Foreign invasions and the formation of the State in southern Mozambique

Autores/as

  • Hector Guerra Hernandez Universidade Federal do Paraná

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2526-303X.v0i35p19-55

Palabras clave:

Southern Mozambique. National construction. Tsonga–social stratification. Bureaucratisation of taxes

Resumen

With a focus on southern Mozambique, this article proposes to examine the process of nation-building and the modernization implicit within it. It begins with questioning the tendency of a certain European historiography to order the African world in its own image, exemplified by the construction of an inaccurate historical identity – “Tsonga” – under a national ideology. Next, the article attempts to establish a relationship between ethnic identity and social conditions, especially considering the first and part of the second half of the nineteenth century, raising some hypotheses. In the first place, this region has been historically characterized by the overlapping coexistence of two economic forms: the foreign-oriented trade and circulation, and domestic forms of reproduction and redistribution. Secondly, it would be possible to suggest that the processes of differentiation and social stratification, derived from this coexistence, predate the occupation of the Portuguese (1895), and therefore were not instigated by it. Third, from the process that we will label “bureaucratization of taxes”, initiated after the effective occupation by the Portuguese colonial administration, these processes of differentiation and social stratification would become processes of social and political exclusion

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Publicado

2015-02-16

Número

Sección

Artigos

Cómo citar

GUERRA HERNANDEZ, Hector. Foreign invasions and the formation of the State in southern Mozambique. África, [S. l.], n. 35, p. 19–55, 2015. DOI: 10.11606/issn.2526-303X.v0i35p19-55. Disponível em: https://revistas.usp.br/africa/article/view/126693.. Acesso em: 6 jan. 2026.