1930-1935年,乌姆津托地区Izimpi Zemibango的土地纠纷、社会身份和国家

J. Sithole
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文挑战了一种普遍的倾向,即把涉及非洲农村社区的各种暴力冲突贴上“派系斗争”、“部落骚乱”或“本土骚乱”的标签,并将其不予理睬,主要是因为这种概括延续了一种刻板的信念,即非洲人天生就有无意识暴力的倾向。通过追查乌姆津托地区冲突的长期根源,它表明,紧张局势在恶化为暴力之前酝酿了很长时间,暴力往往是人们在探索和用尽和平解决冲突的所有途径后选择的最后手段。对紧张局势出现并恶化为暴力的政治和经济背景的仔细审查也表明,非洲以外的人助长了暴力冲突的爆发。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Land Disputes, Social Identities and the State in The Izimpi Zemibango in the Umzinto District, 1930–1935
Abstract This article challenges the widespread tendency to label and dismiss all manner of violent conflicts involving rural African communities as “faction fights”, “tribal disturbances” or “native unrest” primarily because such a generalisation perpetuates a stereotypical belief that there is an inherent propensity towards mindless violence among African people. By tracing the long roots of conflicts in the Umzinto district it illustrates that tensions brewed for long periods of time before they deteriorated into violence, and that violence was often the last resort, chosen when people had explored and exhausted all avenues for the peaceful resolution of conflicts. Careful examination of the political and economic contexts in which tensions surfaced and degenerated into violence also reveals that there were non-African players who contributed to the outbreak of violent conflicts.
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