Children of the Soil

Children of the Soil

The Power of Built Form in Urban Madagascar

  • Author: Rijke-Epstein, Tasha
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9781478020486
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781478027409
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2023
  • Month: September
  • Pages: 368
  • Language: English
In Children of the Soil, Tasha Rijke-Epstein offers an urban history of the port city of Mahajanga, Madagascar, before, during, and after colonization. Drawing on archival and ethnographic evidence, she weaves together the lives and afterlives of built spaces to show how city residents negotiated imperial encroachment, colonial rule, and global racial capitalism over two centuries. From Mahajanga’s hilltop palace to the alluvial depths of its cesspools, the city’s spaces were domains for ideological debates between rulers and subjects, French colonizers and indigenous Malagasy peoples, and Comorian migrants and Indian traders. In these spaces, Mahajanga’s residents expressed competing moral theories about power over people and the land. The built world was also where varying populations reckoned with human, ancestral, and ecological pasts and laid present and future claims to urban belonging. Migrants from nearby Comoros harnessed built forms as anticipatory devices through which they sought to build their presence into the landscape and transform themselves from outsiders into "children of the soil" (zanatany). In tracing the centrality of Mahajanga’s architecture to everyday life, Rijke-Epstein offers new ways to understand the relationships between the material world, the more-than-human realm, and the making of urban life.
  • Cover
  • Contents
  • Note on Toponyms
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Material Histories
  • I. Building Power
    • 1. Casting the Land: Architectural Tactics and the Politics of Durability
    • 2. Vibrant Matters: The Rova and More-Than-Human Forces
  • II. Anticipatory Landscapes
    • 3. Storied Refusals: Labor and Laden Absences
    • 4. Sedimentary Bonds: Treasured Mosques and Everyday Expertise
  • III. Residual Lives and Afterlives
    • 5. Garnered Presences: Constructing Belonging in the Zanatany City
    • 6. Violent Remnants: Infrastructures of Possibility and Peril
  • Epilogue: Unfinished Histories
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
    • A
    • B
    • C
    • D
    • E
    • F
    • G
    • H
    • I
    • K
    • L
    • M
    • N
    • O
    • P
    • Q
    • R
    • S
    • T
    • U
    • V
    • W
    • Z
  • Untitled

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