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The Other Zulus The Spread Of Zulu Ethnicity In Colonial South Africa Michael R Mahoney

  • SKU: BELL-51892252
The Other Zulus The Spread Of Zulu Ethnicity In Colonial South Africa Michael R Mahoney
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Other Zulus The Spread Of Zulu Ethnicity In Colonial South Africa Michael R Mahoney instant download after payment.

Publisher: Duke University Press Books
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.54 MB
Pages: 307
Author: Michael R. Mahoney
ISBN: 9780822395584, 9780822352952, 9780822353096, 0822395584, 0822352958, 0822353091
Language: English
Year: 2012

Product desciption

The Other Zulus The Spread Of Zulu Ethnicity In Colonial South Africa Michael R Mahoney by Michael R. Mahoney 9780822395584, 9780822352952, 9780822353096, 0822395584, 0822352958, 0822353091 instant download after payment.

In 1879, the British colony of Natal invaded the neighboring Zulu kingdom. Large numbers of Natal Africans fought with the British against the Zulus, enabling the British to claim victory and, ultimately, to annex the Zulu kingdom. Less than thirty years later, in 1906, many of those same Natal Africans, and their descendants, rebelled against the British in the name of the Zulu king.

 In The Other Zulus, a thorough history of Zulu ethnicity during the colonial period, Michael R. Mahoney shows that the lower classes of Natal, rather than its elites, initiated the transformation in ethnic self-identification, and they did so for multiple reasons. 

The resentment that Natal Africans felt toward the Zulu king diminished as his power was curtailed by the British. The most negative consequences of colonialism may have taken several decades to affect the daily lives of most Africans. Natal Africans are likely to have experienced the oppression of British rule more immediately and intensely in 1906 than they had in 1879. Meanwhile, labor migration to the gold mines of Johannesburg politicized the young men of Natal. Mahoney's fine-grained local history shows that these young migrants constructed and claimed a new Zulu identity, both to challenge the patriarchal authority of African chiefs and to fight colonial rule.

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