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Language and Colonial Power : The Appropriation of Swahili in the Former Belgian Congo, 1880-1938 (African Studies)

AUTHOR: Johannes Fabian, et al
ISBN: 0521308704

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Language and Colonial Power : The Appropriation of Swahili in the Former Belgian Congo, 1880-1938 (African Studies)
- Book Review,
by Johannes Fabian, et al


Book Description
Among the preconditions for establishing colonial authority was communication with the colonised. Verbal exchanges depended on a shared communicative praxis providing common ground on which unilateral claims could be imposed. Use of, and control over, verbal means of communication were needed to maintain regimes - military, religious-ideological, economic - in power. In the Belgian Congo brutal physical force never ceased to be exercised. In this study Professor Fabian examines the more subtle uses of power through controls on communication, by looking at the history of Swahili as it spread from the East Coast to Central Africa and demonstrating connections between -changing forms of colonial power and the development of policies towards Swahili. Using a wide range of sources, including numerous and sometimes obscure vocabularies, he combines concepts derived from literary theory and sociolinguistics to uncover, through the flaws and failures of these texts, deep-seated attitudes to language and communication.


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         Book Review

Language and Colonial Power : The Appropriation of Swahili in the Former Belgian Congo, 1880-1938 (African Studies)
- Book Reviews,
by Johannes Fabian, et al

Language and Colonial Power: The Appropriation of Swahili in the Former Belgian Congo, 1880-1938

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Among the preconditions for establishing colonial authority was communication with the colonised. Verbal exchanges depended on a shared communicative praxis providing common ground on which unilateral claims could be imposed. Use of, and control over, verbal means of communication were needed to maintain regimes - military, religious-ideological, economic - in power. In the Belgian Congo brutal physical force never ceased to be exercised. In this study Professor Fabian examines the more subtle uses of power through controls on communication, by looking at the history of Swahili as it spread from the East Coast to Central Africa and demonstrating connections between -changing forms of colonial power and the development of policies towards Swahili. Using a wide range of sources, including numerous and sometimes obscure vocabularies, he combines concepts derived from literary theory and sociolinguistics to uncover, through the flaws and failures of these texts, deep-seated attitudes to language and communication.


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