“Wives Wishing to Join Their Husbands”: Colonial Forgery, Gender Legibility, and Labor Migration in West Africa

Q1 Arts and Humanities History in Africa Pub Date : 2022-06-01 DOI:10.1017/hia.2022.3
Ndubueze L. Mbah
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Abstract

Abstract European mobilizations of Africans for labor relied on the forgery that Africans can be harnessed into modern units of capitalist production only when organized into households led by wage-earning men supported by domesticated women. Between the 1930s and 1950s, Nigerian male labor migrants to Fernando Po and Gabon, as well as their wives, advanced diverse forgeries in response to the legibility protocols that European states used to control African migrants. Nigerian men used colonial documentation of their status as husbands to claim women’s bodies. Nigerian women used colonial documentation as wives and mothers to mask autonomy, illicit mobility, child trafficking, and sex work. This article develops a historical theory of forgery to explain how colonial legibility protocols and African manipulations of colonial documents constituted gendering practices. It focuses on the diverse documentary strategies women developed to evade colonial surveillance, including photographs to manufacture kinship and colonial court records to generate identities as temporary wives and fictive mothers. As European agents and African men strove to exploit women’s economic and sexual capacities, women used documentary and social forgeries to exploit fissures in colonial rule and create autonomous spaces of mobility and economic opportunity.
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“希望与丈夫团聚的妻子”:西非的殖民伪造、性别易读性和劳动力迁移
欧洲对非洲劳动力的动员依赖于这样一种假象,即只有当非洲人被组织成由工薪男性领导、由家庭妇女支持的家庭时,非洲人才能被利用到资本主义生产的现代单位中。在20世纪30年代到50年代之间,移民到费尔南多波和加蓬的尼日利亚男性劳工,以及他们的妻子,为了回应欧洲国家用来控制非洲移民的易读性协议,制造了各种伪造品。尼日利亚男人利用殖民时期的丈夫身份文件来占有女人的身体。尼日利亚妇女利用殖民时期的文件作为妻子和母亲来掩盖自主、非法流动、贩卖儿童和性工作。本文发展了一种伪造的历史理论,以解释殖民易读性协议和非洲对殖民文件的操纵如何构成性别实践。它重点关注妇女为逃避殖民监视而制定的各种记录策略,包括拍摄照片以制造亲属关系和殖民法庭记录,以产生临时妻子和虚构母亲的身份。当欧洲代理人和非洲男子努力利用妇女的经济和性能力时,妇女利用文献和社会伪造来利用殖民统治的裂缝,创造自主的流动空间和经济机会。
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来源期刊
History in Africa
History in Africa Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
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