Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T15:41:40.930Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fish, Family, and the Gendered Politics of Descent Along Uganda’s Southern Littorals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 July 2018

Abstract:

This article examines historic gendered negotiations over identity, descent, and access to land along Uganda’s southern littorals by thinking about belonging with an exceptionally diverse assemblage of small fish. Based on accounts from contemporary littoral residents, the comparative historic ethnographic record, and fisheries scientists, the article describes the reproductive practices of enkejje as they may have been visible from Uganda’s southern littorals and situates the practices of raising socially recognized children within broader historical developments of clanship and public healing. Attending to these small fish in moments and in places where groups are under construction reorients analyses of descent politics beyond an often implicit focus on male interests towards the work of grandmothers, aunts, and mothers in debating the qualities of the most foundational units of the body politic – male and female children constituted relationally as persons through their status as legitimate family members.

Résumé:

Cet article examine les négociations historiques genrées sur l’identité, la lignée et l’accès à la terre le long des littoraux sud de l’Ouganda en pensant au phénomène d’appartenance avec l’aide d’un assemblage exceptionnellement diversifié de petits poissons. Basé sur des témoignages de résidents littoraux contemporains, de l’histoire ethnographique comparée et des études scientifiques halieutiques, cet article décrit les pratiques reproductrices d’enkejje telles qu’elles peuvent être visibles depuis les côtes sud ougandaises et situe les pratiques d’éducation des enfants socialement reconnus dans des développements historiques plus larges des clans et de guérison publique. Etudier ces petits poissons dans les moments et dans les endroits où les groupes sont en construction réoriente les analyses de la politique de descendance au-delà d’un intérêt masculin souvent implicite envers le travail des grands-mères, tantes et mères en discutant les qualités des unités les plus fondamentales du corps. Ainsi les enfants de sexe masculin et féminin sont constitués en tant que personnes par le biais de leur statut de membres légitimes de la famille.

