| Author/Contributor(s): | Skloot, Floyd |
| Publisher: | University of Wisconsin Press |
| Date: | 10/27/2016 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Condition: | NEW |
Methodologically innovative, Naming Colonialism advances a new approach that shows how a cultural process--the naming of Europeans--can provide a point of entry into economic and social histories. Drawing on archival documents and oral interviews, Likaka encounters and analyzes a welter of coded fragments. The vivid epithets Congolese gave to rubber company agents--"the home burner," "Leopard," "Beat, beat," "The hippopotamus-hide whip"--clearly conveyed the violence that underpinned colonial extractive economies. Other names were subtler, hinting at derogatory meaning by way of riddles, metaphors, or symbols to which the Europeans were oblivious. Africans thus emerge from this study as autonomous actors whose capacity to observe, categorize, and evaluate reverses our usual optic, providing a critical window on Central African colonialism in its local and regional dimensions.