Islands and autochthons: Coloureds, space and belonging in Rhodesia and Zimbabwe (Part 1)Posted in Africa, Anthropology, Articles, Media Archive, Social Science on 2011-12-21 02:10Z by Steven |
Islands and autochthons: Coloureds, space and belonging in Rhodesia and Zimbabwe (Part 1)
Journal of Social Archaeology
Volume 4, Number 3 (October 2004)
pages 405-426
DOI: 10.1177/1469605304046423
Julia Katherine Seirlis
Department of Anthropology
University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
This article, the first in a two-part series, examines the ramifications of the complex relationships between race and space for definitions of the nation and national identity in Rhodesia and Zimbabwe. Most generally, the workings of race and space helped polarize Rhodesia and Zimbabwe between what was set up as ‘white’ and ‘black’, and limit the struggle for power and claims on belonging to those two poles. Racial identity was inscribed into spatial sensibilities and organization so that white space (the city) functioned as a series of islands and black space (the countryside) activated organic assertions of autochthony. More specifically, race and space informed the creation of an intermediate racial category, ‘Coloured’, with no substantive claim to a ‘real’ or ‘full’ identity and with no authoritative claim to the physical soil of the country.
Read or purchase the article here.