Violent Intermediaries: African Soldiers, Conquest, and Everyday Colonialism in German East Africa

Author:   Michelle R. Moyd
Publisher:   Ohio University Press
ISBN:  

9780821420898


Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 July 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Violent Intermediaries: African Soldiers, Conquest, and Everyday Colonialism in German East Africa


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Full Product Details

Author:   Michelle R. Moyd
Publisher:   Ohio University Press
Imprint:   Ohio University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 58.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.522kg
ISBN:  

9780821420898


ISBN 10:   0821420895
Pages:   304
Publication Date:   01 July 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

* List of Illustrations * Preface * Acknowledgments * A Note on Spellings, Currency, and Measurements * Introduction: Reconstructing Askari Realities * Chapter 1: Becoming Askari Narratives of Early Schutztruppe Recruitment in Context * Chapter 2: Making Askari Ways of War Military Training and Socialization * Chapter 3: The Askari Way of War * Chapter 4: Station Life * Chapter 5: Askari as Agents of Everyday Colonialism * Conclusion: Making Askari Myths * Chronology * Notes * Glossary * Bibliography * Index

Reviews

[Violent Intermediaries] offers a new and well researched perspective drawing on the insights of the social history of recent decades...[Moyd] has produced a fine social history of African soldiers as intermediaries in the everyday life of colonialism in German East Africa. Moyd's insistence on viewing askari not only as soldiers but also as men with social lives and aspirations that transcended their professional activities in maboma, on expeditions, and on the battlefield is refreshing and insightful....Violent Intermediaries is a highly readable monograph offering an empathetic view on the stigmatized African soldiers of the colonial army in German East Africa. Overcoming methodological challenges posed by translation, memory, and frankly a scarcity of documents disclosing askari voices, Moyd sought to understand these soldiers on their own terms. As a result she explores the everyday life of the askari, from within their households to their official and unofficial roles within colonial society, and she recovers a past widely misunderstood due to German praise and Tanzanian denunciation for their loyalty to the Schutztruppe (the official name of the German colonial army).... Violent Intermediaries, like other books in Ohio University Press's New African Histories series edited by Jean Allman, Allen Isaacman, and Derek R. Peterson, expands the boundaries of African history in new and exciting directions. [Moyd] furthers our understanding of everyday colonialism by fleshing out the lives of individuals who were simultaneously agents of colonialism and objects of colonial rule. ...She uses [limited sources] thoroughly to provide rich and insightful details about this underexplored dimension of colonialism. [Moyd] manages to reconcile the German inflated myth of the 'loyal askari' and the post-colonial Tanzanian emphasis [on] the askari as brutal agents of colonialism, by showing the many nuances in between-tracing the contradictory accounts to reveal simple human behavior. I expect Violent Intermediaries to become the definitive English-language history of the East African Schutztruppe [the colonial forces of Germany]. Michelle Moyd has bravely and productively ventured into the realm of conventional military history to draw social and cultural conclusions from the ways that the Schutztruppe fought. This attention to how African soldiers carried out their primary mission is largely missing from most of the recent scholarship on colonial militaries. -- Timothy H. Parsons, professor of history, Washington University (St. Louis) Michelle Moyd brings to life the world of the East African askari in this imaginative and original study of their role in shaping German colonialism in Africa in the early twentieth century. Readable, well argued, and carefully researched, Violent Intermediaries is an important study that will enrich the work of scholars in many areas. -- Philippa Levine, author of The British Empire, Sunrise to Sunset Michelle Moyd offers a uniquely empathetic reading of colonial sources and a new narrative voice as she uncovers the histories of ... actors that have been mythologized, misused, and misunderstood for more than a century. -- Jamie Monson, professor of history, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota


I expect Violent Intermediaries to become the definitive English-language history of the East African Schutztruppe [the colonial forces of Germany]. Michelle Moyd has bravely and productively ventured into the realm of conventional military history to draw social and cultural conclusions from the ways that the Schutztruppe fought. This attention to how African soldiers carried out their primary mission is largely missing from most of the recent scholarship on colonial militaries. Timothy H. Parsons, professor of history and the African and African American studies program, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri Michelle Moyd offers a uniquely empathetic reading of colonial sources and a new narrative voice as she uncovers the histories of?...?actors that have been mythologized, misused, and misunderstood for more than a century. Jamie Monson, professor of history, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota Michelle Moyd brings to life the world of the East African askari in this imaginative and original study of their role in shaping German colonialism in Africa in the early twentieth century. Readable, well argued, and carefully researched, Violent Intermediaries is an important study that will enrich the work of scholars in many areas. Philippa Levine, author of The British Empire, Sunrise to Sunset [A] fascinating and scholarly study of African soldiers in the German Schutztruppe, and their role in establishing German colonial rule in eastern Africa...What is distinctive about this study is the way Moyd includes the pre-colonial history and situation of these soldiers. She argues that pre-existing warfare, enslavement practices and spreading violence before colonial rule must be factored into recruitment and warfare. Also, she shows how African soldiers went through a number of stages in their military training which had an important social dimension and reach. Their power and role as the new 'big men,' in turn went on to shape newly emerging colonial African societies. -Africa at LSE blog [Moyd] manages to reconcile the German inflated myth of the 'loyal askari' and the post-colonial Tanzanian emphasis [on] the askari as brutal agents of colonialism, by showing the many nuances in between-tracing the contradictory accounts to reveal simple human behavior. -history.transnational [Moyd] furthers our understanding of everyday colonialism by fleshing out the lives of individuals who were simultaneously agents of colonialism and objects of colonial rule... She uses [limited sources] thoroughly to provide rich and insightful details about this underexplored dimension of colonialism. -American Historical Review


