Suffering for Territory - Donald S. Moore

Suffering for Territory

Race, Place, and Power in Zimbabwe

(Autor)

Buch | Hardcover
424 Seiten
2005
Duke University Press (Verlag)
978-0-8223-3582-5 (ISBN)
123,45 inkl. MwSt
An ethnographic study of Zimbabwe's land occupations that focuses on the effects of spatialized struggles on sovereignty and the nation-state
Since 2000, black squatters have forcibly occupied white farms across Zimbabwe, reigniting questions of racialized dispossession, land rights, and legacies of liberation. Donald S. Moore probes these contentious politics by analyzing fierce disputes over territory, sovereignty, and subjection in the country’s eastern highlands. He focuses on poor farmers in Kaerezi who endured colonial evictions from their ancestral land and lived as refugees in Mozambique during Zimbabwe’s guerrilla war. After independence in 1980, Kaerezians returned home to a changed landscape. Postcolonial bureaucrats had converted their land from a white ranch into a state resettlement scheme. Those who defied this new spatial order were threatened with eviction. Moore shows how Kaerezians’ predicaments of place pivot on memories of “suffering for territory,” at once an idiom of identity and entitlement. Combining fine-grained ethnography with innovative theoretical insights, this book illuminates the complex interconnections between local practices of power and the wider forces of colonial rule, nationalist politics, and global discourses of development.Moore makes a significant contribution to postcolonial theory with his conceptualization of “entangled landscapes” by articulating racialized rule, situated sovereignties, and environmental resources. Fusing Gramscian cultural politics and Foucault’s analytic of governmentality, he enlists ethnography to foreground the spatiality of power. Suffering for Territory demonstrates how emplaced micro-practices matter, how the outcomes of cultural struggles are contingent on the diverse ways land comes to be inhabited, labored upon, and suffered for.

Donald S. Moore is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a coeditor of Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference, also published by Duke University Press.

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xv

Abbreviations xix

Introduction: Situated Struggles 1

Part I. Governing Space

1. Lines of Dissent 35

2. Disciplining Development 68

3. Landscapes of Livelihood 96

Part II. Colonial Cartographies

4. Racialized Dispossession 129

5. The Ethnic Spatial Fix 153

6. Enduring Evictions 184

Part III. Entangled Landscapes

7. Selective Sovereignties 219

8. Spatial Subjection 250

9. The Traction of Rights and Rule 281

Epilogue: Effective Articulations 310

Notes 323

References 365

Index 387

Zusatzinfo 15 b&w photos, 2 maps
Verlagsort North Carolina
Sprache englisch
Gewicht 757 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Spezielle Soziologien
ISBN-10 0-8223-3582-4 / 0822335824
ISBN-13 978-0-8223-3582-5 / 9780822335825
Zustand Neuware
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