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Boydell & Brewer
Kapitel
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11 The Production of Historical Knowledge at the University of Lubumbashi (1956–2018)
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Notes on Contributors xii
- Acknowledgements xvi
- Abbreviations xix
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Micro-Studies of Urban Life
- 1 Beyond Paternalism: Pluralising Copperbelt Histories 27
- 2 Being a Child of the Mines: Youth Magazines and Comics in the Copperbelt 52
- 3 Divergence and Convergence on the Copperbelt: White Mineworkers in Comparative Perspective, 1911–1963 77
- 4 Football on the Zambian and Katangese Copperbelts: Leisure and Fan Culture from the 1930s to the Present 101
- 5 Beware the Mineral Narrative: The Histories of Solwezi Town and Kansanshi Mine, North-Western Zambia, c. 1899–2020 122
-
Part 2 The Local Copperbelt and the Global Economy
- 6 Kingdoms and Associations: Copper’s Changing Political Economy during the Nineteenth Century 155
- 7 Of Corporate Welfare Buildings and Private Initiative: Post-Paternalist Ruination and Renovation in a Former Zambian Mine Township 179
- 8 From a Colonial to a Mineral Flow Regime: The Mineral Trade and the Inertia of Global Infrastructures in the Copperbelt 207
- 9 Houses Built on Copper: The Environmental Impact of Current Mining Activities on ‘Old’ and ‘New’ Zambian Copperbelt Communities 233
-
Part 3 Producing and Contesting Knowledge of Urban Societies
- 10 ‘The British, the French and even the Russians use these methods’: Psychology, Mental Testing and (Trans)Imperial Dynamics of Expertise Production in Late-Colonial Congo 267
- 11 The Production of Historical Knowledge at the University of Lubumbashi (1956–2018) 296
- 12 The Decolonisation of Community Development in Haut-Katanga and the Zambian Copperbelt, 1945–1990 321
- 13 Reimagining the Copperbelt as a Religious Space 347
- Select Bibliography 373
- Index 403
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Illustrations ix
- Notes on Contributors xii
- Acknowledgements xvi
- Abbreviations xix
- Introduction 1
-
Part 1 Micro-Studies of Urban Life
- 1 Beyond Paternalism: Pluralising Copperbelt Histories 27
- 2 Being a Child of the Mines: Youth Magazines and Comics in the Copperbelt 52
- 3 Divergence and Convergence on the Copperbelt: White Mineworkers in Comparative Perspective, 1911–1963 77
- 4 Football on the Zambian and Katangese Copperbelts: Leisure and Fan Culture from the 1930s to the Present 101
- 5 Beware the Mineral Narrative: The Histories of Solwezi Town and Kansanshi Mine, North-Western Zambia, c. 1899–2020 122
-
Part 2 The Local Copperbelt and the Global Economy
- 6 Kingdoms and Associations: Copper’s Changing Political Economy during the Nineteenth Century 155
- 7 Of Corporate Welfare Buildings and Private Initiative: Post-Paternalist Ruination and Renovation in a Former Zambian Mine Township 179
- 8 From a Colonial to a Mineral Flow Regime: The Mineral Trade and the Inertia of Global Infrastructures in the Copperbelt 207
- 9 Houses Built on Copper: The Environmental Impact of Current Mining Activities on ‘Old’ and ‘New’ Zambian Copperbelt Communities 233
-
Part 3 Producing and Contesting Knowledge of Urban Societies
- 10 ‘The British, the French and even the Russians use these methods’: Psychology, Mental Testing and (Trans)Imperial Dynamics of Expertise Production in Late-Colonial Congo 267
- 11 The Production of Historical Knowledge at the University of Lubumbashi (1956–2018) 296
- 12 The Decolonisation of Community Development in Haut-Katanga and the Zambian Copperbelt, 1945–1990 321
- 13 Reimagining the Copperbelt as a Religious Space 347
- Select Bibliography 373
- Index 403