“[Violent Intermediaries] offers a new and well researched perspective drawing on the insights of the social history of recent decades…[Moyd] has produced a fine social history of African soldiers as intermediaries in the everyday life of colonialism in German East Africa.” * International Journal of African Historical Studies * “Moyd’s insistence on viewing askari not only as soldiers but also as men with social lives and aspirations that transcended their professional activities in maboma, on expeditions, and on the battlefield is refreshing and insightful.…Violent Intermediaries is a highly readable monograph offering an empathetic view on the stigmatized African soldiers of the colonial army in German East Africa.” * H-Net * “Overcoming methodological challenges posed by translation, memory, and frankly a scarcity of documents disclosing askari voices, Moyd sought to understand these soldiers on their own terms. As a result she explores the everyday life of the askari, from within their households to their official and unofficial roles within colonial society, and she recovers a past widely misunderstood due to German praise and Tanzanian denunciation for their loyalty to the Schutztruppe (the official name of the German colonial army).… Violent Intermediaries, like other books in Ohio University Press’s New African Histories series edited by Jean Allman, Allen Isaacman, and Derek R. Peterson, expands the boundaries of African history in new and exciting directions.” * Canadian Journal of History * “[Moyd] furthers our understanding of everyday colonialism by fleshing out the lives of individuals who were simultaneously agents of colonialism and objects of colonial rule. …She uses [limited sources] thoroughly to provide rich and insightful details about this underexplored dimension of colonialism.” * American Historical Review * “[Moyd] manages to reconcile the German inflated myth of the ‘loyal askari’ and the post-colonial Tanzanian emphasis [on] the askari as brutal agents of colonialism, by showing the many nuances in between—tracing the contradictory accounts to reveal simple human behavior.” * history.transnational * “I expect Violent Intermediaries to become the definitive English-language history of the East African Schutztruppe [the colonial forces of Germany]. Michelle Moyd has bravely and productively ventured into the realm of conventional military history to draw social and cultural conclusions from the ways that the Schutztruppe fought. This attention to how African soldiers carried out their primary mission is largely missing from most of the recent scholarship on colonial militaries.” -- Timothy H. Parsons, professor of history, Washington University (St. Louis) “Michelle Moyd brings to life the world of the East African askari in this imaginative and original study of their role in shaping German colonialism in Africa in the early twentieth century. Readable, well argued, and carefully researched, Violent Intermediaries is an important study that will enrich the work of scholars in many areas.” -- Philippa Levine, author of The British Empire, Sunrise to Sunset “Michelle Moyd offers a uniquely empathetic reading of colonial sources and a new narrative voice as she uncovers the histories of … actors that have been mythologized, misused, and misunderstood for more than a century.” -- Jamie Monson, professor of history, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota


[A] fascinating and scholarly study of African soldiers in the German Schutztruppe, and their role in establishing German colonial rule in eastern Africa. What is distinctive about this study is the way Moyd includes the pre-colonial history and situation of these soldiers. She argues that pre-existing warfare, enslavement practices and spreading violence before colonial rule must be factored into recruitment and warfare. Also, she shows how African soldiers went through a number of stages in their military training which had an important social dimension and reach. Their power and role as the new big men, in turn went on to shape newly emerging colonial African societies. Africa at LSE blog


Michelle Moyd offers a uniquely empathetic reading of colonial sources and a new narrative voice as she uncovers the histories of?...?actors that have been mythologized, misused, and misunderstood for more than a century. -- Jamie Monson, professor of history, Macalester College, Saint Paul, Minnesota


Author Information

Michelle R. Moyd is associate professor of history and Red Cedar Distinguished Faculty at Michigan State University. Previously, she has been associate professor of history at Indiana University and a resident fellow at the International Research Center “Work and Human Lifecycle in Global History” of Humboldt University, Germany, and at the Institute for Historical Studies at the University of Texas, Austin. She was also an instructor in the Department of History at the United States Air Force Academy.

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