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Book Review
Mahmood Mamdani, Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy
of Late Colonialism, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996.
Pp. xii + 353. $19.95 (ISBN 0-691-02793-5).
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Although it is still relatively new, Mahmood Mamdani's
Citizen and Subject has already been the subject of considerable
attention and controversy among Africanist scholars. The African
Studies Association has selected it as a co-recipient of the 1997
Herskovitz prize as one of the outstanding works on Africa published
during the previous year. At the same time many historians of Africa
(including the present reviewer) find both Mamdani's narrative and
his analysis to be deeply flawed. The appeal and the problem of
this work both center around the same issue: the attempt by Mamdani
to construct a model of colonialism and its consequences that embraces
both tropical Africa and South Africa. In the immediate aftermath
of South Africa's dramatic shift from Apartheid to majority rule,
such a comparison would seem to infuse the discouraging picture
of recent tropical African development with new energy while also
providing Southern African scholars with a basis for overcoming
their previous intellectual isolation from the rest of the continent.
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The central point of Mamdani's argument
is implied in his title: throughout colonial Africa majority rural
populations were governed through indigenous chiefs and "customary
law" under a regime of "decentralized despotism." As a result they
were ill prepared to participate as citizens in the modern states
that have succeeded colonialism. The canonical version of such colonialism
is the British system of indirect rule, formally employed only in
tropical Africa but echoed both in the segregationist policies of
rural South Africa and in the less explicit practices of other European
powers in tropical Africa. Because such colonialism was both despotic
and decentralized, Mamdani argues that it created only two possibilities
for postcolonial African governments: a conservative maintenance
of decentralization through either the same hierarchy of chiefs
or a "noncoercive clientalism;" or, alternatively, a radical effort
at development through "centralized despotism." |
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Mamdani's model derives mainly
from tropical Africa, where indirect rule was the central theme
of political discourse in the colonial era and where it is also
possible to pass judgment upon postcolonial regimes. However, an
equal portion of his book is devoted to South Africa (and sometimes
to its satellite states such as Swaziland, whose status in the argument
is ambiguous). Much of the discussion here, such as the analysis
of labor union politics, has limited parallels in tropical Africa
(and even these are not explored). Elsewhere, Mamdani draws the
obvious analogies between the "Bantustan" policies of South Africa
and indirect rule (labeled "non-racial apartheid"). The most ambitious
comparative effort relates to the black-on-black political violence
that characterized the decade or so preceding South Africa's democratic
elections of 1994 and is usually blamed on a combination of white
government manipulation and the political ambitions of the Zulu
Inkatha movement. Mamdani sees these events more as a result of
migrant labor communities ("The Rural in the Urban") being excluded
from the urban politics of the ANC and its allied labor unions and
civic associations. The positive model advocated here for all African
politics is some amalgam of the energies displayed in rural movements
of protest against local oppression and the urban vision of a fully
integrated national society. |
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While it is difficult to quarrel with Mamdani's
goals and he even provides occasional insights of some value, the
book as a whole seems unconvincing when it is most coherent and
incoherent when it is convincing. Mamdani's account of South Africa
is sometimes based on faulty evidence and (as in the urban violence
argument cited above) occasionally comes to controversial conclusions,
but on the whole it follows the standard historiography. On tropical
Africa, however (and ironically, since Mamdani has just moved from
his native Uganda to the University of Cape Town), he is sometimes
wildly out of line. |
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Mamdani pays little systematic attention
to economic issues and insists that his "locus of analysis has been
less the mode of accumulation than the mode of domination" (294).
But underlying his entire comparison and particularly his treatment
of tropical Africa is an assumption of comparable motives for domination.
In South Africa these motives derive from a very large and permanent
white population seeking control over a globally powerful set of
mining enterprises that, by the 1940s, had engendered an advanced
local industrial economy. In tropical Africa there were few (usually
no) white settlers and economies were mainly restricted to agricultural
exports of little significance to the outside world. Mamdani overcomes
this gap by modeling all these tropical economies on the production
of cotton and insisting several times that African cotton was critical
to the industrial world because of shortages caused by the American
Civil War, which ended twenty years before the colonial "Scramble
for Africa." (Mamdani may be confusing the Civil War with the boll
weevil infestations in the southern U.S., which occurred shortly
after the Scramble and inspired various European efforts to develop
African cotton production but produced little lasting demand for
the resulting crops.) |
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Given the marginal economic situation
of tropical African colonies (and their successor states) the motives
for managing them were highly conservative: maintaining control
(as a matter of national prestige and potential future value) while
minimizing both financial and political costs (including an emphasis
on export of crops such as cocoa, coffee, and palm oil, all more
profitable and less onerous than cotton). While there were certainly
many instances of abusive coercion, such as those cited by Mamdani,
the aim (and usual result) of both indirect rule and the peasant
agriculture that accompanied it was one of assuring enough revenue
to cover the costs of running the colonial system itself while creating
as little disturbance as possible within local society. Such regimes
produced neither the suffering nor the wealth of South Africa. Morever,
despite Mamdani's denunciation of the "civil society" arguments
currently fashionable in tropical African political studies, his
own rural-urban dichotomy turns out to be little more than a variant
of the same paradigm, and one far more applicable to South than
to tropical Africa, where urban communities have always maintained
a predominantly migrant character. |
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Of greatest interest to readers of
Law and History Review is Mamdani's discussion of codified
"customary law" as an instrument of colonial rule. This was a practice
shared in the rural areas of both South and tropical Africa and
Mamdani follows standard scholarship in stressing the colonial nature
of such an "invention of tradition." He also reproduces for us the
colonial-era debates about the acceptability of removing rural African
"subjects" from the jurisdiction of metropolitan law and entrusting
the administration of its alternative to appointed chiefs and their
bureaucratic European supervisors. But Mamdani overestimates the
rigidity of neo-customary legal regimes (ignoring several recent
studies of their operation) and also exaggerates (for tropical Africa)
their role in inhibiting access to land by either local or immigrant
African cultivators. |
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If this book stimulates further comparisons
of either colonial or postcolonial development in tropical and South
Africa, it will have served a useful purpose. However, the successful
execution of such projects will require more careful historical
research and more rigorous analysis than is evident here. |
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Ralph A. Austen
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University of Chicago
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