Mombasa, the Swahili, and the Making of the Mijikenda

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1993-04-08
Publisher(s): Clarendon Press
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Summary

This is a history of the Kenyan city of Mombasa and its surrounding settlements from the mid-nineteenth century to the height of colonial rule in the 1930s. Justin Willis sets out to place the island and town of Mombasa in its African context, incorporating the findings of recent historical and anthropological research. Willis examines the institutions and social networks which simultaneously united and divided the people of the region before the colonial period, demonstrating both their interdependence and the creation of distinct population categories. This is a radical re-interpretation of the history of Mombasa and its hinterland, based on thorough archival research. It offers valuable insights into the nature of ethnic identity, and makes an important contribution to the growing body of scholarly work on the African city.

Table of Contents

List of Maps
Abbreviations
Explanatory Notes
Introductionp. 1
'Singwaya was a very big city': The Swahili and the Nyika to 1890p. 17
Histories of the Coast, and the Structure of Hinterland Communitiesp. 21
Clients and Slaves in the Nineteenth Centuryp. 47
'Why the natives will not work': Labour, Trade, and the Story of Singwaya, 1890-1919p. 77
Squatting and Trade in the Hinterlandp. 81
Casual Labour and the Swahili in Mombasap. 95
'Close contact with the coast residents is most prejudicial': State Intervention, 1900-1931p. 115
The Creation of Administrative and Landowning Categoriesp. 118
The Control of Tradep. 135
Planning Mombasap. 145
Labour Legislation, Casuality, and the Cost of Labourp. 161
'Other dances': Mombasa and the Mijikenda, 1925-1934p. 171
New Networks of Labourp. 174
The Twelve Tribes and the Mijikendap. 184
Conclusionp. 201
Appendix: Biographies of Informantsp. 203
Bibliographyp. 215
Glossaryp. 224
Indexp. 225
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.

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