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‘I TOLD HIM I WAS LENNOX NJOKWENI’: HONOR AND RACIAL ETIQUETTE IN SOUTHERN RHODESIA*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2011
Abstract
This article focuses on a single episode of racial interaction in 1931 in order to highlight competing notions of honor and respectability in a shared colonial society. This story elucidates how Africans and whites unraveled and rebuilt ‘racial etiquette’, the tacit code that guided individual encounters between blacks and whites and that were so vital to the expression of colonial power. In moments of transition, such as the early 1930s in Southern Rhodesia, the minutiae of racial etiquette were confusing, and this allowed for some dialogue between Africans and whites about what constituted proper behavior. As this story makes clear, Africans were as much a part of composing racial etiquette as whites, despite – indeed, because of – the latter's political power.
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References
1 J. Iliffe, Honour in African History (Cambridge, 2005), 1.
2 Iliffe titles the second part of his book ‘Fragmentation and Mutation’.
3 Iliffe, Honour, 307.
4 Which is precisely Martin Klein's critique of Iliffe's book, ‘Review of John Iliffe, Honour in African History (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005)’, April 2006, http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=11644 (accessed 5 November 2010).
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7 Iliffe, Honour, 4.
8 Ibid. 246.
9 As in the ‘AmaRespectables’ cited in Ibid. 246. Among the works that have influenced my thinking are Ross, Status and Respectability; and M. West, The Rise of an African Middle Class: Colonial Zimbabwe, 1898–1965 (Bloomington, 2002). T. Barnes's notion of ‘righteousness’ points to the lively debates among people over who and what was respectable: ‘We Women Worked So Hard’: Gender, Urbanization and Social Reproduction in Colonial Harare, Zimbabwe, 1930–1956 (Porstmouth, NH, 1999), especially ch. 4. Historians of South Africa have explored the malleability of respectability by considering how it was engaged by working-class people and deployed in gendered debates. See S. Marks, ‘Patriotism, patriarchy and purity: Natal and the politics of Zulu ethnic consciousness’, in L. Vail (ed.), The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa (Berkeley, 1991), 215–40; Goodhew, D., ‘Working-class respectability: the example of the western areas of Johannesburg, 1930–55’, Journal of African History, 41:2 (2000), 241–66CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Thomas, L., ‘The modern girl and racial respectability in 1930s South Africa’, Journal of African History, 47:3 (2006), 461–90CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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13 Ross's work, Status and Respectability, is exemplary.
14 I have been influenced by J. Ritterhouse, Growing Up Jim Crow: How Black and White Southern Children Learned Race (Chapel Hill, NC, 2006).
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17 On ‘improvisation’ see Ritterhouse, Growing Up, 5.
18 National Archives of Zimbabwe, Harare, (NAZ), N3/1/20, Acting Native Commissioner (NC), Ft. Victoria to Chief Native Commissioner, 22 Dec. 1899. In a twist of a usual story, in this case the NC used these words to explain why he dragged an offensive settler off his horse and beat him.
19 As in the American South, Ritterhouse, Growing Up, 4 and ch. 2.
20 The chapter title for the period 1934–48 in West's Rise.
21 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, Lennox Njokweni to the Principal, 25 Feb. 1931. West provides a neat summary of Njokweni's case in Rise, 21–3.
22 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, R. Tapson, assistant native commissioner (ANC), to (NC), Inyati, 3 March 1931.
23 Ibid.; Njokweni to the Principal, 25 Feb. 1931.
24 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, W. G. Brown to the NC, Inyati, 16 Feb. 1931.
25 All this correspondence is in NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31.
26 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, H. U. Moffat, the premier, ‘A. N. C. Tapson & Complaint from Native’, 23 March 1931.
27 West, Rise, 22.
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35 Alexander, Unsettled State, 27–8.
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42 I borrow this notion from D. Jeater, (Law, Language, and Science: The Invention of the ‘Native Mind’ in Southern Rhodesia, 1890–1930 (Portsmouth, NH, 2007), 234), who, in turn, credits a personal communication with Julie Livingston.
43 C. Summers, From Civilization to Segregation: Social Ideals and Social Control in Southern Rhodesia, 1890–1934 (Athens, OH, 1994), 189; C. Summers, Colonial Lessons: Africans' Education in Southern Rhodesia, 1918–1940 (Portsmouth, NH, 2002), 31.
44 Summers, Colonial Lessons, 30.
45 Ibid.
46 Ibid. 32. A strike in 1932 was much more serious and resulted in the resignation of Brown.
47 Quoted in ibid. 32.
48 Ibid. 33.
49 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, W. G. Brown to the chief native commissioner (CNC), 26 Feb. 1931.
