African Workers & Colonial Racism: Mozambican Strategies & Struggles in Lourenco Marques, 1877-1962

African Workers & Colonial Racism: Mozambican Strategies & Struggles in Lourenco Marques, 1877-1962

by Jeanne Penvenne
African Workers & Colonial Racism: Mozambican Strategies & Struggles in Lourenco Marques, 1877-1962

African Workers & Colonial Racism: Mozambican Strategies & Struggles in Lourenco Marques, 1877-1962

by Jeanne Penvenne

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Overview

This path-breaking history of the African working class in Lourenco Marques proceeds from the assumption that Mozambican labor history was less about skills, wages, or productivity than it was about racism, human dignity, and contested masculinity. African attempts to improve their lives through hard work were frustrated time and again by white employers determined to keep them in their place.

Brutal forced-labor policies made it difficult for rural Africans to survive despite their continued access to agricultural land and family labor. Thus the majority of African men living in southern Mozambique spent their adult lives in wage labor, whether they worked in the South African mines or took low-paying jobs in and around the port city of Lourenco Marques.

This lively and balanced analysis brings the voices of African workers to the foreground. By detailing the individual experiences of gang laborers, stevedores, domestic servants, and petty clerks, the author focuses our attention on the human dimensions of colonial racism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780435089542
Publisher: Heinemann
Publication date: 11/10/1994
Series: Social History of Africa Series
Pages: 229
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.54(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Jeanne Marie Penvenne is an assistant professor of history at Tufts University, having previously taught at Boston University, Brandeis University, and the Universidade Eduardo Mondlane. She conducted extensive oral and archival research in Maputo (formerly Lourenco Marques) and in Portugal, and has published articles and working papers on Mozambican history. She is currently writing a social history of African women in the capital city during the critical closing decades of the colonial era in Mozambique.
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