Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T01:18:48.485Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Lords of the fly: colonial visions and revisions of African sleeping-sickness environments on Ugandan Lake Victoria, 1906–61

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2011

Extract

Sleeping-sickness control in southern Uganda created ideological openings for the articulation of colonial visions of African environments. Competing colonial agendas, Ugandans' positions in their own environments, and Ugandans' resistance and responses to colonial schemes determined how such visions played themselves out in practice. The emerging power of colonial science played an important role in colonial attempts at constructing nature and defining Africans' relationship with their environments through disease control. The combination of forced depopulations, strategic clearings, and planned resettlement in British sleeping-sickness control schemes in southern Uganda set in motion a cycle of long-term land alienation from 1906 to 1962 that reflected the particular relations between British science, environmental intervention, and colonisation.

Résumé

Le contrôle de la maladie du sommeil au sud de l'Ouganda a crée des ouvertures idéologiques pour l'articulation de visions coloniales des environnements africains. Des agendas coloniaux en compétition avec les uns les autres, la position des Ougandais dans leur propre environnement, et la résistance et les résponses des Ougandais aux projets coloniaux ont déterminé comment ces visions se réalisent en pratique. Le pouvoir émergeant de la science coloniale a joué un rôle important dans les efforts coloniaux pour construire la nature et pour définir les rapports entre les Africains et leur environnement en contrôlant la maladie. La combinaison de facteurs tels que la dépopulation forcée, les évacuations stratégiques et les plans de repeuplement dans des projects de contrôle de la maladie du sommeil au sud de l'Ouganda, ont mit en marche un cycle à long terme d'aliénation de la terre de 1906 jusqu'à 1962 qui a réflété les rapports particuliers entre la science Britannique, l'intervention environnementale, et la colonisation.

Type
Controlling the colony
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1997

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

Arnold, D. (ed.). 1988. Imperial Medicine and Indigenous Societies. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Barnley, G. R. 1968. ‘Resettlement in the South Busoga Sleeping Sickness Area’, East African Medical Journal 45 (5), 263–5.Google ScholarPubMed
Beck, A. 1970. A History of the British Medical Administration of East Africa, 1900–50. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Bell, H. 1908. ‘Introduction to reports on the sleeping sickness camps, Uganda’, Reports of the Sleeping Sickness Commission of the Royal Society IX, 6268.Google Scholar
Bell, H. 1946. Glimpses of a Governor's Life. London: Sampson Low.Google Scholar
Bruce, D. 1910. Sleeping sickness in Uganda—duration of the infectivity of the glossina palpalis after the removal of the Lake Shore population’, Reports of the Sleeping Sickness Commission of the Royal Society X, 5662.Google Scholar
Bulobo, J. 1993. Interview on 11 November, Bugoto, Uganda.Google Scholar
Busoga District Archives (BDA). 1905. Jinja, Uganda.Google Scholar
Busoga District Archives (BDA). 1929. ‘Sleeping Sickness Officer Field Report’, Jinja, Uganda.Google Scholar
Busoga District Archives (BDA). 1931. ‘Landing Report’, Jinja, Uganda.Google Scholar
Collyns, J. M. 1908. Secretariat minute 1614, Uganda National Archives, Entebbe, Uganda.Google Scholar
Fleming, J. T. 1956. Kiterera Resettlement Report’, BDA, Jinja, Uganda.Google Scholar
Fleming, J. T. 1957. Kiterera Resettlement Report’, BDA, Jinja, Uganda.Google Scholar
Ford, J. 1971. The Role of Trypanosomiasis in African Ecology: a study of the tsetse fly problem. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Gray, A. C. H. 1908. Report on the Sleeping Sickness Camps, Uganda’, Reports of the Sleeping Sickness Commission of the Royal Society IX, 6996.Google Scholar
Headrick, R. 1994. Colonialism, Health and Illness in French Equatorial Africa, 1885–1935. Atlanta, Ga.: African Studies Association.Google Scholar
Hodges, A. D. P. 1906. Explanatory Address on Sleeping Sickness to the Natives of the Uganda Protectorate. Entebbe: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Hodges, A. D. P. 1911. Sleeping Sickness Clearing Scheme. Entebbe: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Kaboli, B. 1993. Interview on 27 December, Luwanika, Uganda.Google Scholar
Kinbya, S. 1993. Interview on 30 December, Wambeti, Busoga, Uganda.Google Scholar
Knight, C. G. 1971. The ecology of African sleeping sickness’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 61, 2344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koerner, T., de Raadt, P., and Maudlin, I. 1995. The 1901 Uganda sleeping sickness epidemic revisited: a case of mistaken identity?Parasitology Today 11 (8) 303–6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Langlands, B. W. 1967. The Sleeping Sickness Epidemic in Uganda, 1900–20. Kampala: Makerere University Press.Google Scholar
Lyons, M. 1992. The Colonial Disease: a social history of sleeping sickness in northern Zaire, 1900–40. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacDonald, J. R. L. 1897. Soldiering and Surveying in British East Africa. London.Google Scholar
MacKichan, I. 1944–45. ‘Rhodesian sleeping sickness in eastern Uganda’, Transcripts of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 38, 4960.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mamdani, M. 1976. Politics and Class Formation in Uganda. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
O'Connor, A. M. 1966. An Economic Geography of East Africa. London: Longman; New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Olwita, A. 1993. Interview on 12 November, Bugoto, Busoga, Uganda.Google Scholar
Sleeping Sickness Rules (No. 2). 1908. Uganda Gazette, December.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soff, H. 1971. A History of Sleeping Sickness in Uganda: administrative response’, Ph.D. dissertation, Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press.Google Scholar
Summers, C. 1991. Intimate colonialism: the imperial power of reproduction in Uganda, 1907–25’, Signs 16 (4), 787807.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tucker, A. R. 1908. Eighteen Years in Uganda and East Africa. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Twaddle, M. 1993. Kakungulu and the Creation of Uganda. Columbus, Oh.: Ohio State University Press.Google Scholar
Uganda Fishing Ordinance. 1907. Uganda Gazette, December.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1906a. Secretariat Minute 874. Entebbe, Uganda.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1906b. Secretarial minute 1099.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1907. Secretarial minute 422.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1908a. Secretarial minute 2015.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1908b. Secretarial minute 1614.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1908c. Secretarial minute 1807.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1908d. Secretarial minute 72.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1909. Secretarial minute 2047.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1910. Secretarial minute 96.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1911. Secretarial minute 1094.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1926a. Secretarial minute 1926.Google Scholar
Uganda National Archives (UNA). 1926b. Secretarial minute 7013.Google Scholar
Uganda Protectorate Medical and Sanitary Report, 1937. Entebbe: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Vaughan, M. 1991. Curing their Ills: colonial power and African illness. Stanford, Cal.: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Wandoka, A. 1993. Interview on 12 November, Sigulu island, Uganda.Google Scholar
Watts, S. 1966. The South Busoga Resettlement Scheme. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Program of East African Studies.Google Scholar
Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine. 1953. ‘Buvuma Sleeping Sickness Report’. Busoga District Report, 1952. London: Wellcome Medical Library.Google Scholar