Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda
In 1972, Ugandan president Idi Amin expelled close to 80,000 South Asians of Ugandan heritage from the country by dictatorial decree. In Insecurities of Expulsion, Anneeth Kaur Hundle revisits this weighty historical event, arguing that it is neither an exceptional nor a parochial event, neither a result of primordial Afro-South Asian racial conflict nor an opening into a redemptive search for Afro-South Asian interracial solidarities. Hundle explores the aftermaths and continuous nature of the expulsion event, examining its effects and affects; the images, representations, and differentiated experiences and memories of the event; and the tense and ambivalent practices of citizenship, sovereignty, and governance that have emerged in the decades following the expulsion. She examines Afro-Asian entanglements in what she describes as transcontinental Uganda through the lenses of race, ethnicity, class, caste, religion, gender, and sexuality. Throughout, Hundle argues for stronger attention to knowledge production on global Afro-South Asian connections and the continued dynamics of community, citizenship, and identity on the African Continent as central to envisioning Black African self-determinism, racial reconciliation, and interracial pluralisms during shifting imperial, postcolonial, nationalist, and geopolitical times.
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Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda
In 1972, Ugandan president Idi Amin expelled close to 80,000 South Asians of Ugandan heritage from the country by dictatorial decree. In Insecurities of Expulsion, Anneeth Kaur Hundle revisits this weighty historical event, arguing that it is neither an exceptional nor a parochial event, neither a result of primordial Afro-South Asian racial conflict nor an opening into a redemptive search for Afro-South Asian interracial solidarities. Hundle explores the aftermaths and continuous nature of the expulsion event, examining its effects and affects; the images, representations, and differentiated experiences and memories of the event; and the tense and ambivalent practices of citizenship, sovereignty, and governance that have emerged in the decades following the expulsion. She examines Afro-Asian entanglements in what she describes as transcontinental Uganda through the lenses of race, ethnicity, class, caste, religion, gender, and sexuality. Throughout, Hundle argues for stronger attention to knowledge production on global Afro-South Asian connections and the continued dynamics of community, citizenship, and identity on the African Continent as central to envisioning Black African self-determinism, racial reconciliation, and interracial pluralisms during shifting imperial, postcolonial, nationalist, and geopolitical times.
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Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda

Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda

by Anneeth Kaur Hundle
Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda

Insecurities of Expulsion: Afro-Asian Entanglements in Transcontinental Uganda

by Anneeth Kaur Hundle

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Overview

In 1972, Ugandan president Idi Amin expelled close to 80,000 South Asians of Ugandan heritage from the country by dictatorial decree. In Insecurities of Expulsion, Anneeth Kaur Hundle revisits this weighty historical event, arguing that it is neither an exceptional nor a parochial event, neither a result of primordial Afro-South Asian racial conflict nor an opening into a redemptive search for Afro-South Asian interracial solidarities. Hundle explores the aftermaths and continuous nature of the expulsion event, examining its effects and affects; the images, representations, and differentiated experiences and memories of the event; and the tense and ambivalent practices of citizenship, sovereignty, and governance that have emerged in the decades following the expulsion. She examines Afro-Asian entanglements in what she describes as transcontinental Uganda through the lenses of race, ethnicity, class, caste, religion, gender, and sexuality. Throughout, Hundle argues for stronger attention to knowledge production on global Afro-South Asian connections and the continued dynamics of community, citizenship, and identity on the African Continent as central to envisioning Black African self-determinism, racial reconciliation, and interracial pluralisms during shifting imperial, postcolonial, nationalist, and geopolitical times.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478031918
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 06/06/2025
Pages: 416
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.93(d)

About the Author

Anneeth Kaur Hundle is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Presidential Chair in Social Sciences to Advance Sikh Studies at the University of California, Irvine.

Table of Contents

List of Abbreviations  ix
Preface. From Diasporic to Transcontinental Entanglement  xiii
Maps  xxvi
Part I. Imperial Entanglements
Introduction. Expulsion as Closure, Expulsion as Opening  1
1. Becoming a Racial Exile, Becoming a Black Nation: Colonial and Postcolonial Orientations  41
Part II. Entanglements of Expulsion
2. Exceptions to the Expulsion: Racial Denizenship in Amin’s Uganda  91
3. Insecurities of Repatriation: From Refugee to Returnee  128
Part III. South-South Entanglements
4. Insecurities of Foreign Direct Investment: From Returnee to Investor-Citizen  173
5. Indian Ugandan, African Asian, or Both? Community-Building, Community Citizenship, and Culture and Indigeneity  207
6. Of Gendered Insecurities: Contingent and Ambivalent Feminist Afro-South Asian Intimacies and Solidarities  242
Conclusion. Toward a Transcontinental Anthropology of Afro-South Asian Entanglement  279
Postscript. Fifty Years On  301
Appendix. Active South Asian Community Associations and Institutions in Uganda since the Early 1990s  307
Notes  311
Bibliography  345
Index
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