Queering Colonial Natal

Queering Colonial Natal
Author: T. J. Tallie
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 279
Release: 2019-10-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1452960526

Download Queering Colonial Natal Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

How were indigenous social practices deemed queer and aberrant by colonial forces? In Queering Colonial Natal, T.J. Tallie travels to colonial Natalestablished by the British in 1843, today South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal provinceto show how settler regimes “queered” indigenous practices. Defining them as threats to the normative order they sought to impose, they did so by delimiting Zulu polygamy; restricting alcohol access, clothing, and even friendship; and assigning only Europeans to government schools. Using queer and critical indigenous theory, this book critically assesses Natal (where settlers were to remain a minority) in the context of the global settler colonial project in the nineteenth century to yield a new and engaging synthesis. Tallie explores the settler colonial history of Natal’s white settlers and how they sought to establish laws and rules for both whites and Africans based on European mores of sexuality and gender. At the same time, colonial archives reveal that many African and Indian people challenged such civilizational claims. Ultimately Tallie argues that the violent collisions between Africans, Indians, and Europeans in Natal shaped the conceptions of race and gender that bolstered each group’s claim to authority.


Queering Colonial Natal
Language: en
Pages: 279
Authors: T. J. Tallie
Categories: Political Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019-10-15 - Publisher: U of Minnesota Press

GET EBOOK

How were indigenous social practices deemed queer and aberrant by colonial forces? In Queering Colonial Natal, T.J. Tallie travels to colonial Natalestablished
Blacks of the Land
Language: en
Pages: 293
Authors: John M. Monteiro
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2018-10-25 - Publisher: Cambridge University Press

GET EBOOK

Originally published in Portuguese in 1994 as Negros da Terra, this field-defining work by the late historian John M. Monteiro has been translated into English
Gender, Separatist Politics, and Embodied Nationalism in Cameroon
Language: en
Pages: 347
Authors: Jacqueline-Bethel Tchouta Mougoué
Categories: HISTORY
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019 - Publisher:

GET EBOOK

Fresh insights into gendered politics in Cameroon
Ties that Bind
Language: en
Pages: 467
Authors: Jon Soske
Categories: Social Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2016-11-01 - Publisher: NYU Press

GET EBOOK

Intimacies of friendship create vital spaces for practices of power and resistance within the histories of apartheid and colonialism. What does friendship have
1989
Language: en
Pages: 406
Authors: Krishan Kumar
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2001 - Publisher: Choice Publishing Co., Ltd.

GET EBOOK

In 1989, from East Berlin to Budapest and Bucharest to Moscow, communism was falling. The walls were coming down and the world was being changed in ways that se