Type
Towards Multispecies History
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2018 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, A.M., “Further Observations Concerning the Proposed Introduction of Nile Perch into Lake Victoria,” East African Agricultural and Forestry Journal 264 (1961), 195201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balcombe, Jonathan, What a Fish Knows: The Inner Lives of Our Underwater Cousins (New York: Scientific American/Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2016).Google Scholar
Balirwa, John S., “Ecological, Environmental and Socioeconomic Aspects of the Lake Victoria’s Introduced Nile Perch Fishery in Relation to the Native Fisheries and the Species Culture Potential: Lessons to Learn,” African Journal of Ecology 452 (2007), 120129.Google Scholar
Bell, Hesketh, “Sleeping Sickness Ordinance, 1908,” The Official Gazette of the East Africa and Uganda Protectorates, 10202 (Nairobi: Governors of East Africa and Uganda, 1908), 197198.Google Scholar
Burton, John W., “The Wave Is My Mother’s Husband: A Piscatorial Theme in Pastoral Nilotic Ethnology,” Journal of Asian and African Studies 143 (1979), 204216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Condon, Michael A., “Contribution to the Ethnography of the Basoga-Batamba Uganda Protectorate, Br. E. Africa,” Anthropos 54 (1910), 934956.Google Scholar
Cunningham, James F., Uganda and Its Peoples: Notes on the Protectorate of Uganda, Especially the Anthropology and Ethnology of Its Indigenous Races (London: Hutchinson & Company, 1905).Google Scholar
Goldschmidt, Tijs, “Egg Mimics in Haplochromine Cichlids (Pisces, Perciformes) from Lake Victoria,” Ethology 881 (1991), 177190.Google Scholar
Goldschmidt, Tijs, Witte, Frans and Wanink, Jan, “Cascading Effects of the Introduced Nile Perch on the Detritivorous/Phytoplanktivorous Species in the Sublittoral Areas of Lake Victoria,” Conservation Biology 7 –3 (1993), 686700.Google Scholar
Gorju, Julien, Entre Le Victoria, l’Albert et l’Edouard: Ethnographie de La Partie Anglaise Du Vicariat de l’Uganda, Origines, Histoire, Religion, Coutumes (Rennes: Imprimeries Oberthür, 1920).Google Scholar
Greenwood, Peter H., The Cichlid Fishes of Lake Victoria, East Africa: The Biology and Evolution of a Species Flock (London: British Museum [Natural History], 1974).Google Scholar
Guyer, Jane I., “Wealth in People, Wealth in Things – Introduction,” Journal of African History 361 (1995), 8390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haesler, Marcel P., et al., “Female Mouthbrooders in Control of Pre- and Postmating Sexual Selection,” Behavioral Ecology 225 (2011), 10331041.Google Scholar
Hamill, F.A., et al., “Traditional Herbal Drugs of Southern Uganda: Part I,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 703 (2000), 281300.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton Johnston, Harry, The Uganda Protectorate (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1902).Google Scholar
Hanson, Holly E., Landed Obligation: The Practice of Power in Buganda (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, 2003).Google Scholar
Haraway, Donna, When Species Meet (Minneapolis MA: University of Minnesota Press, 2008).Google Scholar
Harrison, J.W., A.M. Mackay, Pioneer Missionary of the Church Missionary Society to Uganda (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1893), 151.Google Scholar
Hattersley, Charles W., Uganda by Pen and Camera (London: The Religious Tract Society, 1906).Google Scholar
Johnson, Jennifer L., “Managerial Technologies, [Il]Legal Livelihoods and the Forgotten Consumers of Africa’s Largest Freshwater Fishery,” in: Falola, Toyin and Brownell, Emily (eds.), Landscape and Environment in Colonial and Postcolonial Africa (New York: Routledge, 2012), 248270.Google Scholar
Johnson, Jennifer Lee, “Eating and Existence on an Island in Southern Uganda,” Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 371 (2017), 223.Google Scholar
Kabahenda, Margaret K., et al., “Protein and Micronutrient Composition of Low-Value Fish Products Commonly Marketed in the Lake Victoria Region,” World Journal of Agricultural Sciences 75 (2011), 521526.Google Scholar
Kagwa, Apolo, The Customs of the Baganda (translated by Kalibala, Ernest B., edited by Mandelbaum, May [Edel]) (New York: Columbia University Press, 1934).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kamatenesi-Mugisha, Maud, and Oryem-Origa, Hannington, “Medicinal Plants Used to Induce Labour during Childbirth in Western Uganda,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 1091 (2007), 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaufman, Leslie S., Chapman, Lauren J., and Chapman, Colin A., “Evolution in Fast Forward: Haplochromine Fishes of the Lake Victoria Region,” Endeavour 211 (1997), 2330.Google Scholar
Kilbride, Janet E., and Kilbride, Philip L., “Sitting and Smiling Behavior of Baganda Infants: The Influence of Culturally Constituted Experience,” Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology 61 (1975), 88107.Google Scholar
Kilbride, Philip L., and Kilbride, Janet E., “Sociocultural Factors and the Early Manifestation of Sociability Behavior Among Baranda Infants,” Ethos 23 (1974), 88107.Google Scholar
Kinloch, Bruce, The Shamba Raiders: Memories of a Game Warden (Southampton: Ashford, 1988).Google Scholar
Kirksey, Stefan, and Helmreich, Stefan, “The Emergence of Multispecies Ethnography,” Cultural Anthropology 254 (2010), 545576.Google Scholar
Kitching, Arthur L., On the Backwaters of the Nile: Studies of Some Child Races of Central Africa (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1912).Google Scholar
Koblmüller, Stephan, et al., “Age and Spread of the Haplochromine Cichlid Fishes in Africa,” Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 491 (2008), 153169.Google Scholar
