Skip navigation

Journal article

Re-assessing the significance of firearms in Central Africa: the case of North-Western Zambia to the 1920s

English
12
0

Attachments [ 0 ]

There are no files associated with this item.

More Details

Cambridge University Press
Africa | Southern Africa

Based on a close examination of European travelogues and the evidence produced in the wake of the formulation of colonial gun policies, this article contends that the significance of firearms in Central Africa in the nineteenth and early twentieth century has been unduly played down in the existing literature. The first substantive section of the article charts the movement of the gun frontier in nineteenth-century north-western Zambia. It foregrounds the new technology's economic and military applications, the means through which north-western Zambians overcame some at least of its limitations, and the plurality of innovative social roles that they attributed to it. Successive sections centre on the pervasiveness of gun-running in the early twentieth century and the implementation and profound social consequences of gun control laws.

Comments

(Leave your comments here about this item.)

Item Analytics

Select desired time period