混血儿:从Barbara Kimenye的生活史看20世纪50年代至60年代坎帕拉的种族、阶级和性别

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES Journal of Eastern African Studies Pub Date : 2022-07-03 DOI:10.1080/17531055.2022.2163469
Anna Adima
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引用次数: 0

摘要

活跃的社会场景、知识分子中心和形形色色的名流:这就是20世纪50年代末和60年代初的坎帕拉。这座城市因其“玫瑰色”的种族关系而享有自由的声誉,吸引了来自非洲和世界各地的思想家和社会名流。芭芭拉·基门耶(Barbara Kimenye)是一位拥有英国和加勒比双重血统的黑人混血女性,她自称是乌干达人,是“东非最多产的儿童作家之一”,正是在这个独特的空间里,她感动了。对她在乌干达首都生活的考察,揭示了英国殖民主义在20世纪50年代和60年代坎帕拉带来的种族和阶级的本质。作为一名混血女性,Kimenye占据了一个独特的地位,她生活在乌干达黑人和白人侨民社区的交汇处。作为一个经济困难的两个孩子的单身母亲,她在坎帕拉精英圈的运动在一定程度上是因为她接近白人。本文将借鉴Kimenye的系列回忆录和其他档案资料,展示她的独特地位如何挑战种族和阶级的殖民分类,突出其非实质性和多孔性,并提供对后殖民时期东非城市性质的新理解。
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Mixed-ish: race, class and gender in 1950s–60s Kampala through a life history of Barbara Kimenye
ABSTRACT Vibrant social scene, intellectual hub and diverse glitterati: this was Kampala for its beau monde in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The city enjoyed a liberal reputation with ‘rosy’ race relations, attracting thinkers and socialites from across Africa and the world. It was in this singular space that Barbara Kimenye, a Black mixed-race woman of dual English and Caribbean heritage, self-identified Ugandan, and ‘one of East Africa’s most prolific children’s writers’, moved. An examination of her life in the Ugandan capital illuminates the nature of race and class, as brought about by British colonialism, in 1950s and 1960s Kampala. As a mixed-race woman, Kimenye occupied a unique position, living at the intersections of Black Ugandan and white expatriate communities. Her movement in Kampala’s elite circles, as an economically challenged single mother of two, was in part enabled through her proximity to whiteness. Drawing on Kimenye’s serialised memoirs and other archival sources, this article will demonstrate how her unique positionality challenged colonial taxonomies of race and class, highlighting their insubstantial and porous nature, and providing a new understanding of the nature of the post-colonial East African city.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
12
期刊介绍: Journal of Eastern African Studies is an international publication of the British Institute in Eastern Africa, published four times each year. It aims to promote fresh scholarly enquiry on the region from within the humanities and the social sciences, and to encourage work that communicates across disciplinary boundaries. It seeks to foster inter-disciplinary analysis, strong comparative perspectives, and research employing the most significant theoretical or methodological approaches for the region.
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