A Modern History of TanganyikaCambridge University Press, 1979 M05 10 - 616 pages This is the first comprehensive and fully documented history of modern Tanganyika (mainland Tanzania). After introductory chapters on the nineteenth century, Dr Iliffe concentrates on the colonial period, and especially on economic, social and intellectual change among Africans as the core of their colonial experience and the basis of their political behaviour. Particularl attention is paid to the consequences for small-scale societies of their incorporation into the international order; the impact of capitlaism and the emergence of capitalist relationships and attitudes; African attempts to defend or reform indigenous institutions and to organise movements of protest or revolt against European control; the successive formation and dissolution of a specifically colonial society; and the effects of economic change on Tanganyika's ecology in modern times. The book brings together the research which scholars of many nationalities have carried out in Tanzania over the last twenty years, and attempts to synthesise their findings with the evidence available from African and European records in Tanzania, Britain and Germany. |
Contents
Intentions | 1 |
Tanganyika in 1800 | 6 |
Production exchange and social organisation | 13 |
Political organisation | 21 |
The problem of evil | 26 |
Music and dance | 33 |
The larger world | 35 |
The nineteenth century | 40 |
Regional differentiation and food production | 311 |
The creation of tribes | 318 |
The implementation of indirect rule | 325 |
The ideology of indirect rule | 334 |
The crisis of colonial society 192945 | 342 |
Diminishing returns | 347 |
A fading vision | 356 |
The spiral of repression | 370 |
The politics of survival | 52 |
The restructuring of indigenous economies | 67 |
Innovation and resistance in culture and religion | 77 |
The German conquest | 88 |
The struggle for the caravan routes | 98 |
Mkwawa and Hehe resistance | 107 |
The consolidation of German rule | 116 |
Colonial economy and ecological crisis 18901914 | 123 |
Disaster and survival in the 78905 | 124 |
Railways and the colonial economy | 135 |
The struggle for labour | 151 |
The ecological catastrophe | 163 |
The Maji Maji rebellion 19057 | 168 |
Expansion | 181 |
Repression | 193 |
Aftermath | 199 |
Religious and cultural change before 1914 | 203 |
Islam | 208 |
Christianity | 216 |
Dance | 237 |
Fortunes of war | 240 |
Survival and opportunity | 248 |
The British regime and its beneficiaries | 261 |
The Great War for Civilisation1 | 269 |
The origins of rural capitalism | 273 |
The emergence of peasant societies | 274 |
Cash crops and social change | 286 |
European enterprise and African labour | 301 |
Responsibility for the future | 376 |
Townsmen and workers | 381 |
Dar es Salaam | 384 |
The labour movement | 395 |
The African Association 192948 | 405 |
The association in Dar es Salaam 192939 | 406 |
The association in the provinces 792939 | 412 |
Popular organisation and panAfricanism 193945 | 418 |
Territorial consciousness and organisational collapse 79458 | 426 |
The new colonialism | 436 |
Policy and planning | 437 |
Development and deprivation in African rural societies | 453 |
Nationbuilding | 475 |
The new politics 194555 | 485 |
Tribal aggregation | 487 |
Popular politics in the northeast | 490 |
The politicisation of the Lake Province | 503 |
Julius Nyerere and the formation of TANU | 507 |
The first phase of nationalist growth | 513 |
The nationalist victory 195561 | 521 |
The social composition of TANU 19558 | 523 |
Labour trade religion and nationalism | 537 |
The breakthrough 19569 | 552 |
Between past and future 195961 | 567 |
Bibliography | 577 |
595 | |
Common terms and phrases
administration African African Association agricultural Arab areas Asian Association August authority became began branch British capital cent Central century Chagga chiefdom chiefs Christian church coast coastal coffee colonial Council created crops cultivated Dar es Salaam December demand district early East Africa economic especially established European existed experience famine February followed force formed German groups important increased independence Islam January July June Kilimanjaro labour Lake land late later leaders less lived London Maji March meeting mission missionaries movement Muslim native needed November Nyamwezi Nyerere October officer organisation party plantations political possessed probably produced reached regions remained resistance returned rule Salaam September Shambaa sisal slaves social society Southern Tabora Tanga Tanganyika TANU TANU's territorial took town trade Union University Usambara village workers young Zanzibar