Post-genocide identity politics and colonial durabilities in Rwanda

IF 1.3 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY Critical African Studies Pub Date : 2021-06-21 DOI:10.1080/21681392.2021.1938404
A. Purdeková, David Mwambari
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

While academic literature has long explored the ways in which colonial reification of identity and narratives underpinning unequal racialised status of colonial subjects contributed to cycles of violence in the Great Lakes region, including in Rwanda, few ask the complementary question: Does the colonial legacy imprint on the ‘post-conflict’ era, shaping post-genocide attempts at nation-building and identity re-engineering carried out in the name of the broader project of peacebuilding? Using the conceptual framework of colonial durabilities, we argue that despite explicit attempts to remove the vestiges of colonialism, the colonial past endures, in everyday expressions of identity as well as in grand policies of its reformulation. The current paper aims to trace these vestiges in the transformations of identity politics and nation-building in Rwanda by looking at three distinct arenas: (i) the architecture of de-ethnicisation policy itself; (ii) the stubborn lingering of racialised distinctions in popular culture; and (iii) the rise of ‘new’ social divisions based on the country of exile.
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卢旺达种族灭绝后的身份政治和殖民的持久性
虽然学术文献长期以来一直在探索殖民身份的物化和殖民主体不平等种族化地位的叙述如何助长了包括卢旺达在内的大湖地区的暴力循环,但很少有人提出补充问题:殖民遗产是否在“后冲突”时代留下了印记,影响了以更广泛的建设和平项目的名义进行的种族灭绝后国家建设和身份重新设计的尝试?利用殖民持久性的概念框架,我们认为,尽管明确试图消除殖民主义的痕迹,殖民的过去仍然存在,无论是在日常的身份表达中,还是在其重新制定的重大政策中。本文旨在通过观察三个不同的领域来追踪卢旺达身份政治和国家建设转型中的这些痕迹:(i)去种族化政策本身的架构;(ii)流行文化中顽固的种族化差异;(三)以流亡国为基础的“新”社会分化的兴起。
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来源期刊
Critical African Studies
Critical African Studies Arts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: Critical African Studies seeks to return Africanist scholarship to the heart of theoretical innovation within each of its constituent disciplines, including Anthropology, Political Science, Sociology, History, Law and Economics. We offer authors a more flexible publishing platform than other journals, allowing them greater space to develop empirical discussions alongside theoretical and conceptual engagements. We aim to publish scholarly articles that offer both innovative empirical contributions, grounded in original fieldwork, and also innovative theoretical engagements. This speaks to our broader intention to promote the deployment of thorough empirical work for the purposes of sophisticated theoretical innovation. We invite contributions that meet the aims of the journal, including special issue proposals that offer fresh empirical and theoretical insights into African Studies debates.
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