Lords of the Fly
Sleeping Sickness Control in British East Africa, 1900-1960
Kirk Arden Hoppe, University of Illinois at Chicago
ISBN 978-0-325-07123-7 / 0-325-07123-3 / 2003 / 224pp / Cloth
Imprint: Heinemann
Availability: This title is not yet published.
Grade Level: Adult
*Price and availability subject to change without notice.
British sleeping sickness control in colonial Uganda and Tanzania became a powerful mechanism for environmental and social engineering that defined and delineated African landscapes, reordered African mobility and access to resources. As colonialism shifted from conquest to occupation, colonial scientists exercised much influence during periods of administrative uncertainty about the role and future of colonial rule. "Impartial" and "objective" science helped to justify the British "civilizing mission" in East Africa by muting the moral ambiguities and violence of colonial occupation.
Africans' actions shaped systems of western scientific knowledge as they evolved in colonial contexts. Bridging what might otherwise be viewed as the disparate colonial functions of environmental and health control, sleeping sickness policy by the British was not a straightforward exercise of colonial power. The implementation of sleeping sickness control compelled both Africans and British to negotiate. African elite, farmers, and fishers, and British administrators, field officers, and African employees, all adjusted their actions according to on-going processes of resistance, cooperation and compromise. Interactions between colonial officials, their African agents, and other African groups informed African and British understandings about sleeping sickness, sleeping sickness control and African environments, and transformed Western ideas in practice.
Figures
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Scramble for Sleeping Sickness: Imperial Interests and the Rise of Colonial Science
Depopulation and Safe Corridors in Colonial Uganda, 1906-1920
The Shift to Tanganyika, 1920-1935
Forced Resettlement in Tanganyika and Uganda, 1935-1960
Labor, Land, and Colonial Disease Control
Conclusion
Epilogue
Abbreviations Used in Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
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