Migration and Forced Labor in the Social Imaginary of Southern Mozambique, 1920–1964

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2016-11-16 DOI:10.1353/AEH.2016.0005
H. Hernández
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper revisits the historiography of forced labor and mobility in southern Mozambique during the Portuguese colonial era by reexamining several key works in the field. It seeks to understand how the population of southern Mozambique constructed a social imaginary on the margins of the civilizational fiction designed by colonial rule. Avoiding a state-centered or legalistic reading of this history, the article stresses the fragility of the colonial/modern design and the fundamentally compulsory character of colonial labor, and contrasts these against the diverse responses developed by colonial subjects. In particular, the article seeks to understand how the “repertoires of power” that colonial rulers used to consolidate their power reframed the processes of migration and social mobility. Colonial rule altered preexisting practices and conceptions of mobility within southern Mozambique, transforming them into exercises more analogous to domestic forms of resistance. As the dynamics of social mobility preceded the formation of the modern/colonial state, they can be reconstituted as a parallel logic and rationality, which existed alongside the constructions of the colonial enterprise; as a result, many of the policies undertaken by the colonial state were primarily geared toward ending this relative autonomy and controlling the movement of the colonized population.
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1920-1964年莫桑比克南部社会想象中的移民和强迫劳动
本文通过重新审视该领域的几项关键工作,重新审视了葡萄牙殖民时期莫桑比克南部强迫劳动和流动的史学。它试图理解莫桑比克南部的居民是如何在殖民统治所设计的文明小说的边缘构建社会想象的。本文避免以国家为中心或法律主义的解读这段历史,强调殖民/现代设计的脆弱性和殖民劳动的基本强制性特征,并将这些与殖民主体的不同反应进行对比。特别是,本文试图理解殖民统治者用来巩固其权力的“权力手段”是如何重塑移民和社会流动的过程的。殖民统治改变了莫桑比克南部原有的流动做法和概念,使其更类似于国内形式的抵抗。由于社会流动的动力先于现代/殖民国家的形成,它们可以被重构为一种平行的逻辑和理性,它与殖民企业的建构并存;因此,殖民国家采取的许多政策主要是为了结束这种相对自治和控制殖民地人口的流动。
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