En savoir plus
Informationen zum Autor Michael R. Mahoney is Adjunct Professor of History at Ripon College and Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Lawrence University. Klappentext Michael R. Mahoney is Adjunct Professor of History at Ripon College and Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Lawrence University. Zusammenfassung A detailed history explaining how and why! in the late nineteenth century and early twentieth! Africans from the British colony of Natal transformed their ethnic self-identification! constructing and claiming a new Zulu identity. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments ix Maps xii Introduction 1 1. The Failure of Zulu Ethnic Integration in the Precolonial Zulu Kingdom 21 2. A Zulu King Too Strong to Love, a Colonial State Too Weak to Hate, 1838-1879 47 3. Increasing Conflict among Natal Africans, 1879-1906 83 4. The Role of Migrant Labor in the Spread of Zulu Ethnicity, 1886-1906 117 5. Natal Africans' Turn to Dinuzulu, 1898-1905 150 6. The Poll Tax Protests and Rebellion, 1905-1906 182 Epilogue 217 Notes 225 Bibliography 261 Index 277
A propos de l'auteur
Michael R. Mahoney is Adjunct Professor of History at Ripon College and Visiting Assistant Professor of History at Lawrence University.