Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s

This dissertation examines the history of land inequality. Historians have long assumed that unequal distribution of land in Zimbabwe was a consequence of colonial rule. I show that unequal distribution of land long predated colonialism, and that the interaction between pre-existing and new forms of...

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Main Author: Mseba, Admire
Other Authors: Giblin, James Leonard
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Iowa 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5575
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7055&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-uiowa.edu-oai-ir.uiowa.edu-etd-70552019-10-13T04:29:56Z Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s Mseba, Admire This dissertation examines the history of land inequality. Historians have long assumed that unequal distribution of land in Zimbabwe was a consequence of colonial rule. I show that unequal distribution of land long predated colonialism, and that the interaction between pre-existing and new forms of inequality fundamentally shaped the colonial experience. I begin with basic perspectives from environmental and agrarian history, I emphasize that access to land has determined whether Africans will be able to obtain subsistence, but that productive land is always a relatively scarce resource. I look very closely at the differences in soil productivity within particular landscapes, micro-environments and even individual tracts. Such differences in soil quality and the resulting scarcity of the most productive lands, I argue, provoked competition for land long before shortages caused by colonial land policies. I situate this competition within the intimate social settings of households, kinships and, after the imposition of British rule in 1890, farms and mission stations. In them, I find political and social dynamics which, together with colonial rule, created inequality among Africans and contributed to unequal access to land. They include gender, kinship, status and generation. Through an analysis of stories of precolonial migration and settlement, I examine claims to political and ritual control over territory made by chiefs, spirit mediums and `first-comers'. Colonial land alienation deepened this competition, while the contingencies of colonial administration often forced officials to relate to European settlers in ways that opened opportunities for Africans to contest their subordinated access to land. 2015-05-01T07:00:00Z dissertation application/pdf https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5575 https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7055&context=etd Copyright © 2015 Admire Mseba Theses and Dissertations eng University of IowaGiblin, James Leonard Colonialism Gender Kinship Land Social Relations Zimbabwe History
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Colonialism
Gender
Kinship
Land
Social Relations
Zimbabwe
History
spellingShingle Colonialism
Gender
Kinship
Land
Social Relations
Zimbabwe
History
Mseba, Admire
Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
description This dissertation examines the history of land inequality. Historians have long assumed that unequal distribution of land in Zimbabwe was a consequence of colonial rule. I show that unequal distribution of land long predated colonialism, and that the interaction between pre-existing and new forms of inequality fundamentally shaped the colonial experience. I begin with basic perspectives from environmental and agrarian history, I emphasize that access to land has determined whether Africans will be able to obtain subsistence, but that productive land is always a relatively scarce resource. I look very closely at the differences in soil productivity within particular landscapes, micro-environments and even individual tracts. Such differences in soil quality and the resulting scarcity of the most productive lands, I argue, provoked competition for land long before shortages caused by colonial land policies. I situate this competition within the intimate social settings of households, kinships and, after the imposition of British rule in 1890, farms and mission stations. In them, I find political and social dynamics which, together with colonial rule, created inequality among Africans and contributed to unequal access to land. They include gender, kinship, status and generation. Through an analysis of stories of precolonial migration and settlement, I examine claims to political and ritual control over territory made by chiefs, spirit mediums and `first-comers'. Colonial land alienation deepened this competition, while the contingencies of colonial administration often forced officials to relate to European settlers in ways that opened opportunities for Africans to contest their subordinated access to land.
author2 Giblin, James Leonard
author_facet Giblin, James Leonard
Mseba, Admire
author Mseba, Admire
author_sort Mseba, Admire
title Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
title_short Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
title_full Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
title_fullStr Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
title_full_unstemmed Land, power and social relations in northeastern ZImbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
title_sort land, power and social relations in northeastern zimbabwe from precolonial times to the 1950s
publisher University of Iowa
publishDate 2015
url https://ir.uiowa.edu/etd/5575
https://ir.uiowa.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7055&context=etd
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