Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory, and National Cosmology among Hutu Refugees in Tanzania

Cover
University of Chicago Press, 14.12.2012 - 374 Seiten
In this study of Hutu refugees from Burundi, driven into exile in Tanzania after their 1972 insurrection against the dominant Tutsi was brutally quashed, Liisa Malkki shows how experiences of dispossession and violence are remembered and turned into narratives, and how this process helps to construct identities such as "Hutu" and "Tutsi."

Through extensive fieldwork in two refugee communities, Malkki finds that the refugees' current circumstances significantly influence these constructions. Those living in organized camps created an elaborate "mythico-history" of the Hutu people, which gave significance to exile, and envisioned a collective return to the homeland of Burundi. Other refugees, who had assimilated in a more urban setting, crafted identities in response to the practical circumstances of their day to day lives. Malkki reveals how such things as national identity, historical consciousness, and the social imagination of "enemies" get constructed in the process of everyday life. The book closes with an epilogue looking at the recent violence between Hutu and Tutsi in Rwanda and Burundi, and showing how the movement of large refugee populations across national borders has shaped patterns of violence in the region.
 

Inhalt

Introduction An Ethnography of Displacement in the National Order of Things
1
A Road Map
19
Two The MythicoHistory
52
Living the Present in Historical Terms
105
A Pragmatics of Identity
153
Five The Danger of Assimilation and the Purity of Exile
197
Six Consciousness and Liminality in the Cosmological Order of Nations
232
Return of Genocide
259
Notes
299
References
325
Index
345
Urheberrecht

Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Bibliografische Informationen