东非的城市经验(1750-2000)

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2005-01-01 DOI:10.2307/3556935
Andrew Ivaska
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In addition to strong essays exploring colonial cities, the volume devotes considerable attention to precolonial urban forms and the social landscapes of small towns. Its geographical coverage is impressive (Eastern Africa being broadly interpreted here to encompass countries stretching from Ethiopia to Zimbabwe). Not least of its virtues, it brings together scholars based in Africa with colleagues working in North America, the United Kingdom, and Japan to showcase a breadth of methodologies and theoretical concerns. The collection is organized both thematically and broadly chronologically. Following Burton's well-written and comprehensive introduction tracing urban history in the region from the late eighteenth century onwards, the book is divided into four sections: precolonial urban centers, colonial order in urban East Africa, rural-urban interactions, and town life in colonial Nairobi and beyond. In extensively exploring topics that are too often given short shrift in African urban studies, the first and third sections -on precolonial urban formations and the importance to the urban experience of a rural and small-town scene-exhibit what are thematically the volume's most unique contributions. Giacomo Macola's examination of the royal capitals of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Eastern Lunda polities southwest of Lake Tanganyika is notable for his focus on the centrality of these capitals for the construction of a \"Lunda imperial mystique\" that was critical to maintaining royal power. Macola's paper nicely complements Richard Reid's comparative investigation of the relationship between warfare and towns in the Ethiopian highlands and Buganda in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with both contributions making interesting arguments about the place of the urban, both physically and ideologically, in precolonial power. And underlining the importance of the precolonial urban past to the histories of colonial town planning that followed, Abdul Sheriff traces a history of Zanzibar town's precolonial development, one that compellingly situates the notion of a strictly segregated town as a colonial fantasy at odds with precolonial spatial politics. The section on small-town urbanism further enhances the unique character of the volume's thematic concerns. 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引用次数: 7

