Sudan Studies by Iris Seri-Hersch
Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023, 2 vol., 671 p.
Vezzadini Elena, Seri-Hersch Iris, Revilla Lucie, Poussier Anaël, Abdul Jalil Mahassin (eds).
Th... more Vezzadini Elena, Seri-Hersch Iris, Revilla Lucie, Poussier Anaël, Abdul Jalil Mahassin (eds).
This book starts from the premise that the study of "exceptionally normal" women and men – as conceived by microhistory – has radical implications for understanding history and politics, and applies this notion to Sudan. Against a historiography dominated by elite actors and international agents, it examines both how ordinary people have brought about the most important political shifts in the country’s history (including the recent revolution in 2019) and how they have played a role in maintaining authoritarian regimes. It also explores how men and women have led their daily lives through a web of ordinary worries, desires and passions.
The book includes contributions by historians, anthropologists, and political scientists who often have a dual commitment to Middle Eastern and African studies. While focusing on the complexity and nuances of Sudanese local lives in both the past and the present, it also connects Sudan and South Sudan with broader regional, global, and imperial trends.
The book is divided into two volumes and six parts, ordered thematically. The first part tackles the entanglement between archives, social history, and power. The second focuses on women’s agency in history and politics from the Funj era to the recent 2018-2019 revolution. Part 3 includes contributions on the history and global connections of the Sudanese armed forces. In the second volume, part 4 intersects the themes of urban life, leisure, and colonial attitudes with queerness. In part 5, labour identities, practices, and institutions are discussed both in urban milieus and against the background of war and expropriation in rural areas. Finally, part 6 studies the construction of social consent under various self-styled Islamic regimes, as well as the emergence of alternative imaginaries and acts of citizenship in times of political openness.
Book Discussion: Livres & MAM online discussion (in English): https://youtu.be/97nyoit-zc4
Seri-Hersch Iris, Vezzadini Elena and Revilla Lucie. 2023. In: Ordinary Sudan, 1504-2019: From Social History to Politics from Below, edited by Elena Vezzadini et al. (Berlin: De Gruyter), p. 1-33.
Canadian Journal of African Studies, 2024
أتر الأسبوعية, العدد 11, 4 يناير 2024, ص51-63
Revue des mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée, 2024
This essay appraises "Sudan Studies" following the 2011 secession of South Sudan. It asks two que... more This essay appraises "Sudan Studies" following the 2011 secession of South Sudan. It asks two questions. First, what has Sudan Studies been as a colonial and postcolonial field of academic inquiry and how should or must it change? Second, should we continue to write about a single arena of Sudan Studies now that Sudan has split apart? The authors advance a "manifesto" for Sudan Studies by urging scholars to map out more intellectual terrain by attending to non-elite actors and women; grass-roots and local history; the environment and the arts; oral sources; and interdisciplinary studies of culture, politics, and society. They propose that scholars can transcend the changing boundaries of the nation-state, and recognize connections forged through past and present migrations and contacts, by studying the Sudan as a zone rather than a fixed country. Finally, in their introduction to this bilingual special issue, they highlight the increasing relevance of French scholarship to the endeavor of rethinking Sudan Studies.
Canadian Journal of African Studies, Vol. 49(1), 2015, p. 19-37., 2015
Cet article propose une réflexion critique sur le champ des études soudanaises à la lumière de la... more Cet article propose une réflexion critique sur le champ des études soudanaises à la lumière de la scission du Soudan en deux États en 2011. Il retrace la genèse des études soudanaises en tant que domaine de recherche distinct, soulignant le décalage important entre les débuts d’une production à prétention savante sur le Soudan et le moment où apparaissent les labels “Sudan Studies”/“dirāsāt sūdāniyya”. La pertinence actuelle d’un champ d’études soudanaises “transnational” est interrogée, amenant l’auteur à suggérer différents critères légitimant ou non l’existence d’un domaine soudaniste distinct si ce n’est unifié. Enfin, l’article envisage l’évolution future de la production historienne sur les Soudans, à la fois dans le nouveau contexte politique et idéologique qui se dessine depuis 2011, et sous un angle plus proprement historiographique.
