SARAH DAVIS WESTWOOD
4 “Black Skin, White Heart:” The Construction of the Martial Race Category
in French West Africa STÉPHANIE SOUBRIER
5 Women, Militarism, and Martial Identities among the Acholi of Northern
Uganda, 1800–1962 LUCY TAYLOR
6 “To Cool the Hot Blood of a Martial Race:” Balancing Zulu Martiality and
British Colonial Anxieties, 1879–1906 LIZ TIMBS
7 “Brotherhood That Binds the Brave:” Sudanese Soldiers and the Paradox of
Martial Identities in the Age of Empire RON LAMOTHE and MICHELLE MOYD
8 From “Savage” to “Serviceable:” Changing Attitudes toward a Martial
African Society in German East Africa STEVEN FABIAN
9 The Yoruba as a “Martial Race:” The History of an Idea and Its
Alternatives, 1890–1960 OLIVER COATES
10 From Martial Races to a People’s Army: Decolonization and Martial
Identity in Tanzania CHARLES G. THOMAS
Afterword: Martial Races in Africa and India HEATHER STREETS-SALTER
Contributors
Index
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Martial Races in African History MYLES OSBORNE
1 In Mombasa They Are “Like Prisoners” to the Mijikenda: Martiality, Trade,
and Inland Influences on a Swahili Port City DAVID BRESNAHAN
2 Martial Races in Alawite and French Protectorate Morocco: Black Soldiers,
Slavery, and Women’s Labor in the Abid al-Bukhari and Tirailleurs
Sénégalais SARAH J. ZIMMERMAN
3 A Question of Interpretation: Warfare and Martial Race Theory in West
Africa SARAH DAVIS WESTWOOD
4 “Black Skin, White Heart:” The Construction of the Martial Race Category
in French West Africa STÉPHANIE SOUBRIER
5 Women, Militarism, and Martial Identities among the Acholi of Northern
Uganda, 1800–1962 LUCY TAYLOR
6 “To Cool the Hot Blood of a Martial Race:” Balancing Zulu Martiality and
British Colonial Anxieties, 1879–1906 LIZ TIMBS
7 “Brotherhood That Binds the Brave:” Sudanese Soldiers and the Paradox of
Martial Identities in the Age of Empire RON LAMOTHE and MICHELLE MOYD
8 From “Savage” to “Serviceable:” Changing Attitudes toward a Martial
African Society in German East Africa STEVEN FABIAN
9 The Yoruba as a “Martial Race:” The History of an Idea and Its
Alternatives, 1890–1960 OLIVER COATES
10 From Martial Races to a People’s Army: Decolonization and Martial
Identity in Tanzania CHARLES G. THOMAS
Afterword: Martial Races in Africa and India HEATHER STREETS-SALTER
Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Martial Races in African History MYLES OSBORNE
1 In Mombasa They Are “Like Prisoners” to the Mijikenda: Martiality, Trade,
and Inland Influences on a Swahili Port City DAVID BRESNAHAN
2 Martial Races in Alawite and French Protectorate Morocco: Black Soldiers,
Slavery, and Women’s Labor in the Abid al-Bukhari and Tirailleurs
Sénégalais SARAH J. ZIMMERMAN
3 A Question of Interpretation: Warfare and Martial Race Theory in West
Africa SARAH DAVIS WESTWOOD
4 “Black Skin, White Heart:” The Construction of the Martial Race Category
in French West Africa STÉPHANIE SOUBRIER
5 Women, Militarism, and Martial Identities among the Acholi of Northern
Uganda, 1800–1962 LUCY TAYLOR
6 “To Cool the Hot Blood of a Martial Race:” Balancing Zulu Martiality and
British Colonial Anxieties, 1879–1906 LIZ TIMBS
7 “Brotherhood That Binds the Brave:” Sudanese Soldiers and the Paradox of
Martial Identities in the Age of Empire RON LAMOTHE and MICHELLE MOYD
8 From “Savage” to “Serviceable:” Changing Attitudes toward a Martial
African Society in German East Africa STEVEN FABIAN
9 The Yoruba as a “Martial Race:” The History of an Idea and Its
Alternatives, 1890–1960 OLIVER COATES
10 From Martial Races to a People’s Army: Decolonization and Martial
Identity in Tanzania CHARLES G. THOMAS
Afterword: Martial Races in Africa and India HEATHER STREETS-SALTER
Contributors
Index