Runaway Slaves and the Aftermath of Slavery on the Swahili Coast

Pub Date : 2021-10-27 DOI:10.1163/2405836x-00603003
Clélia Coret
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Abstract

Along the East African coast, marronage increased in the 19th century as a consequence of the intensification of the slave trade and the development of a plantation economy based on slave labor. Research on the fugitive slaves on the Swahili coast has been conducted since the 1980s and has mainly highlighted the ambivalent relationship (between rejection and belonging) of maroons with the dominant coastal culture—that of the slave owners, shaped in particular by Islam and urbanity. This article goes beyond the existing interpretations by showing that the aftermath of slavery often consisted of a range of options, less static than those described so far and less focused on opting either into or out of coastal culture. Relying on a case study in present-day Kenya and drawing from European written sources and interviews, I examine what happened to escaped slaves in the Witu region, where a Swahili city-state was founded in 1862. Their history is examined through a spatial analysis and the modalities of their economic and social participation in regional dynamics, showing that no single cultural influence was hegemonic in this region.
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逃跑的奴隶和斯瓦希里海岸奴隶制的后果
19世纪,随着奴隶贸易的加剧和以奴隶劳动为基础的种植园经济的发展,沿着东非海岸,婚姻不断增加。自20世纪80年代以来,对斯瓦希里海岸逃亡奴隶的研究主要强调了逃亡奴隶与主要的沿海文化的矛盾关系(在排斥和归属之间)-奴隶主的文化,特别是伊斯兰教和都市化。这篇文章超越了现有的解释,表明奴隶制的后果通常由一系列选择组成,不像迄今为止所描述的那样一成不变,也不太关注选择进入或退出沿海文化。通过对当今肯尼亚的案例研究,并借鉴欧洲的书面资料和采访,我研究了1862年斯瓦希里语城邦建立的维图地区逃亡奴隶的遭遇。通过空间分析及其在区域动态中的经济和社会参与模式,研究了它们的历史,表明没有单一的文化影响在该地区占据主导地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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