摘要

约1750-2000年东非的城市经验。安德鲁·伯顿编辑。阿扎尼亚,特别卷三十六至三十七。内罗毕:英国东非研究所,2002年。Pp. ix, 264;48插图。$24.00/£15.00 /肯尼亚先令。1600张纸。近年来,非洲文学在城市历史方面的作品激增。由于社会和文化史的广泛趋势,这项工作已经回到并重振了一个主要由经济历史学家、地理学家和社会学家在20世纪80年代之前的几十年里探索过的领域。安德鲁·伯顿编辑的《1750-2000年东非城市经验》是2000年在内罗毕举行的一次国际会议的成果,它不仅体现了城市历史的新浪潮,而且在许多主题独特和分析富有成效的方向上对其进行了扩展。除了强大的散文探索殖民城市,该卷致力于相当重视前殖民城市形式和小城镇的社会景观。它的地理覆盖范围令人印象深刻(东非在这里被广泛地解释为包括从埃塞俄比亚到津巴布韦的国家)。最重要的是,它将非洲的学者与在北美、英国和日本工作的同事聚集在一起,展示了广泛的方法和理论问题。这些藏品是按主题和大致时间顺序组织的。继伯顿从18世纪后期开始对该地区的城市历史进行了详尽而全面的介绍之后,本书分为四个部分:前殖民时期的城市中心、东非城市的殖民秩序、城乡互动、内罗毕殖民地及其他地区的城镇生活。在广泛探索非洲城市研究中经常被忽视的主题时,第一和第三部分-前殖民时期的城市形成以及农村和小城镇场景的城市经验的重要性-展示了本卷在主题上最独特的贡献。贾科莫·马科拉(Giacomo Macola)对位于坦噶尼喀湖西南的18世纪和19世纪东伦达(Lunda)政治的皇家首都的研究,因其对这些首都的中心地位的关注而闻名,这些中心地位是建立“伦达帝国神秘”的关键,对维持王权至关重要。Macola的论文很好地补充了Richard Reid在18世纪和19世纪对埃塞俄比亚高地和布干达的战争与城镇关系的比较研究,两篇论文都对城市在前殖民时期的地位进行了有趣的争论,无论是在物质上还是在意识形态上。阿卜杜勒·谢里夫(Abdul Sheriff)强调了前殖民时期的城市历史对随后的殖民城镇规划历史的重要性,他追溯了桑给巴尔镇的前殖民发展历史,令人信服地将严格隔离城镇的概念定位为殖民幻想,与前殖民时期的空间政治格格不入。关于小城镇城市化的部分进一步增强了该卷主题关注的独特性。通过对殖民时期的索尔兹伯里和布拉瓦约的比较,Yoshikuni令人信服地分析了前殖民时期和农业时期的历史如何塑造了这两个城市中心的发展——这一动态在20世纪非洲城市的研究中得到了更广泛的认可,而实际上却没有付诸实践。…
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The Urban Experience in Eastern Africa C. 1750-2000
The Urban Experience in Eastern Africa c. 1750-2000. Edited by Andrew Burton. Azania, special volume xxxvi-xxxvii. Nairobi: British Institute in Eastern Africa, 2002. Pp. ix, 264; 48 illustrations. $24.00/ £15.00 / Kenyan Shs.1,600 paper. In recent years Africanist literature has seen a surge in work on urban history. Arising out of broader trends in social and cultural history, this work has returned to and reinvigorated a terrain explored primarily by economic historians, geographers, and sociologists in the decades prior to the 1980s. The Urban Experience in Eastern Africa c. 1750-2000, edited by Andrew Burton and emerging out of an international conference held in Nairobi in 2000, not only exemplifies this new wave of urban history but also extends it in a number of topically unique and analytically productive directions. In addition to strong essays exploring colonial cities, the volume devotes considerable attention to precolonial urban forms and the social landscapes of small towns. Its geographical coverage is impressive (Eastern Africa being broadly interpreted here to encompass countries stretching from Ethiopia to Zimbabwe). Not least of its virtues, it brings together scholars based in Africa with colleagues working in North America, the United Kingdom, and Japan to showcase a breadth of methodologies and theoretical concerns. The collection is organized both thematically and broadly chronologically. Following Burton's well-written and comprehensive introduction tracing urban history in the region from the late eighteenth century onwards, the book is divided into four sections: precolonial urban centers, colonial order in urban East Africa, rural-urban interactions, and town life in colonial Nairobi and beyond. In extensively exploring topics that are too often given short shrift in African urban studies, the first and third sections -on precolonial urban formations and the importance to the urban experience of a rural and small-town scene-exhibit what are thematically the volume's most unique contributions. Giacomo Macola's examination of the royal capitals of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Eastern Lunda polities southwest of Lake Tanganyika is notable for his focus on the centrality of these capitals for the construction of a "Lunda imperial mystique" that was critical to maintaining royal power. Macola's paper nicely complements Richard Reid's comparative investigation of the relationship between warfare and towns in the Ethiopian highlands and Buganda in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, with both contributions making interesting arguments about the place of the urban, both physically and ideologically, in precolonial power. And underlining the importance of the precolonial urban past to the histories of colonial town planning that followed, Abdul Sheriff traces a history of Zanzibar town's precolonial development, one that compellingly situates the notion of a strictly segregated town as a colonial fantasy at odds with precolonial spatial politics. The section on small-town urbanism further enhances the unique character of the volume's thematic concerns. With a comparative focus on colonial Salisbury and Bulawayo, Tsuneo Yoshikuni convincingly analyzes ways in which both precolonial and agrarian histories shaped the development of these two urban centers -a dynamic that is more widely acknowledged than actually put into practice in work on twentieth-century African cities. …
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期刊介绍: The International Journal of African Historical Studies (IJAHS) is devoted to the study of the African past. Norman Bennett was the founder and guiding force behind the journal’s growth from its first incarnation at Boston University as African Historical Studies in 1968. He remained its editor for more than thirty years. The title was expanded to the International Journal of African Historical Studies in 1972, when Africana Publishers Holmes and Meier took over publication and distribution for the next decade. Beginning in 1982, the African Studies Center once again assumed full responsibility for production and distribution. Jean Hay served as the journal’s production editor from 1979 to 1995, and editor from 1998 to her retirement in 2005. Michael DiBlasi is the current editor, and James McCann and Diana Wylie are associate editors of the journal. Members of the editorial board include: Emmanuel Akyeampong, Peter Alegi, Misty Bastian, Sara Berry, Barbara Cooper, Marc Epprecht, Lidwien Kapteijns, Meredith McKittrick, Pashington Obang, David Schoenbrun, Heather Sharkey, Ann B. Stahl, John Thornton, and Rudolph Ware III. The journal publishes three issues each year (April, August, and December). Articles, notes, and documents submitted to the journal should be based on original research and framed in terms of historical analysis. Contributions in archaeology, history, anthropology, historical ecology, political science, political ecology, and economic history are welcome. Articles that highlight European administrators, settlers, or colonial policies should be submitted elsewhere, unless they deal substantially with interactions with (or the affects on) African societies.
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