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Land, Migration and Belonging
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A new history of the Basotho migrants in Zimbabwe that illuminates identity politics, African agency and the complexities of social integration in the colonial period.Tracing the history of the Bas...
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15 February 2019

A new history of the Basotho migrants in Zimbabwe that illuminates identity politics, African agency and the complexities of social integration in the colonial period.
Tracing the history of the Basotho, a small mainly Christianised community of evangelists working for the Dutch Reformed Church, this book examines the challenges faced by minority ethnic groups in colonial Zimbabwe and how they tried to strike a balance between particularism and integration. Maintaining their own language and community farm, the Basotho used ownership of freehold land, religion and a shared history to sustain their identity. The author analyses the challenges they faced in purchasing land and in engaging with colonial administrators and missionaries, as well as the nature and impact of internal schisms within the community, and shows how their "unity in diversity"impacted on their struggles for belonging and shaped their lives. This detailed account of the experiences and strategies the Basotho deployed in interactions with the Dutch Reformed Church missionaries and colonial administrators as well as with their non-Sotho neighbours will contribute to wider debates about migration, identity and the politics of belonging, and to our understanding of African agency in the context of colonial and missionary encounters.
Published in association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa
Tracing the history of the Basotho, a small mainly Christianised community of evangelists working for the Dutch Reformed Church, this book examines the challenges faced by minority ethnic groups in colonial Zimbabwe and how they tried to strike a balance between particularism and integration. Maintaining their own language and community farm, the Basotho used ownership of freehold land, religion and a shared history to sustain their identity. The author analyses the challenges they faced in purchasing land and in engaging with colonial administrators and missionaries, as well as the nature and impact of internal schisms within the community, and shows how their "unity in diversity"impacted on their struggles for belonging and shaped their lives. This detailed account of the experiences and strategies the Basotho deployed in interactions with the Dutch Reformed Church missionaries and colonial administrators as well as with their non-Sotho neighbours will contribute to wider debates about migration, identity and the politics of belonging, and to our understanding of African agency in the context of colonial and missionary encounters.
Published in association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa
Price: $120.00
Pages: 197
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: James Currey
Series: Eastern Africa Series
Publication Date:
15 February 2019
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781847012166
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
HISTORY / Africa / South / General, African history, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology of Religion, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, Social groups: religious groups and communities
Land, Migration and Belonging is a welcome contribution to the struggles over belonging in Southern Rhodesia by a migrant group that tried to strike a balance between ethnic particularism and integration. [.] It is important for anyone interested in rethinking identity and belonging in Zimbabwe and in the region.
Introduction: The Basotho and the Politics of Belonging in Southern Rhodesia
Evangelists, Migrants and "Progressive Africans"
Colonial Displacements and the Establishment of Native Purchase Areas
"Kubhetere": Bethel Farm and the Basotho's Belonging in the Dewure Purchase Areas
Building a Community School: The Rise and Fall of Bethel School
Adherents and Rebels: The Basotho and the Dutch Reformed Church Missionaries
Epilogue: Uncertainty and the Basotho's Quest for Belonging
Evangelists, Migrants and "Progressive Africans"
Colonial Displacements and the Establishment of Native Purchase Areas
"Kubhetere": Bethel Farm and the Basotho's Belonging in the Dewure Purchase Areas
Building a Community School: The Rise and Fall of Bethel School
Adherents and Rebels: The Basotho and the Dutch Reformed Church Missionaries
Epilogue: Uncertainty and the Basotho's Quest for Belonging