Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-vfjqv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T18:07:57.123Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

DESCRIBING URBAN ‘NO MAN'S LAND’ IN AFRICA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2011

Extract

Cities as elusive, invisible, yet to come. ‘[T]he city is no-man's land’ (Grace Khunou, p. 240 in Mbembe and Nuttall). ‘Lagos is no man's land’ (heard in Lagos by the present writer, August 2010). A picture of a strangely empty and disrupted man-made landscape (William Kentridge, pp. 349–350 in Mbembe and Nuttall), balanced by a dense but also personless urban scene (by the same author, pp. 35–6 in the same text). … The slippage between conventional social scientific terms of runaway urbanization, the teeming human vitality of African cities, and the elusiveness of the titles, sayings and images of these three books, opens up the rich vein for research and writing into which these authors work their ways. Johannesburg. Kinshasa. Pikine (Dakar). Winterveld (a South African urban area outside Pretoria). Douala. Jeddah. The books reviewed here are based on detailed field research in six particular cities. They all juxtapose the categories of ‘metropolis’ and ‘modernity’ to the category of ‘Africa’, all positing the anomaly this move may represent in the categorical social scientific mind. The subtitles immediately indicate a different starting point from the analytics of population, geography and governance. With an approach through ‘tales’ (De Boeck and Plissart) and ‘reading the city’ (Mbembe and Nuttall), the authors indicate an alternative intellectual reach. They start from visual imagery, the language arts and the social mediations through which the lives lived in urban ‘modern’ Africa are expressed, communicated, understood, configured and conserved. Their aims evoked in my mind the modern art – rather than the analytics – of other cities. So here we have ‘circulation’ and vehicles as symbols and sounds without too much attention to traffic (the Lagos ‘go slow’; the accidents); ‘bodies’ without much attention to food or toilet needs or aging; ‘authority’ evaded or permeating rather than personified in mayors, town councils and multitudes of other officials and employees. In the ether of the invisible, what circulates are symbols and expressions; what emanates from bodies is sexual tension, aesthetic sensibility and physical vulnerability (‘bodies in danger’, De Boeck and Plissart, p. 117); what bears down oppressively is constraint and neglect of all kinds. In brief, what strikes the perceptive mind is precisely what bursts out of the conventional forms and has not yet taken a newly conventionalized shape. Through this orientation, all three books bring the humanities and artistic sensibilities to the question of the spirits, souls, inspirations, dangers, images and memories that inhabit the crowded spaces between buildings and people, insects and people, people and people.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Appadurai, A. (1990) ‘Disjuncture and difference in the global cultural economy’, Public Culture 2 (2): 124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barber, K. (ed.) (1997) Readings in African Popular Culture. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (1940) The Nuer. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ferguson, J. (1999) Expectations of Modernity: myths and meanings of urban life on the Zambian copperbelt. Berkeley CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Fernandez, J. (1986) ‘The experience of returning to the whole’, Chapter 8 in his Persuasions and Performances: the play of tropes in culture. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Geschiere, P., Meyer, B. and Pels, P. (eds) (2008) Readings in Modernity in Africa. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Guyer, J. I. (2004) ‘Anthropology in area studies’, Annual Review of Anthropology 33: 499523.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guyer, J. I. (2009) ‘On possibility: a response to “How is anthropology going?” ’, Anthropological Theory 9 (4): 355–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hochschild, A. (1998) King Leopold's Ghost: a story of greed, terror, and heroism in colonial Africa. Boston MA: Houghton Mifflin.Google Scholar
Hoggart, R. (1957) The Uses of Literacy: aspects of working-class life, with special reference to publications and entertainments. London: Chatto and Windus.Google Scholar
Humphrey, C. (1999) ‘Shamans in the city’, Anthropology Today 3: 310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, M. (1996) Things As They Are: new directions in phenomenological anthropology. Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Koolhaas, R. (2002) ‘Fragments of a lecture on Lagos’ in O. Enwezor et al. (eds), Under Siege: Four African Cities (Documenta 11 Platform 4). Ostfildern-Ruit, Germany: Hatje Cantz Publishers.Google Scholar
Malinowski, B. (1922) Argonauts of the Western Pacific. London: G. Routledge and Sons.Google Scholar
Mbembe, A. (1988) Afriques Indociles: Christianisme, pouvoir et société postcoloniale. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Mbembe, A. (1996) La naissance du maquis dans le Sud-Cameroun (1920–1960): histoire des usages de la raison en colonie. Paris: Karthala.Google Scholar
Rabinow, P. and Marcus, G. (2008) Designs for an Anthropology of the Contemporary. Durham NC: Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Trouillot, M.-R. (1997) Silencing the Past: power and the production of history. Boston MA: Beacon Press.Google Scholar