Full Description
South Sudan's Azande during colonialism, war, and displacement revisits a people long frozen in time by E. E. Evans-Pritchard's classical anthropology. Its ethnographic research draws on archival sources and hundreds of interviews with chiefs, bureaucrats, former combatants, refugees, and stayees, beginning in a hopeful, post-independence South Sudan and continuing through war and displacement to Uganda. The book traces how colonialism, wars, and mass displacement have fractured Azande society, while also laying the ground for cultural renewal, historical consciousness, and even the reinstatement of an Azande kingdom. Yet the Azande's cultural renaissance may also bear the seeds of renewed conflict.
Contents
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Illustrations
Chapter 1: Introduction; Portraits: Introducing key respondents
Chapter 2: Ruptures: Traditional authorities, violence, and the state in Western Equatoria (1500s-2014)
Chapter 3: Movements: Im/mobility, violence, and state control in Western Equatoria (1500s-2014)
Chapter 4: Grounding conflicts: Land and formalisation in times of post-conflict return in Western Equatoria (2011-2015)
Chapter 5: Being traditional in mercurial times: Chiefs in Western Equatoria (2005-2016)
Chapter 6: 'It has started again': The eruption of civil war and people's decisions to stay or go (2015-2017)
Chapter 7: Encountering the state upon arrival: Aid, papers, and land in Uganda (2015-2019)
Chapter 8: Displaced traditional authority and the reconstruction of order in Uganda (2016-2019)
Chapter 9: Overcoming ruptures: The pursuit of future
Bibliography
Index



