Decolonising white Africa : examining the experiences of Kenyans
Abstract
Legitimised during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries through
racial views based upon pseudo-scientific rhetoric, and routinely simplified in
the present, historical literature about white colonial communities in Africa has
struggled to offer a detailed analysis of the realities of day-to-day life. By
contrast, those that remained in African colonies post-independence represent a
group about which even less is known. This project adds to our understanding of
British colonial history by offering a detailed analysis of the white Kenyan
community, examining their experiences from the dawn of independence in 1963
through to the present. Based on more than fifty thematic interviews used to offer
a reconstructive analysis, as well as field and archival work within East Africa,
this project presents a nuanced qualitative study of cultural mobility and social
identity in relation to Kenya’s white population. By scrutinising how the white
Kenyan community fared through events such as the Mau Mau Emergency
(1952-60), the independence period, the administration of Daniel Arap Moi
(1978-2002), and the lingering influence of colonial memory in the present,
original insights into the mentality of the former colonial community have been
revealed. Far from the homogenous unit that jingoistic publications from the
colonial period claimed, the white Kenyan community is shown to be a deeply
fragmented and dynamic group. The success that the white Kenyan community
has enjoyed post-independence, namely in the sense that they have not followed
similar communities in Rhodesia and Algeria, is shown to be due to their ability
to quickly and effectively react to emerging political and social trends. However,
as those with any memory of the colonial period succumb to old age, the future
of white Kenyan identity is made uncertain, with a new community developing
in the present that is wholly separate from the group’s imperial past.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
Rights
Embargo Date: 2030-02-18
Thesis restricted in accordance with University regulations. Restricted until 18th February 2030
Thesis restricted in accordance with University regulations. Restricted until 18th February 2030
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