TY - BOOK AU - Miles,William F.S. TI - Hausaland divided: colonialism and independence in Nigeria and Niger T2 - The Wilder House series in politics, history, and culture SN - 9780801470097 AV - DT515 .H387 1994 PY - 1994/// CY - Ithaca PB - Cornell University Press KW - Hausa (African people) KW - Ethnic identity KW - Government relations KW - Cultural assimilation KW - Ethnic groups KW - Social conditions KW - History KW - Niger KW - Nigeria KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; A Note on Hausa Orthography --; 1. Introduction: Rehabilitating the Borderline --; 2. The Setting --; 3. Ethnic Identity and National Consciousness: Who Are the Hausa? --; 4. Boundary Considerations --; 5. Colonizing the Hausa: British and French --; 6. According to the Archives ... --; 7. Chieftaincy in Yardaji and Yekuwa --; 8. Arziki vs. Talauci: The Economic Comparison --; 9. Educating the Hausa --; 10. Islam: The Religious Difference --; 11. Village Cultures Compared --; 12. Transcending the Tangaraho --; Appendix A. Fieldwork Strategy: The Choice of a Site --; Appendix B. Administration of Self-Identity Surveys --; Appendix C. Selected Characteristics, Daura Local Government and Magaria Arrondissement, 1978-1985 --; Appendix D. Extracts from Anglo-French Treaties Delimiting the Nigeria-Niger Boundary, 1906-1910 --; Appendix E. Communique of the Nigeria-Niger Transborder Cooperation Workshop, Kano, July 2-8, 1989 --; Appendix F. Glossary; 2; b N2 - How have different forms of colonialism shaped societies and their politics? What can borderland communities teach us about nation building and group identity? William F.S. Miles focuses on the Hausa-speaking people of West Africa, whose land is still split by an arbitrary boundary established by Great Britain and France at the turn of the century. In 1983 Miles returned as a Fulbright scholar to the region where he had served as a Peace Corps volunteer in the late 1970s. Already fluent in the Hausa language, he established residence in carefully selected twin villages on either side of the border separating the Republic of Niger from the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Over the next year, and then during subsequent visits, he traveled by horseback between the two places, conducting surveys, collecting oral testimony, and living the ethnographic life. Miles argues that the colonial imprint of the British and the French can still be discerned more than a generation after the conferring of formal independence on Nigeria and Niger. Moreover, such influences persist even in the relatively remote countryside: in the nature of economic transactions, in local education practices, in the practice of Islam, in the operation of chieftaincy. In Hausaland as throughout the world, the border illuminates vital differences between otherwise similar societies. Spanning the conventional boundaries between political science, anthropology, history, sociology, and economics, Hausaland Divided will be valuable reading for Africanists, students of colonialism and its effects, and practitioners of rural development UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=972830&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -