Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922

From 1897 to 1922, through all the phases of his career as a researcher into the histories and customs of Africans in Zululand and Natal, the colonial official James Stuart made copious notes of his ongoing conversations with Socwatsha kaPhaphu. Renderings of these notes fill 168 printed pages of vo...

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Main Author: John Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History Department
Series:Kronos
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902015000100006&lng=en&tlng=en
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spelling doaj-9bf44833dd4c4305a789c91867b9e7082020-11-25T03:02:22ZengUniversity of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History DepartmentKronos0259-01902309-9585411142165S0259-01902015000100006Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922John Wright0University of Cape TownFrom 1897 to 1922, through all the phases of his career as a researcher into the histories and customs of Africans in Zululand and Natal, the colonial official James Stuart made copious notes of his ongoing conversations with Socwatsha kaPhaphu. Renderings of these notes fill 168 printed pages of volume 6 of the James Stuart Archive, published in 2014. The notes not only form a rich source of empirical historical information but also give insights into the contexts in which knowledges of the past were made and circulated in African societies in Zululand and Natal in the first two decades of the twentieth century. In addition, they reveal something of Stuart's own methods as a recorder of oral histories, and the changing conditions in which he worked. This essay examines the scope and, where possible, the sources of Socwatshas knowledge of the past, and why and when Stuart engaged in recording particular aspects of it. In doing so, the essay points up the inescapable intertwinings of accounts of the past as narrated by an African commentator and as recorded in writing by a colonial official. Scholars are now examining in detail the roles played by African knowledge makers in the making and circulating of literary knowledges of the continent in the colonial era; this essay takes a further step in this direction.http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902015000100006&lng=en&tlng=enalfred bryantcolony of natalcolony of zululandrolfes dhlomointerlocutorjames stuart archivenatal rebellion 1906oral historiessocwatsha kaphaphujames stuartzulu history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Wright
spellingShingle John Wright
Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
Kronos
alfred bryant
colony of natal
colony of zululand
rolfes dhlomo
interlocutor
james stuart archive
natal rebellion 1906
oral histories
socwatsha kaphaphu
james stuart
zulu history
author_facet John Wright
author_sort John Wright
title Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
title_short Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
title_full Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
title_fullStr Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
title_full_unstemmed Socwatsha kaPhaphu, James Stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
title_sort socwatsha kaphaphu, james stuart, and their conversations on the past, 1897-1922
publisher University of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History Department
series Kronos
issn 0259-0190
2309-9585
description From 1897 to 1922, through all the phases of his career as a researcher into the histories and customs of Africans in Zululand and Natal, the colonial official James Stuart made copious notes of his ongoing conversations with Socwatsha kaPhaphu. Renderings of these notes fill 168 printed pages of volume 6 of the James Stuart Archive, published in 2014. The notes not only form a rich source of empirical historical information but also give insights into the contexts in which knowledges of the past were made and circulated in African societies in Zululand and Natal in the first two decades of the twentieth century. In addition, they reveal something of Stuart's own methods as a recorder of oral histories, and the changing conditions in which he worked. This essay examines the scope and, where possible, the sources of Socwatshas knowledge of the past, and why and when Stuart engaged in recording particular aspects of it. In doing so, the essay points up the inescapable intertwinings of accounts of the past as narrated by an African commentator and as recorded in writing by a colonial official. Scholars are now examining in detail the roles played by African knowledge makers in the making and circulating of literary knowledges of the continent in the colonial era; this essay takes a further step in this direction.
topic alfred bryant
colony of natal
colony of zululand
rolfes dhlomo
interlocutor
james stuart archive
natal rebellion 1906
oral histories
socwatsha kaphaphu
james stuart
zulu history
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902015000100006&lng=en&tlng=en
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