Kodesh, Neil, Beyond the Royal Gaze: Clanship and Public Healing in Buganda (Charlottesville VA: University of Virginia Press, 2010).Google Scholar
Kohn, Eduardo, How Forests Think: Toward an Anthropology beyond the Human (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Kottak, Conrad P., “Ecological Variables in the Origin and Evolution of African States: The Buganda Example,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 143 (1972), 351380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Veux, [Père], Premier Essai de Vocabulaire Luganda-Français d’après l’Ordre Étymologique (Maison-Carrée: Imprimerie des Missionaires d’Afrique [Pères Blancs], 1917).Google Scholar
Lonsdale, John, “Moral and Political Argument in Kenya,” in: Berman, Bruce, Eyoh, Dickson and Kymlicka, Will (eds.), Moral and Political Argument in Kenya (Oxford: James Currey Publishers, 2004), 7395.Google Scholar
Lusembo, Mathias, “The Transformation of the Status and Role of the Ganda Married Woman since 1877,” PhD dissertation, Pontificia Universitas Gregoriana, (Rome, 1990), 171.Google Scholar
Macquarie, C., “Water Gipsies of the Malagarasi,” Tanganyika Notes and Records 9 (1940), 6167.Google Scholar
Maan, Martine E., et al., “Intraspecific Sexual Selection on a Speciation Trait, Male Coloration, in the Lake Victoria Cichlid Pundamilia Nyererei,” Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 2711556 (2004), 24452452.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mair, Lucy, An African People in the Twentieth Century (London: George Routledge & Sons, Ltd., 1934), 3435.Google Scholar
Mrowka, Wolfgang, “Egg Stealing in a Mouthbrooding Cichlid Fish,” Animal Behaviour 353 (1987), 923925.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, John D., Luganda-English Dictionary (Washington DC: Consortium Press [for] Catholic University of America Press, 1972).Google Scholar
Musisi, Nakanyike B., “Women, ‘Elite Polygyny,’ and Buganda State Formation,” Signs 164 (1991), 757786.Google Scholar
Nannyonga-Tamusuza, Sylvia, “Female-Men, Male-Women, and Others: Constructing and Negotiating Gender among the Baganda of Uganda,” Journal of Eastern African Studies 32 (2009), 367380.Google Scholar
Nsimbi, Michael B., “Village Life and Customs in Buganda,” Uganda Journal 20 (1956), 2736.Google Scholar
Ogden, Laura A., Hall, Billy and Tanita, Kimiko, “Animals, Plants, People, and Things: A Review of Multispecies Ethnography,” Environment and Society 41 (2013), 524.Google Scholar
Pilkington, G.L., Luganda-English and English-Luganda Vocabulary (London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1892).Google Scholar
Reid, Andrew, “Buganda: Unearthing an African Kingdom,” Archaeology International 7 (2003), 4043.Google Scholar
Reid, Richard, Political Power in Pre-Colonial Buganda: Economy, Society & Welfare in the Nineteenth Century (Athens OH: Ohio University Press, 2002).Google Scholar
Roscoe, John, The Baganda: an Account of Their Native Customs and Beliefs (London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., 1911).Google Scholar
Roscoe, John, The Northern Bantu: An Account of Some Central African Tribes of the Uganda Protectorate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1915).Google Scholar
Schoenbrun, David L., The Historical Reconstruction of Great Lakes Bantu Cultural Vocabulary: Etymologies and Distributions (Köln: Rüdiger Köppe Verlag, 1997).Google Scholar
Schoenbrun, David L., A Green Place, A Good Place: Agrarian Change, Gender, and Social Identity in the Great Lakes Region to the 15th Century (Portsmouth NH: Heinemann, 1998).Google Scholar
Schoenbrun, David L., “Pythons Worked: Constellating Communities of Practice with Conceptual Metaphor in Northern Lake Victoria, ca. A.D. 800 to 1200,” in: Roddick, Andrew P. and Stahl, Ann B. (eds.), Knowledge in Motion: Constellations of Learning Across Time and Place (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2016), 216246.Google Scholar
Ssegawa, Paul, and Kasenene, John Massan, “Medicinal Plant Diversity and Uses in the Sango Bay Area, Southern Uganda,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 1133 (2007), 521540.Google Scholar
Stephens, Rhiannon, A History of African Motherhood: The Case of Uganda, 700–1900 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).Google Scholar
Tabuti, John R.S., Arnstein Lye, Kare and Dhillion, S.S., “Traditional Herbal Drugs of Bulamogi, Uganda: Plants, Use and Administration,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 881 (2003), 1944.Google Scholar
Tabuti, John R.S., Kukunda, Collins B. and Waako, Paul J., “Medicinal Plants Used by Traditional Medicine Practitioners in the Treatment of Tuberculosis and Related Ailments in Uganda,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 1271 (2010), 130136.Google Scholar
Tsing, Anna L., “More Than Human Sociality,” Anthropology and Nature (London: Routledge, 2013), 2742.Google Scholar
Verzijden, Machteld N., and Cate, Carel ten, “Early Learning Influences Species Assortative Mating Preferences in Lake Victoria Cichlid Fish,” Biology Letters 32 (2007), 134136.Google Scholar
Walser, Ferdinand, Luganda Proverbs (Berlin: Reimer, 1982).Google Scholar
Witte, Frans, et al., “Species Extinction and Concomitant Ecological Changes in Lake Victoria,” Netherlands Journal of Zoology 422 (1991), 214232.Google Scholar
World Health Organization, “Measles Fact Sheet No. 286,” February 2014, http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs286/en/.Google Scholar
Yowana Kikulwe Gomotoka, J.T. (translator David Kiyaga-Mulindwa) “Kome” (Kampala: unpublished manuscript, n.d. [1930s]).Google Scholar
Zzibukulimbwa, Kasirye (translated by Robert Bakaaki and Jennifer L. Johnson), “The Beginning of Ennyanja Nalubaale and the Inhabitants of the Lake,” (Kampala, unpublished manuscript, n.d. [1980s]).Google Scholar