Histories of authority in the African Great Lakes: trajectories and transactions
Author:
Desrosiers Marie-Eve,Russell Aidan
Abstract
AbstractThis article reflects on how scholars have engaged with the past and with notions of authority in the African Great Lakes. A dominant ‘presentist’ perspective on the region mobilizes historical knowledge in an uncritical fashion, reducing authority to a set of historical clichés and building on a familiar focus on crises and the state. Bridging history and political science, we propose two concepts to analyse histories of political authority to unsettle presentist biases: trajectories and transactions. To illustrate the contribution these alternative lenses make, we present two historical vignettes. First, we revisit the 1973 coup in Rwanda as an ambiguous trajectory of authority-making and unmaking. Then, we consider languages of praise and petitioning in Burundi in the 1960s, to show how authority is lived, manifested and challenged through local transactional relations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference67 articles.
1. Deslaurier, C. (2002) ‘Un monde politique en mutation: le Burundi à la veille de l'indépendance (circa 1956–1961)’. PhD thesis, Université Panthéon-Sorbonne.
2. Africa's pasts and Africa's historians;Cooper;Canadian Journal of African Studies,2000
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