This article offers a critical reflection on the field of Sudan Studies in light of the partition of Sudan into two states in 2011. It charts the emergence of Sudan Studies as a distinct research field, emphasising the temporal gap between the beginning of scholarly writing on Sudan and the moment when the labels “Sudan Studies” and “dirāsāt sūdāniyya” appeared. The current relevance of a “transnational” field of Sudan Studies is questioned, leading the author to suggest various criteria that may legitimise the existence of a distinct -if not unified- “Sudanist” field. Finally, the article envisions the future evolution of the historical scholarship on the two Sudans, both in the new political and ideological context that has been taking shape since 2011, and from a more specifically historiographical perspective.
Cahiers d'Etudes africaines, Vol. 208, 2012, p. 905-935, 2012
This paper deals with "modernity" as an analytical category, investigating how it has been used b... more This paper deals with "modernity" as an analytical category, investigating how it has been used by scholars of modern Sudan in the last fifty years. Keeping in mind the heuristic distinction between analytical and normative categories, the study goes back to European conceptualizations of modernity before examining how it has been constructed and used across a wide range of Sudanist academic writings. Despite significant differences in their approaches and subjects of study, most of the works under review explicitly or implicitly adopt either modernization or dependence theories. The paper ultimately argues for the necessity of avoiding the epistemological dead ends of both "modernizing" and "multiple" modernities."
Cahiers d'Etudes africaines, Vol 208, 2012, p. 905-935, 2012
Cet article propose une réflexion critique sur les usages de la catégorie modernité dans l'histor... more Cet article propose une réflexion critique sur les usages de la catégorie modernité dans l'historiographie du Soudan contemporain. Attentive à la distinction heuristique entre catégories analytiques et catégories normatives, l'étude revient sur des conceptualisations européennes de la modernité avant d'examiner ses usages dans la production académique soudaniste des cinquante dernières années. En dépit de la diversité de leurs approches et de leurs objets, la plupart des travaux analysés endossent explicitement ou implicitement l'une ou l'autre des théories de la modernisation et de la dépendance. L'argumentaire débouche sur la nécessité, pour les chercheurs en sciences sociales, de sortir des impasses épistémologiques de la modernité "modernisatrice" et des modernités "multiples".
Journée d’études "Les historiographies arabes sur l'histoire ottomane", IFEA, Istanbul, 14 June 2019
Afrique contemporaine, Vol. 246, 2013, p. 114-115, 2013
Seri-Hersch Iris, « Vers une (re)dynamisation des études soudanaises en France », Afrique contemp... more Seri-Hersch Iris, « Vers une (re)dynamisation des études soudanaises en France », Afrique contemporaine, 2013/2 n° 246, p. 114-115.
Tel Aviv Notes, Vol. 7(13), Jul 9, 2013
Revue des mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée, Vol. 150, 2021
Obituary
Education in Colonial & Post-Colonial Sudan by Iris Seri-Hersch
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History, Feb 2017
In the first half of the 20th century, Sudan, which included the territories of present-day Sudan... more In the first half of the 20th century, Sudan, which included the territories of present-day Sudan and South Sudan, was ruled by a dual colonial government known as the Anglo-Egyptian Condominium (1899–1956). Britain was the senior partner in this administration, Egypt being itself politically and militarily subordinated to Britain between 1882 and 1956. During most of the colonial period, Sudan was ruled as two Sudans, as the British sought to separate the predominantly Islamic and Arabic-speaking North from the multireligious and multilingual South. Educational policy was no exception to this: until 1947, the British developed a government school system in the North while leaving educational matters in the hands of Christian missionaries in the South. In the North, the numerically dominant government school network coexisted with Egyptian schools, missionary schools, community schools, and Sudanese private schools. In the South, schools were established by the Anglican Church Missionary Society, the Roman Catholic Verona Fathers, and the American Presbyterian Mission. Whereas Arabic and English were the mediums of instruction in Northern schools, the linguistic situation was more complicated in the South, where local vernaculars, English and Romanized Arabic were used in missionary schools.
