Khoesan and Imperial Citizenship in Nineteenth Century South Africa
In: Routledge Studies in Modern History Ser.
Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Glossary -- Introduction: Exploring Khoesan "Voice" and Agency in Nineteenth Century South Africa -- Introducing the Khoesan/"Hottentots -- Uncovering Khoesan "Voices -- Notes -- 1. Masters and Subjects: The British Occupations and Khoesan Subjecthood, 1795-1828 -- The British Colonial Turn and Its Consequences for the Khoesan -- The First British Occupation: Foreshadows of British Protectionism -- Law and Identity in the Cape Colony -- Invoking Loyalism: The Caledon Code -- The Caledon Code in Graaff-Reinet District -- Cradock's Judicial Reforms and the Making of "Hottentot" Subjects -- The Local and the Imperial: Re-orientating Resistance -- Notes -- 2. Subjecthood in Contest: The Demise and Incorporation of San, 1806-1830 -- Legislating Assimilation as Colonial Subjects -- Reconfiguring Hunter-Gatherer Identity: To Be "Hottentots" Is to Be Subjects -- Notes -- 3. Imperial Citizenship and Nationalism: Civil Rights, Political Consciousness, and the Deployment of Loyalty as Resistance, 1828-1834 -- A Reappraisal of Ordinance 50 of 1828 -- Mobility under Threat: The Proposed Vagrancy Bill of 1834 -- Hottentot" Subjecthood in Defence of Civil Liberty -- Notes -- 4. Competing Loyalties: Masters, Missionaries, and the Monarch, 1830-1850 -- Loyalty and Intimacy: "Hottentot" Identity in Transition -- The Ambiguities of Subjecthood within the Master's Household -- The Farmstead as Moral Community -- Mobility in Question: The Master and Servant Inquiry, 1848 -- Notes -- 5. From Resistance to Rebellion: Khoesan Loyalism and Its Discontents, 1849-1858 -- The Convict and Constitution Debates -- The Menace of Farmstead Intimacy to Settler Society -- Fear God, Honour the Queen": Appealing to Loyalty to Quell Rebellion.