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首页> 外文期刊>African Studies >Slavery and Freedom in Nineteenth Century East Africa: The Case of Waungwana Caravan Porters
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Slavery and Freedom in Nineteenth Century East Africa: The Case of Waungwana Caravan Porters

机译:19世纪东非的奴隶制和自由:以Waungwana大篷车搬运工为例

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The nineteenth century East African caravan system was organised around the labour of itinerant caravan porters, most of whom were free wage labourers. However, a minority of the caravan labour force and a section of the populations of new market and caravan towns on the coast and in the interior were slaves or freed slaves known as Waungwana, or 'gentlemen'. Waungwana caravan porters and retainers of Muslim traders were mostly coast-based, although many travelled for years in the far interior of Central and East Africa. To some degree the Waungwana were assimilated into Swahili culture, with its urban Muslim characteristics. Yet the Waungwana were from diverse origins across East Africa. They were also very mobile, and they were wage earning and often entrepreneurial. Paradoxically it is this very mobility and frequently great distance from the centres of Swahili culture that gave the Waungwana social and economic opportunities, status, and a role as cultural brokers. They were men of the world, and lived their lives alongside the free caravan personnel of the non-Muslim interior. Waungwana were able, therefore, to negotiate limitations to their slave status and enlarge a sphere of freedom for themselves. They were also founding inhabitants of the new centres of urban modernity along the caravan routes. The Waungwana perfectly illustrate multiple conceptions of 'labour crossings'. First, they transcended the rather blurred boundaries between free and slave labour in nineteenth century East Africa. Second, they utilised space and mobility in a fluid way to negotiate the conditions of slavery and freedom. Third, they were partners in processes of transregional, transnational and supraethnic interactions in Central and East Africa.
机译:19世纪的东非大篷车系统是围绕巡回大篷车搬运工的工作而组织的,其中大多数是自由工资工人。但是,在沿海地区和内陆地区,少数商队劳动力以及一部分新市场和商队城镇是奴隶或被释放的奴隶,被称为Waungwana或“绅士”。 Waungwana商队搬运工和穆斯林商人的固定人大多是沿海人,尽管许多人在中非和东非的内陆地区旅行了多年。 Waungwana在某种程度上已被融入具有城市穆斯林特征的斯瓦希里语文化。然而,瓦旺瓦纳人来自东非各地。他们也很随和,他们是挣工资的人,常常是企业家。矛盾的是,正是这种流动性以及与斯瓦希里语文化中心的经常相距遥远,才使瓦翁瓦纳获得了社会和经济机会,地位以及作为文化经纪人的作用。他们是世界上的男人,与非穆斯林内部的免费大篷车人员一起生活。因此,Waungwana能够就其奴隶地位进行限制,并为自己扩大自由范围。他们还在大篷车路线上建立了新的城市现代中心。瓦旺瓦纳(Waungwana)完美地说明了“劳动过境”的多种概念。首先,他们超越了19世纪东非自由劳动与奴隶劳动之间相当模糊的界限。其次,他们以灵活的方式利用空间和机动性来谈判奴隶制和自由的条件。第三,他们是中非和东非跨区域,跨国和超种族互动过程中的伙伴。

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