Abstract


 Travelogues are a rich medium through which to explore observations of everyday culture and rituals, perceptions of the world order, and narrative strategies of othering. In this paper, I turn my attention to travelogues written by East Africans (coastal Swahili Muslims, diasporic Shi’i and Parsi South Asians, and Christian Ugandans) in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Although the authors come from different religious groupings, cultural-linguistic backgrounds and socio-economic milieus, they travel the same routes within East Africa and, occasionally, also to Europe or even as far as Siberia. I argue that the texts (including journals, retrospectives, and ethnographies) must be read as documents of East African cosmopolitanism. Mobility enables the authors to subvert the imperial world order by re-framing it narratively according to their own religious identity. This gives rise to reflections on humanity, equality and the beauty of knowledge, but not to the exclusion of racial and religious bigotry within and between the non-European communities in East Africa. In my analysis, I tease out narrative patterns, observational styles, and literary tropes present in the texts across religious boundaries. As all the texts were either commissioned by Europeans or edited by their translators before publication they do not document naively ‘authentic’ perspectives of East Africans, but reflect the complexities of communication within strict racial hierarchies. In concluding, I discuss the potential of religion to invert colonial centres and peripheries: European metropoles become places of exotic fascination while the familiar practices of co-religionists can turn the ‘hinterland’ into centres of learning.

Highlights

  • Silimu bin Abakari recounts his travels in three parts: he accompanied his German master, Theodor Bumiller, on an East African expedition, on a voyage by sea and rail from Zanzibar to Berlin, and on the above-mentioned hunting trip in

  • By bringing together a number of travelogues authored by East Africans of various religious, socio-economic and linguistic backgrounds from the turn of the twentieth century, I can show how non-Western narrators navigate the entanglements of a complex cosmopolitan society in the colonial era and predicate their own identity upon it

  • In the East African travelogues under analysis here processes of intertextual appropriation and [77] narrative inversions of imperial, racial and missionary topoi are central to the re-affirmation of religious identities

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Summary

Introduction

Silimu bin Abakari recounts his travels in three parts: he accompanied his German master, Theodor Bumiller, on an East African expedition, on a voyage by sea and rail from Zanzibar to Berlin, and on the above-mentioned hunting trip in In the narratives of both Chande and Adamji, trade partnerships and accommodation are framed completely in terms of cultural and religious identity (Bohra vs non-Bohra, Muslim mwungwana vs heathen mshenzi), yet on the road a spirit of helpfulness arises that allows the travellers to transgress certain boundaries and create a community of fellow sufferers.

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