Cartography and the Political Imagination. Julie MacArthurЧитать онлайн книгу.
around Mount Elgon.120 Indeed the Hobley line cut through and across many of the curving ethnonyms he himself originally mapped in 1898 (fig. 1.11). This reorientation transformed the Nyanza region into a borderland, a space thoroughly caught between two colonies that were rapidly differentiating in terms of local governance, European settlement, and African rights. Interterritorial disputes over the exact limits of this border persisted throughout the colonial period and well into the postcolonial era.121 This process of remapping would have profound effects on the alignment and geographic imaginations of political communities in both territories.
Despite the 1902 boundary agreement, as late as 1927 the boundaries of North Kavirondo remained in flux.122 The creation of these boundaries first occurred on paper, redrawn over the detailed maps of the Uganda Protectorate, with written descriptions of boundaries circulated in British proclamations. Surveyors and administrators then set out on boundary tours, enlisting African laborers to carry heavy stones for cairns, erect large stone pillars, set beacons, and dig trenches across the new interterritorial boundary with Uganda and against the expanding white highlands.123 Colonial administrators would then take elders, headmen, and local villagers out to “beat the bounds” of the new boundaries, using drums and ornamental ceremonial flair.124 In this way, the imperial instruments of territoriality imposed a top-down cartographic spatial ordering while enlisting local communities to invest in the construction of these boundaries.
FIGURE 1.11. Map of the East Africa Protectorate, 1902. Beachey, History of East Africa, xii.
Officials used survey maps, the construction of roads, and the collection of taxes to construct and consolidate meaningful boundaries. As the colonial administration envisioned Nyanza Province as a potentially rich source of labor and cash crop production, the enforcement of boundaries became a tool in the territorial control of work and local production. With the arrival of the railway, the colonial administration introduced cotton and maize as new export commodities. While cotton production foundered due to local resentment and low prices, maize proved a profitable and exportable cash crop, quickly overtaking traditional crops such as millet, sorghum, and cassava as the staple food of African diets, particularly for laborers.125 North Kavirondo was fast becoming the “granary of East Africa” and the largest pool of potential laborers in the young colony.126
Colonial officials also used borders and taxes to direct the flow of labor. Roads in North Kavirondo emanated out east and north from the administrative base in Mumias to direct the flow of labor and commerce away from Uganda and toward work on the railways, new European settlers’ farms in the highlands, and government public works projects within the limits of the new colony. Colonial commissioners worked to “impress all people with the necessity for their young, unemployed men going out to work.”127 Much to the frustration of colonial officials, African laborers from North Kavirondo negotiated seasonal contracts to fit agricultural cycles and displayed a preference “to work month by month and their dislike of definitely binding themselves by a written contract.”128
Many defied colonial demands on their labor and resources by migrating across the still poorly defined Ugandan border. Farmers on the Ugandan side of the border similarly evaded forced cotton cultivation and military conscription by crossing into western Kenya.129 These movements were not without risk and insecurity. Kenyan and Ugandan officials responded with joint taxation collections and punitive actions against clans on either side of the border.130 In 1917, as Kenyan officials raised hut taxes to fund World War I efforts and pressured chiefs to supply constant labor for the Carrier Corps, fifty Wamia families were forced to return to North Kavirondo from Uganda, where they had fled.131 The administration also put strict restrictions on the movement of cattle, seeing any form of pastoralism as “opposed to social or political advancement” and using boundaries to control the spread of sleeping sickness and rinderpest.132 Administrators introduced “census books” for the registration of residents within a given boundary to help control movement and enforce the payment of taxes.133 While chiefs went around their territories counting huts, they also subverted these processes by offering refuge to competing communities. In the case of Chief Sudi, his entire census had to be thrown out as he was found to have collected taxes and census data on villages on Mumia’s side of the border.134 Border patrols and the introduction of identity permits in the form of the kipande reinforced territorial boundaries as a central feature of colonial governance.
After quashing the final throes of outright resistance, in 1908, British officials set about demarcating internal boundaries and an effective local administration. That same year, Geoffrey Archer, acting district commissioner of North Kavirondo, began his demarcation tour.135 Archer found the undulating landscape of North Kavirondo, with its “many fixed points and much open rolling grasslands,” a “good training ground” for practicing his surveying skills.136 Archer enlisted local inhabitants as porters, guides, and aides and taught them lessons in cartography as he triangulated locations and called out instructions on the placement of markers. Archer gained a strong reputation for managing clan disputes across the interterritorial boundary and securing local support for “unsatisfactory” boundaries, earning him the difficult job of delimiting the Northern Frontier District and later the governorship of British Somaliland at the young age of thirty-two.137 Although officials professed a desire to make administrative boundaries coincide with the “tribal” areas mapped by Hobley, Archer struggled to collect accurate clan numbers and to consolidate boundaries along the lines of “native laws and customs.”138 Archer complained that the “Kavirondo are the most pronounced land grabbers.”139 Like Francis Fuller among the Asante in the Gold Coast, Archer believed that boundaries fixed to a topographical map would make sense of the confusion of local customs;140 and yet, as Sara Berry argued, “However precisely they were drawn on paper, boundaries could be remarkably elusive in practice.”141
The Wanga royal family and their emissaries invested early in the ideology of boundaries and acted as surveyors in the creation of the basic units of authority and territorial control within the district. Nabongo Mumia and his half brother Murunga were the only Africans officially consulted on Archer’s demarcation tour.142 Archer sent out Wanga chiefs as territorial agents to construct “locations,” the smallest administrative unit in the district. In this initial demarcation, only eight locations were drawn around the multiple communities of the region. Throughout the demarcation tour, the Wanga proved not only their usefulness but also their ability to benefit from the colonial processes of mapping. As later reported by Provincial Commissioner C. M. Dobbs, Archer gave “Mumia the biggest sub-district as . . . he alone had ‘capable men who are fit to be appointed as headmen over the various sub-divisions of this area.’”143
Between 1904 and 1909 the British elevated their Wanga allies to the position of chiefs over the diverse range of clans never previously subject to Wanga power. On 15 November 1909, the colonial government confirmed their alliance with the Wanga by appointing Mumia “paramount chief” over the entire district. This official title would come to haunt the British administration as later African politicians attempted to claim the legitimacy and authority of a paramount chief. Colonial officials reinforced the new “native authority” of Wanga chiefs with the power to arrest, issue orders on the movement of people, compel labor, preside over local disputes, and collect taxes.144 In the Wanga the British found the local source of “indirect rule” they needed to enforce colonial boundaries.
However, written into the very processes of boundary demarcation and colonial authority were the tools of its subversion for local actors. Countermapping strategies reflected both local geographic practices and the adoption of colonial technologies of mapping. The most commonly used tactic, as had been the case for centuries, was evasion. Local inhabitants, particularly along the interterritorial border, strategically moved throughout geographic networks that extended around and beyond these new borders to evade tax collection, to defy new authorities, and to confuse colonial officials. These