An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean
In An Unformed Map, Philip Janzen traces the intellectual trajectories of Caribbean people who joined the British and French colonial administrations in Africa between 1890 and 1930. Caribbean administrators grew up in colonial societies, saw themselves as British and French, and tended to look down on Africans. Once in Africa, however, they were doubly marginalized—excluded by Europeans and unwelcome among Africans. This marginalization was then reproduced in colonial archives, where their lives appear only in fragments. Drawing on sources beyond the archives of empire, from dictionaries and language exams to a suitcase full of poems, Janzen considers how Caribbean administrators reckoned with the profound effects of assimilation, racism, and dislocation. As they learned African languages, formed relationships with African intellectuals, and engaged with African cultures and histories, they began to rethink their positions in the British and French empires. They also created new geographies of belonging across the Atlantic, foundations from which others imagined new political horizons. Ultimately, Janzen offers a model for reading across sources and writing history in the face of archival fragmentation.
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An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean
In An Unformed Map, Philip Janzen traces the intellectual trajectories of Caribbean people who joined the British and French colonial administrations in Africa between 1890 and 1930. Caribbean administrators grew up in colonial societies, saw themselves as British and French, and tended to look down on Africans. Once in Africa, however, they were doubly marginalized—excluded by Europeans and unwelcome among Africans. This marginalization was then reproduced in colonial archives, where their lives appear only in fragments. Drawing on sources beyond the archives of empire, from dictionaries and language exams to a suitcase full of poems, Janzen considers how Caribbean administrators reckoned with the profound effects of assimilation, racism, and dislocation. As they learned African languages, formed relationships with African intellectuals, and engaged with African cultures and histories, they began to rethink their positions in the British and French empires. They also created new geographies of belonging across the Atlantic, foundations from which others imagined new political horizons. Ultimately, Janzen offers a model for reading across sources and writing history in the face of archival fragmentation.
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An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

by Philip Janzen
An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

An Unformed Map: Geographies of Belonging between Africa and the Caribbean

by Philip Janzen

eBook

$27.95 

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Overview

In An Unformed Map, Philip Janzen traces the intellectual trajectories of Caribbean people who joined the British and French colonial administrations in Africa between 1890 and 1930. Caribbean administrators grew up in colonial societies, saw themselves as British and French, and tended to look down on Africans. Once in Africa, however, they were doubly marginalized—excluded by Europeans and unwelcome among Africans. This marginalization was then reproduced in colonial archives, where their lives appear only in fragments. Drawing on sources beyond the archives of empire, from dictionaries and language exams to a suitcase full of poems, Janzen considers how Caribbean administrators reckoned with the profound effects of assimilation, racism, and dislocation. As they learned African languages, formed relationships with African intellectuals, and engaged with African cultures and histories, they began to rethink their positions in the British and French empires. They also created new geographies of belonging across the Atlantic, foundations from which others imagined new political horizons. Ultimately, Janzen offers a model for reading across sources and writing history in the face of archival fragmentation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478060901
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 05/02/2025
Series: Theory in Forms
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 28 MB
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About the Author

Philip Janzen is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Florida.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  xi
Introduction. Fault Lines  1
1. From the Caribbean to Africa  15
2. Middle Passages  31
3. Fragments and Photographs  53
4. Buried Vocabularies  73
5. Intimate Geographies  105
6. Old Talk  133
7. Poetry and Peripheries  155
Epilogue  179
Notes  183
Bibliography  225
Index
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