In this Book

Pastimes & Politics: Culture, Community, and Identity in Post-Abolition Urban Zanzibar, 1890–1945

Book
Laura Fair
2001
Published by: Ohio University Press
summary
The first decades of the twentieth century were years of dramatic change in Zanzibar, a time when the social, economic, and political lives of island residents were in incredible flux, framed by the abolition of slavery, the introduction of colonialism, and a tide of urban migration. Pastimes and Politics explores the era from the perspective of the urban poor, highlighting the numerous and varied ways that recently freed slaves and other immigrants to town struggled to improve their individual and collective lives and to create a sense of community within this new environment. In this study Laura Fair explores a range of cultural and social practices that gave expression to slaves’ ideas of emancipation, as well as how such ideas and practices were gendered. Pastimes and Politics examines the ways in which various cultural practices, including taarab music, dress, football, ethnicity, and sexuality, changed during the early twentieth century in relation to islanders’ changing social and political identities. Professor Fair argues that cultural changes were not merely reflections of social and political transformations. Rather, leisure and popular culture were critical practices through which the colonized and former slaves transformed themselves and the society in which they lived. Methodologically innovative and clearly written, Pastimes and Politics is accessible to specialists and general readers alike. It is a book that should find wide use in courses on African history, urbanization, popular culture, gender studies, or emancipation. Laura Fair is a member of the department of history at the University of Oregon.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright

pp. v-vii

Contents

pp. ix-x

List of Illustrations

pp. xi-xii

Acknowledgments

pp. xiii-xvi

Chapter 1. Introduction

pp. 1-63

Chapter 2. Dressing Up: Clothing, Class, and Gender in Post-Abolition Zanzibar

pp. 64-109

Chapter 3. “The Land Is Ours! Why Should We Pay Rent? ”: Land, Law, and Housing in Colonial Ng’ambo

pp. 110-168

Chapter 4. The Music of Siti binti Saad: Creating Community, Crafting Identity, and Negotiating Power through Taarab

pp. 169-225

Chapter 5. Colonial Politics, Masculinity, and Football

pp. 226-264

Chapter 6. Conclusion

pp. 265-271

Notes

pp. 273-329

Glossary

pp. 331-334

Bibliography

pp. 335-364

Index

pp. 365-370
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