1st Edition

Missions, States, and European Expansion in Africa

    314 Pages
    by Routledge

    314 Pages
    by Routledge

    Missions, States, and European Expansion in Africa aims to explore the ways Christianity and colonialism acted as hegemonic or counter hegemonic forces in the making of African societies. As Western interventionist forces, Christianity and colonialism were crucial in establishing and maintaining political, cultural, and economic domination. Indeed, both elements of Africa’s encounter with the West played pivotal roles in shaping African societies during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This volume uses a wide range of perspectives to address the intersection between missions, evangelism, and colonial expansion across Africa. The contributors address several issues, including missionary collaboration with the colonizing effort of European powers; disagreements between missionaries and colonizing agents; the ways in which missionaries and colonial officials used language, imagery, and European epistemology to legitimize relations of inequality with Africans; and the ways in which both groups collaborated to transform African societies.

    Thus, Missions, States, and European Expansion in Africa transcends the narrow boundaries that often separate the role of these two elements of European encounter to argue that missionary endeavours and official colonial actions could all be conceptualized as hegemonic institutions, in which both pursued the same civilizing mission, even if they adopted different strategies in their encounter with African societies.

    Introduction  1. All Things to All People: Christian Missionaries in Nineteenth Century South Africa  2. To Hang a Ladder in the Air: Talking About African Education in Edinburgh in 1910  3. Catholicism, Protestantism, and Imperial Claims in the Kabaka’s Buganda, 1860-1902  4. Collaboration, Containment, and Control: Missionary Impulse and the Construction of Colonial Nigeria  5. The Ambivalent Triumvirates on the Niger: European Traders, Christian Evangelism, and British Imperial Politics in Southern Nigeria, 1850-1899  6. Collaborative Landscape: The Mission, the State, and Their Subjects in the Making of Northeastern Tanzania's Terrain, 1870-1900  7. American Evangelical Christian Encounters in Southern Sudan, 1900-present  8. Missions, Colonial Expansionism, and the Supplanting of African Religion  9. African Agents of CMS and the Tightrope of Mission versus Empire 1842 – 1891  10. Constructing Hegemonies: Gender, Race and Missions in Colonial Kenya  11. Threatening Gestures, Immoral Bodies: The Intersection of Church, State, and Kongo Performances in the Belgian Congo

    Biography

    Korieh, Chima J.; Njoku, Raphael Chijioke