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Suffering for Territory

Autor Donald S Moore
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 12 sep 2005

Structura acestui volum este concepută ca o investigație pe mai multe niveluri: pornește de la experiența concretă a fermierilor săraci din Kaerezi, trece prin analiza birocratică a schemelor de recolonizare post-independență și culminează cu o redefinire a teoriei postcoloniale. Reținem aici un parcurs care nu se limitează la cronologia evenimentelor, ci propune o analiză spațială a puterii, utilizând instrumentele teoretice ale lui Foucault și Gramsci pentru a explica cum pământul devine un depozit de identitate și suferință. Descoperim o perspectivă originală asupra modului în care memoria colectivă a „suferinței pentru teritoriu” devine un argument pentru dreptul de proprietate în fața amenințărilor statului modern. Notăm cu interes cum Donald S Moore poziționează această lucrare în continuarea preocupărilor sale din Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference. Dacă în lucrarea anterioară autorul investiga modul în care conceptele de rasă și natură sunt țesute în noțiunile despre corp și națiune, în Suffering for Territory el aplică aceste viziuni asupra unui spațiu geografic specific, transformând zona montană din Zimbabwe într-un laborator de studiu al suveranității. Complementar volumului The Unsettled Land de Jocelyn Alexander, care oferă o necesară perspectivă istorică asupra ocupațiilor de terenuri, lucrarea de față acoperă dimensiunea etnografică și culturală profundă, explicând mecanismele intime prin care indivizii locuiesc și își revendică spațiul. Stilul este unul academic, dens, însă extrem de bine ancorat în realitatea de pe teren prin includerea a 15 fotografii alb-negru și hărți care documentează transformarea peisajului. Moore reușește să demonstreze că micro-practicile locale și luptele culturale sunt la fel de relevante ca politicile naționale, oferind o lectură esențială pentru înțelegerea dinamicii puterii în Africa contemporană.

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780822335702
ISBN-10: 0822335700
Pagini: 424
Ilustrații: 15 b&w photographs, 2 maps
Dimensiuni: 160 x 236 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Duke University Press

De ce să citești această carte

Această lucrare este esențială pentru cei interesați de sociologie politică, antropologie și drept funciar. Cititorul va obține o înțelegere profundă a modului în care istoria colonială și politicile postcoloniale se ciocnesc în viața de zi cu zi a fermierilor. Este un studiu de caz magistral despre cum un teritoriu nu este doar o resursă economică, ci o componentă vitală a identității umane și a rezistenței în fața autorității statale.


Despre autor

Donald S Moore este un cercetător recunoscut pentru contribuțiile sale în domeniul antropologiei culturale și al studiilor postcoloniale. Opera sa se concentrează pe intersecția dintre putere, spațiu și mediu, explorând modul în care identitățile rasiale și drepturile asupra resurselor naturale sunt negociate în contexte de conflict. Prin volume precum Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference, Moore s-a impus ca o voce importantă în analiza critică a modului în care peisajele sunt modelate de forțele politice și culturale globale, menținând în același timp o rigoare etnografică remarcabilă.


Descriere scurtă

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, laboured upon, and suffered for.Donald S. Moore is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. He is a co-editor of Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference, also published by Duke University Press.

