Governing the Nuer
Author : Percy Coriat
Publisher :
Page : 288 pages
File Size : 23,52 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Ethnology
ISBN :
Author : Percy Coriat
Publisher :
Page : 288 pages
File Size : 23,52 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Ethnology
ISBN :
Author : Raymond Case Kelly
Publisher : University of Michigan Press
Page : 336 pages
File Size : 31,91 MB
Release : 1985
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780472080564
A study of Nuer expansionism with implications for research into the relationship between social and material causes of change
Author : Douglas Hamilton Johnson
Publisher : Fontes Historiae Africanae
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 44,99 MB
Release : 2016
Category : History
ISBN : 9780197265888
The documents edited here cover the significant events in the contact, conquest, and pacification of the Nuer from 1898 to 1930. They contain some of the earliest 20th-century ethnographic descriptions of the Nuer and their Dinka and Mabaan neighbors. Together these sources provide a historical context for further understanding Evans-Pritchard's ethnography, as well as a more detailed understanding of the events that led to incorporation of the Nuer into the colonial state.
Author : Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard
Publisher :
Page : 183 pages
File Size : 44,72 MB
Release : 1965
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Percy Coriat
Publisher :
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 27,53 MB
Release : 2018-04-09
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 9780994363152
Winner of the 1995 African Studies Association Text Prize (now the Paul Hair Prize)Percy Coriat was the first Nuer-speaking British official to produce a substantial body of informed and detailed reports on the Nuer. This volume brings together all of his most substantial writings found in Sudanese, South Sudanese and British archives to date, and makes them available for the first time to a wider audience interested in the history and ethnography of the Nuer. These papers give the most comprehensive account yet published of Nuer life in the 1920s, describing the events that preceded and led to Evans-Pritchard's own fieldwork in the 1930s and providing a much-needed historical context for his famous Nuer trilogy.'Appointed at a time when ?character? was thought the important quality in a Sudan Political Service officer, Coriat'was a man of action who recorded what he did, what he saw and what he understood. It is this first hand observation which gives the collection its greatest value as a primary source. Anyone concerned with Nuer ethnography or history will find these documents indispensable and Johnson's introduction and detailed notes provide clear guidance to them.' ? African Affairs
Author : David Anderson
Publisher : Manchester University Press
Page : 433 pages
File Size : 40,41 MB
Release : 2021-06-15
Category : History
ISBN : 1526162997
From the Victorian period to the present, images of the policeman have played a prominent role in the literature of empire, shaping popular perceptions of colonial policing. This book covers and compares the different ways and means that were employed in policing policies from 1830 to 1940. Countries covered range from Ireland, Australia, Africa and India to New Zealand and the Caribbean. As patterns of authority, of accountability and of consent, control and coercion evolved in each colony the general trend was towards a greater concentration of police time upon crime. The most important aspect of imperial linkage in colonial policing was the movement of personnel from one colony to another. To evaluate the precise role of the 'Irish model' in colonial police forces is at present probably beyond the powers of any one scholar. Policing in Queensland played a vital role in the construction of the colonial social order. In 1886 the constabulary was split by legislation into the New Zealand Police Force and the standing army or Permanent Militia. The nature of the British influence in the Klondike gold rush may be seen both in the policy of the government and in the actions of the men sent to enforce it. The book also overviews the role of policing in guarding the Gold Coast, police support in 1954 Sudan, Orange River Colony, Colonial Mombasa and Kenya, as well as and nineteenth-century rural India.
Author : Douglas H. Johnson
Publisher : Oxford Studies in Social and C
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 12,4 MB
Release : 1997
Category : Religion
ISBN : 9780198233671
This is the first major study of the Nuer based on primary research since Evans-Pritchard's classic Nuer Religion. It is also the first full-length historical study of indigenous African prophets operating outside the context of the world's main religions, and as such builds on Evans-Pritchard's pioneering work in promoting collaboration and dialogue between the disciplines of anthropology and history. Prophets first emerged as significant figures among the Nuer in the nineteenth century. They fashioned the religious idiom of prophecy from a range of spiritual ideas, and enunciated the social principles which broadened and sustained a moral community across political and ethnic boundaries. Douglas Johnson argues that, contrary to the standard anthropological interpretation, the major prophets' lasting contribution was their vision of peace, not their role in war. This vision is particularly relevant today, and the book concludes with a detailed discussion of events in the Sudan since independence in 1956, describing how modern Nuer, and many other southern Sudanese, still find the message of the nineteenth-century prophets relevant to their experiences in the current civil war.
Author : Jemera Rone
Publisher : Human Rights Watch
Page : 772 pages
File Size : 10,69 MB
Release : 2003
Category : Forced migration
ISBN : 9781564322913
For twenty years, southern Sudan has been the site of a tragic and brutal civil war, pitting the northern-based Arab and Islamic government against rebels in African marginalized areas, especially the south. More than two million people have died and four million have been displaced as a result. In 1999, anew element radically changed the war: Sudanese oil, located in the south, was firs exported by the central government. The human price of this bonanza is immeasurable. The government, using oil revenues and aided by co-opted southerners, rained a scorched earth campaign of mass displacement, bombing, and terror on the agro-pastoral southern civilians living in and near the oil zones. The displaced number in the hundreds of thousands.
Author : Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard
Publisher :
Page : 271 pages
File Size : 12,86 MB
Release : 1950
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Christopher Morton
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 243 pages
File Size : 17,81 MB
Release : 2020-02-08
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0192542257
Sir Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973) is widely considered the most influential British anthropologist of the twentieth century, known to generations of students for his seminal works on South Sudanese ethnography Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among the Azande (OUP 1937) and The Nuer (OUP 1940). In these works, now classics in the anthropological literature, Evans-Pritchard broke new ground on questions of rationality, social accountability, kinship, social and political organization, and religion, as well as influentially moving the discipline in Britain away from the natural sciences and towards history. Yet despite much discussion about his theoretical contributions to anthropology, no study has yet explored his fieldwork in detail in order to get a better understanding of its historical contexts, local circumstances or the social encounters out of which it emerged. This book then is just such an exploration, of Evans-Pritchard the fieldworker through the lens of his fieldwork photography. Through an engagement with his photographic archive, and by thinking with it alongside his written ethnographies and other unpublished evidence, the book offers a new insight into the way in which Evans-Pritchard's theoretical contributions to the discipline were shaped by his fieldwork and the numerous local people in Africa with whom he collaborated. By writing history through field photographs we move back towards the fieldwork experiences, exploring the vivid traces, lived realities and local presences at the heart of the social encounter that formed the basis of Evans-Pritchard's anthropology.