Giordano Nanni
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‘The moons are always out of order’
Colonial constructions of ‘African time’
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An historical account of the colonial construction of 'African time' will enable us to define the discursive boundaries and ideological context wherein colonial reformers set out to remould African temporal cultures. In documenting the manner in which Europeans perceived 'African time' we ought to note that travellers to the colonies were themselves undergoing profound cultural changes in the process of adjusting to a new life. The pace of life in the colony was certainly different from that which was experienced in the bustling urban centres of Britain. Even sensitive colonial observers perceived but a tenuous margin separating the humanity of Bushmen from the savageness of the fauna which they pursued. The reverend J. Campbell, recorded the story of a Bushman who had diagnosed the condition of a man wounded by a poisoned arrow, predicting that the victim would die 'immediately on the going down of the sun'.

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The colonisation of time

Ritual, routine and resistance in the British Empire

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