Recenzii

“This widely suggestive book—a model of hospitable thought—combines erudition, theoretical insights, and literary inventiveness with well-crafted ethnography. In the process, it rewrites not only the histories of land, but also the histories of life, race, and sovereignty in Zimbabwe.”—Achille Mbembe, author of On the Postcolony“Suffering for Territory is an outstanding work of scholarship, which combines innovative theory with vivid ethnographic detail to produce an unusually illuminating view of land, livelihoods, and politics in contemporary rural Zimbabwe. With enormous erudition and keen observational insight, Donald S. Moore shows convincingly how both territories and the subjects who inhabit them can be understood as the contingent products of dynamic social and historical processes. The book’s combination of sophisticated theoretical analysis and deep ethnographic understanding makes it one of the most important contributions to the anthropology of Africa to appear in recent years.”—James Ferguson, author of Expectations of Modernity: Myths and Meanings of Urban Life on the Zambian Copperbelt“Donald S. Moore’s Suffering for Territory is a paradigm-shattering work in agrarian studies. Combining an impressive ethnographic study of land struggle in contemporary Zimbabwe with critical theories of sovereignty, hegemony, and race, Moore decisively and masterfully rereads the history of Zimbabwe and southern Africa through the prism of settler colonialism, colonial capitalism, and their legacies.”—Elizabeth A. Povinelli, author of The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism"Moore has produced a comprehensive analytical history of the land question in Kaerezi District. . . . Includes useful maps of the Nyanga and Kaerezi districts; numerous photos illustrating landscapes and Kaerezian peoples; and extensive footnotes and bibliography. Highly recommended."—M.E. Doro, Choic“[T]he book tells of an important era in the history of Zimbabwe. It illustrates well a variety of relations that have been unfolding before and since independence. It provides useful insights into relations of power, control and territory.”—M. F. C. Bourdillon, Development and Change“Suffering for Territory is one of those rare monographs that has much to offer to numerous audiences as it interlayers a sophisticated theoretical analysis with highly insightful historical and ethnographic detail. It also combines a carefully situated political and ethical commentary with an engaging writing style that easily carries the reader through a rich landscape while conveying a historicized terrain of power and struggles, localized vulnerabilities, and ironic humor.” —Blair Rutherford, African Studies Review“This is a significant and striking book.”—Terrence Ranger, Africa“Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe’s social history...It is to be highly recommended...and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the last decade” —Andrew Hartnack, Journal of Contemporary African Studies"Anthropologist Donald Moore has produced a path-breaking study of place and thecultural politics of dvelopment in Africa. From the opening pages of this provocativenew work, the reader is treated to an evocative, at times poetical, prose. . . .Suffering for Territory is remarkable in its theoretical ambitions . . . The book is atonce highly readable and theoretically complex, is an enormous scholarlyachievement that is destined to take a place among the most influential contemporary works in agrarian studies."--ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D: SOCIETYAND SPACE, volume 24 "[Moore] interacted with the people of Kaerezi in a remarkably intimate and empathetic way. . . he writes beautifully, evoking a remarkable landscape. He tells a story which speaks for itself, and he makes it tell everything it contains."--AFRICA " . . . Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe's social history. It also provides new and insightful ways to examine the current political and land-based struggles in contemporary Zimbabwe. It is to be highly recommended to those interested in land, livelihoods and politics in southern Africa, and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the past decade."--Jrnl of Contemporary African Studies "Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe's social history...It is to be highly recommended...and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the last decade" Andrew Hartnack, Journal of Contemporary African Studies "Suffering for Territory is one of those rare monographs that has much to offer to numerous audiences as it interlayers a sophisticated theoretical analysis with highly insightful historical and ethnographic detail. It also combines a carefully situated political and ethical commentary with an engaging writing style that easily carries the reader through a rich landscape while conveying a historicized terrain of power and struggles, localized vulnerabilities, and ironic humor." Blair Rutherford, African Studies Review "Anthropologist Donald Moore has produced a path-breaking study of place and the cultural politics of development in Africa. From the opening pages of this provocative new work, the reader is treated to an evocative, at times poetical, prose. . . . Suffering for Territory is a highly original piece of ethnographic writing. Moore has succeeded in merging past and present, theory and ethnography, and the local and the global into a seamless narrative. The book is a postdisciplinary triumph that effortlessly blends social theory with the concepts and analytics of anthropology, history, and geography." Roderick P Neumann, Environment and Planning D "Moore brilliantly tells the story of a complicated and contested territory wedged between