50 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, W. G. Brown to the NC, Inyati, 26 Feb. 1931.
51 Ibid.
52 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, Brown to the NC, Inyati, 16 Feb. 1931. On education standards, see Summers, Colonial Lessons, 30.
53 NAZ, NVA 1/2/1, Confidential report on staff, Robert Ross Tapson, superintendent of natives (SoN), Victoria, 28 June 1917.
54 NAZ, S138/43, 1928–31, H. U. Moffat to the secretary, 18 Feb. 1930, attached to the Private Secretary to the CNC, Rex v Nyashano, 19 Feb. 1930.
55 NAZ, S138/43, 1928–31, NC, Inyati to the SoN, Matabeleland, 28 Feb. 1930.
56 NAZ, S1542/C15/2, CNC, Carbutt to the SoN, Matabeleland, 4 Jan. 1935; Tapson, ANC, Filibusi to the NC, Filabusi, stamped 20 Dec. 1934; J. R. Perrins to the CNC, 1 Dec. 1934.
57 E. Goffman, Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior (New York, 1967), title on 149.
58 In writing about an 1883 race riot, Jane Dailey suggests that the participants offered ‘multiple, contradictory, and fundamentally incompatible versions of the riot’, which turned on debates about ‘manners, honor, and status, and questions about who controlled public space’. Dailey, Jane, ‘Deference and violence in the postbellum urban south: manners and massacres in Danville, Virginia’, Journal of Southern History, 18:3 (1997), 575Google Scholar. See also Summers, C., ‘“Subterranean evil” and “tumultuous riot” in Buganda: authority and alienation at King's College, Budo, 1942’, Journal of African History, 47:1 (2006), 93–113CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
59 High Court Decisions, 1912, Rex v Guthrie and Rex v Isaac, 10–14; Shutt, ‘“The Natives”’, 662.
60 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, Lennox Njokweni to the principal, 25 Feb. 1931.
61 Ibid.
62 Ibid.
63 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, NC, Inyati to the SoN, Bulawayo, 16 March 1931, marginal note at the bottom dated 18 March 1931.
64 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, W. G. Brown to the NC, Inyati, 26 Feb. 1931. The remainder of this paragraph and the next are from this letter.
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66 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, W. G. Brown to the NC, Inyati, 26 Feb. 1931.
67 NAZ, S138/43, 1928–31, W. G. Brown to the NC, Inyati, 26 Feb. 1931.
68 NAZ, S138/43, 1928–31, W. G. Brown to the CNC, 26 Feb. 1931.
69 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, R. Tapson, ANC, to the NC, Inyati, 3 March 1931.
70 Ibid.
71 Ibid.
72 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, NC, Inyati to SoN, Bulawayo, 16 March 1931.
73 NAZ, S138/43, 1928–31, SoN, Bulawayo to CNC, 14 March 1931.
74 Summers, From Civilization, 185.
75 NAZ, S138/22, 1927–28, CNC to the magistrate, Salisbury, 26 Jan. 1928. See also the correspondence over rank and clothing in N3/21/10. Carbutt became CNC in 1930.
76 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, H. U. Moffat, ‘A. N. C. Tapson & Complaint from Native’, 23 March 1931.
77 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, CNC to the secretary to the premier, 20 March 1931.
78 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, SoN, Matabeleland to CNC, 9 Sept. 1929.
79 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, CNC to the secretary to the premier, 20 March 1931.
80 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–1931, H. U. Moffat, ‘A. N. C. Tapson & Complaint from Native’, 23 March 1931.
81 As noted by West, The Rise, 22–23. This paragraph draws on the correspondence between Brown, Greer, and the premier in NAZ, S138/41, 1926–1931.
82 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, H. U. Moffat, ‘A. N. C. Tapson & Complaint from Native’, 23 March 1931.
83 Ibid.
84 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, CNC to the principal, London Mission, Inyati, 4 June 1931.
85 NAZ, S138/41, 1926–31, ANC, Shangani Reserve to NC, Inyati, 14 May 1931.
86 Review Cases, vol. III, Part III, 1948: Rex v Zenzo, 22 July 1948, 27–8.
87 NAZ, MS 665/1, R. Tapson to Dear Turton [the CNC], 6 June 1950.
88 Jeater, Law.
89 J. Ritterhouse, ‘The etiquette of race relations in the Jim Crow South’, in Ted Owmby (ed.), Manners and Southern History (Jackson, MS, 2007), 23.
90 Ritterhouse, Growing Up, 13.
91 Cooper, Colonialism, 73.