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Saints and politicians : essays in the organisation of a Senegalese peasant society
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ISBN: 0521205727 0521101093 051175969X 9780521205726 9780511759697 9780521101097 Year: 1975 Volume: 15 Publisher: London Cambridge university press

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Abstract

Political life among the Wolof (the largest and most powerful of Senegal's 'tribal' groups) is the principal theme of this collection of essays. The focus of study is on African political leadership, in towns and villages. Within the constraints of alien control or influence, it is argued, cultural and organisational barriers have consistently allowed a wide range of initiative to African leaders and communities in a creative and flexible adjustment to new and unfamiliar demands. Exploration of this African initiative in various contexts suggests a complex, fascinating pattern of cultural and structural interaction. The multidisciplinary approach to politics in these essays will interest historians and social anthropologists as well as political scientists. These studies are indeed relevant to any student of the problems of 'underdeveloped' societies involved in the modern state. Parts of the essays have been published elsewhere, but all have been extensively revised, updated and integrated to a coherent pattern of analysis.


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The Wolof of Saloum : social structure and rural development in Senegal.
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ISBN: 9022005836 Year: 1978 Publisher: Wageningen Centre for agricultural publishing and documentation

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Ethnicity and the colonial state : finding and representing group identifications in a coastal West African and global perspective (1850-7960)
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ISBN: 9004307354 9004307346 9789004307353 9789004307346 Year: 2015 Publisher: Brill

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Ethnicity and the Colonial State analyses, through a comparison of three West African communities (Wolof, Temne, and Ewe), the ways in which ethnic labels and arguments are used (or omitted) in dealings with colonial administrations. It follows these strategies and choices over more than a century, between the conquest periods and independence. Where state structures were weak as a factor of group cohesion, ethnic arguments were especially likely to come into play. The analysis discusses internal fissures and conflicting interests within the communities as other incentives for ethnic coalition-building. The observations made in this book are put into the context of a global historical perspective, for which “ethnicity” has so far remained a badly defined concept.

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