Nation-making at the border : Zambian diplomacy in the Democratic Republic of Congo

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dc.contributor.author Larmer, Miles
dc.date.accessioned 2021-03-10T13:03:31Z
dc.date.available 2021-03-10T13:03:31Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.description.abstract How and where were new African nations made at the moment of decolonization? Focusing on the periphery rather than the center provides an insightful answer to this question: imposing national identity in border regions with mixed and mobile populations, dynamic migrant flows, and cross-border linkages was a task fraught with contradiction. This article explores the establishment of Zambian political and diplomatic space in the Democratic Republic of Congo and the activities of Zambian political and diplomatic representatives in the southern Congolese city of Elisabethville in the early-to-mid 1960s. It does not assess how effective these officials were in imposing a sense of Zambian national identity, but rather what their efforts reveal about the ideas and values that informed state elites’ assertions of national identity and their relationship to history, local identities, and moral codes regarding, among other things, customary authority and gendered behavior. The article argues that nation-making in newly independent states involved the assertion of not only state sovereignty over territorial space but also symbolic power, the right to classify, and the moral and political notions that underlay ostensibly bureaucratic, disinterested state structures. Analysis of the attempts of Zambia’s first diplomatic representatives to establish and assert their notion of Zambian-ness reveals the fragility of new national identities and the extent to which elites sought to underpin these identities by the assertion of moral certainties. en_ZA
dc.description.department Historical and Heritage Studies en_ZA
dc.description.librarian am2021 en_ZA
dc.description.sponsorship The European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program. en_ZA
dc.description.uri https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/comparative-studies-in-society-and-history en_ZA
dc.identifier.citation Larmer, M. 2019, 'Nation-making at the border : Zambian diplomacy in the Democratic Republic of Congo', Comparative Studies in Society and History, vol. 61, no. 1, pp.145-175. en_ZA
dc.identifier.issn 0010-4175 (print)
dc.identifier.issn 1475-2999 (online)
dc.identifier.issn 10.1017/S001041751800052X
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/78988
dc.language.iso en en_ZA
dc.publisher Cambridge University Press en_ZA
dc.rights © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2019. en_ZA
dc.subject Nationalism en_ZA
dc.subject Borders en_ZA
dc.subject Decolonization en_ZA
dc.subject Africa en_ZA
dc.subject Zambia en_ZA
dc.subject Diplomacy en_ZA
dc.subject Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) en_ZA
dc.title Nation-making at the border : Zambian diplomacy in the Democratic Republic of Congo en_ZA
dc.type Article en_ZA


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