the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border and Nyanga National Park, and how the fate of its people became entangled with anticolonial and postcolonial politics." Alan Smart, Africa Today "This book rewrites academic debate over land, environment and power in Zimbabwe, and beyond, and if non-specialists find some of its narrative dense and too hard to penetrate, then I urge them to read on and persevere, for this book is truly a remarkable achievement." Joost Fontein, African Affairs "This is a remarkable book in many ways. For the author not only observed 'the natives,' as anthropologists are wont to do, he actually joined them. As a result, he provides a vivid picture of life in a resettlement area, beginning with the building of his own hut in the village and going on to the planting of trees and the mediation of local land disputes." Elaine Windrich, H-Net Reviews, H-SAfrica "This is a significant and striking book." Terrence Ranger, Africa "Using well researched and brilliantly presented ethnographies and social histories of the Tangwena People's Kaerezi Ranch (one of the most symbolic arenas in the struggle for independence and racial equality), Moore sifts through the 'sediments' of history and present day dynamics to tell a story of how the contemporary spatial and agrarian structure emerged and is articulated in the lived experiences of villagers in Nyamutsapa (the location of most of his field work)." Admos Osmund Chimhowu, Journal of Agrarian Change "Moore has produced a comprehensive analytical history of the land question in Kaerezi District. . . . Includes useful maps of the Nyanga and Kaerezi districts; numerous photos illustrating landscapes and Kaerezian peoples; and extensive footnotes and bibliography. Highly recommended." M.E. Doro, Choice "[T]he book tells of an important era in the history of Zimbabwe. It illustrates well a variety of relations that have been unfolding before and since independence. It provides useful insights into relations of power, control and territory." M. F. C. Bourdillon, Development and Change "[T]he text has a thorough theoretical grounding, which is backed up by Moore's fieldwork." Cameron McCormick, Cultural Geographies "[A] highly interesting book. . . . [Moore's] ethnography is rich and detailed. . . . Moore tries to provide the reader not only with a detailed case study, but also with a new theoretical framework to analyse natural resource conflicts. In my opinion he wonderfully succeeds in this endeavour, . . ." Marja Spierenburg, Journal of Modern African Studies
"This widely suggestive book--a model of hospitable thought--combines erudition, theoretical insights, and literary inventiveness with well-crafted ethnography. In the process, it rewrites not only the histories of land, but also the histories of life, race, and sovereignty in Zimbabwe."--Achille Mbembe, author of On the Postcolony "Suffering for Territory is an outstanding work of scholarship, which combines innovative theory with vivid ethnographic detail to produce an unusually illuminating view of land, livelihoods, and politics in contemporary rural Zimbabwe. With enormous erudition and keen observational insight, Donald S. Moore shows convincingly how both territories and the subjects who inhabit them can be understood as the contingent products of dynamic social and historical processes. The book's combination of sophisticated theoretical analysis and deep ethnographic understanding makes it one of the most important contributions to the anthropology of Africa to appear in recent years."--James Ferguson, author of Expectations of Modernity: Myths and Meanings of Urban Life on the Zambian Copperbelt "Donald S. Moore's Suffering for Territory is a paradigm-shattering work in agrarian studies. Combining an impressive ethnographic study of land struggle in contemporary Zimbabwe with critical theories of sovereignty, hegemony, and race, Moore decisively and masterfully rereads the history of Zimbabwe and southern Africa through the prism of settler colonialism, colonial capitalism, and their legacies."--Elizabeth A. Povinelli, author of The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism "Moore has produced a comprehensive analytical history of the land question in Kaerezi District... Includes useful maps of the Nyanga and Kaerezi districts; numerous photos illustrating landscapes and Kaerezian peoples; and extensive footnotes and bibliography. Highly recommended."--M.E. Doro, Choic "[T]he book tells of an important era in the history of Zimbabwe. It illustrates well a variety of relations that have been unfolding before and since independence. It provides useful insights into relations of power, control and territory."--M. F. C. Bourdillon, Development and Change "Suffering for Territory is one of those rare monographs that has much to offer to numerous audiences as it interlayers a sophisticated theoretical analysis with highly insightful historical and ethnographic detail. It also combines a carefully situated political and ethical commentary with an engaging writing style that easily carries the reader through a rich landscape while conveying a historicized terrain of power and struggles, localized vulnerabilities, and ironic humor." --Blair Rutherford, African Studies Review "This is a significant and striking book."--Terrence Ranger, Africa "Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe's social history...It is to be highly recommended...and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the last decade" --Andrew Hartnack, Journal of Contemporary African Studies "Anthropologist Donald Moore has produced a path-breaking study of place and the cultural politics of dvelopment in Africa. From the opening pages of this provocative new work, the reader is treated to an evocative, at times poetical, prose... Suffering for Territory is remarkable in its theoretical ambitions ... The book is at once highly readable and theoretically complex, is an enormous scholarly achievement that is destined to take a place among the most influential contemp orary works in agrarian studies."--ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING D: SOCIETY AND SPACE, volume 24 "[Moore] interacted with the people of Kaerezi in a remarkably intimate and empathetic way... he writes beautifully, evoking a remarkable landscape. He tells a story which speaks for itself, and he makes it tell everything it contains."--AFRICA " ... Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe's social history. It also provides new and insightful ways to examine the current political and land-based struggles in contemporary Zimbabwe. It is to be highly recommended to those interested in land, livelihoods and politics in southern Africa, and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the past decade."--Jrnl of Contemporary African Studies "Suffering for Territory is an important and timely contribution to Zimbabwe's social history...It is to be highly recommended...and is one of the best anthropological works on Zimbabwe to be published in the last decade" Andrew Hartnack, Journal of Contemporary African Studies "Suffering for Territory is one of those rare monographs that has much to offer to numerous audiences as it interlayers a sophisticated theoretical analysis with highly insightful historical and ethnographic detail. It also combines a carefully situated political and ethical commentary with an engaging writing style that easily carries the reader through a rich landscape while conveying a historicized terrain of power and struggles, localized vulnerabilities, and ironic humor." Blair Rutherford, African Studies Review "Anthropologist Donald Moore has produced a path-breaking study of place and the cultural politics of development in Africa. From the opening pages of this provocative new work, the reader is treated to an evocative, at times poetical, prose... Suffering for Territory is a highly original piece of ethnographic writing. Moore has succeeded in merging past and present, theory and ethnography, and the local and the global into a seamless narrative. The book is a postdisciplinary triumph that effortlessly blends social theory with the concepts and analytics of anthropology, history, and geography." Roderick P Neumann, Environment and Planning D "Moore brilliantly tells the story of a complicated and contested territory wedged between the Zimbabwe-Mozambique border and Nyanga National Park, and how the fate of its people became entangled with anticolonial and postcolonial politics." Alan Smart, Africa Today "This book rewrites academic debate over land, environment and power in Zimbabwe, and beyond, and if non-specialists find some of its narrative dense and too hard to penetrate, then I urge them to read on and persevere, for this book is truly a remarkable achievement." Joost Fontein, African Affairs "This is a remarkable book in many ways. For the author not only observed 'the natives,' as anthropologists are wont to do, he actually joined them. As a result, he provides a vivid picture of life in a resettlement area, beginning with the building of his own hut in the village and going on to the planting of trees and the mediation of local land disputes." Elaine Windrich, H-Net Reviews, H-SAfrica "This is a significant and striking book." Terrence Ranger, Africa "Using well researched and brilliantly presented ethnographies and social histories of the Tangwena People's Kaerezi Ranch (one of the most symbolic arenas in the struggle for independence and racial equality), Moore sifts through the 'sediments' of history and present day dynamics to tell a story of how the contemporary spatial and agrarian structure emerged and is articulated in the lived experiences of villagers in Nyamutsapa (the location of most of his field work)." Admos Osmund Chimhowu, Journal of Agrarian Change "Moore has produced a comprehensive analytical history of the land question in Kaerezi District... Includes useful maps of the Nyanga and Kaerezi districts; numerous photos illustrating landscapes and Kaerezian peoples; and extensive footnotes and bibliography. Highly recommended." M.E. Doro, Choice "[T]he book tells of an important era in the history of Zimbabwe. It illustrates well a variety of relations that have been unfolding before and since independence. It provides useful insights into relations of power, control and territory." M. F. C. Bourdillon, Development and Change "[T]he text has a thorough theoretical grounding, which is backed up by Moore's fieldwork." Cameron McCormick, Cultural Geographies "[A] highly interesting book... [Moore's] ethnography is rich and detailed... Moore tries to provide the reader not only with a detailed case study, but also with a new theoretical framework to analyse natural resource conflicts. In my opinion he wonderfully succeeds in this endeavour, ..." Marja Spierenburg, Journal of Modern African Studies

Textul de pe ultima copertă

"Donald S. Moore's "Suffering for Territory" is a paradigm-shattering work in agrarian studies. Combining an impressive ethnographic study of land struggle in contemporary Zimbabwe with critical theories of sovereignty, hegemony, and race, Moore decisively and masterfully rereads the history of Zimbabwe and southern Africa through the prism of settler colonialism, colonial capitalism, and their legacies."--Elizabeth A. Povinelli, author of "The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism"

Descriere

An ethnographic study of Zimbabwe's land occupations that focuses on the effects of spatialized struggles on sovereignty and the nation-state