The last colonial decade (1947–1957) witnessed a triple process of educational expansion, unification, and nationalization. Mounting Anglo-Egyptian rivalries over the control of Sudan and the polarization of Sudanese nationalists into “pro-British” independentists and “pro-Egyptian” unionists led the British authorities in Khartoum to boost government education while giving up the policy of separate rule between North and South. In practice, educational unification of the two Sudanese regions meant the alignment of Southern curricula on Northern programs and the introduction of Arabic into Southern schools, first as a subject matter, then as a medium of instruction. Missionary and other private schools were nationalized one year after Sudan gained independence from Britain and Egypt (1956).
in Bührer, Tanja et al., eds., 2017. Cooperation and Empire: Local Realities of Global Processes. Oxford: Berghahn, p. 292-322., Aug 2017
This paper aims at contributing to ongoing historiographical debates on cooperation and cross-cu... more This paper aims at contributing to ongoing historiographical debates on cooperation and cross-cultural relations in imperial/colonial settings through a specific case study of education in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan (1899-1956). As an "in-between" space between the Arab Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa, as a frontier area between Arabic-speaking and English-speaking Africa, and as a legal anomaly within the British Empire, the Sudan has drawn little attention among scholars of imperialism and colonialism. Despite this relative marginality, several important studies dealing mainly or partly with the issue of collaboration/cooperation in colonial Sudan have been produced since the 1980s. Among them, Heather Sharkey's thorough analysis of Sudanese civil servants as "human bridges" between colonialism and nationalism relies both on Ronald Robinson's political study and on more recent works by postcolonial or "new imperial" historians, hinting at continuities -or at least compatibilities- between these various approaches.
During the first half of the 20th century, the Sudan was theoretically ruled by a dual Anglo-Egyptian administration known as the "Condominium". The country was not a colonial territory in the legal sense, being attached to the British Foreign Office rather than to the Colonial Office in London. Besides, it was never the home of any significant British or European settler community. In practice, however, Britain detained all decision-making powers in the Sudan, for Egypt was herself subject to British subordination to varying degrees from 1882 to 1956. The Sudan Government was dominated by the British Sudan Political Service, an elite corps modelled upon the Indian Civil Service. This did not mean that the British ran the country alone; as in most other territories under imperial/colonial rule, they had to rely on the collaboration and work of thousands of local clerks, translators, tax-collectors, judges and teachers. In the Sudanese case, these local or regional actors were mostly Northern Sudanese, Egyptians and "Syrians" (a category that usually included all Levantines). Cross-cultural mechanisms of cooperation existed both within the Khartoum central government and between the central government and local or provincial administrations , as well as between the colonial state apparatus and Sudanese organizations (Sufi orders and later political parties). After the Second Word War, in the context of a heightened Anglo-Egyptian dispute over the Sudan, the British authorities in Khartoum decided to speed up the Sudanization of the administration, namely the replacement of British with Sudanese officials. This process significantly affected cooperation dynamics, as more and more key positions were taken up by (mostly Northern) Sudanese between 1946 and 1954. Power relations, social hierarchies and mutual perceptions between British and Sudanese in and outside the government service were reshaped to a considerable extent.
The paper seeks to shed new light on the politics of cooperation in colonial Sudan by focusing on education, an understudied field of cross-cultural interaction. Colonial education is both relevant and fascinating because it involved at once collaborative processes, unequal power relationships, disciplining mechanisms and emancipating dynamics. Moreover, the paper provides a detailed analysis of historical dimensions of cooperation that have not hitherto been adequately or fully addressed: specific modes of collaboration, concrete results produced by joint work, difficulties and obstacles to cooperation, mutual perceptions of the collaborating actors.
In a first part, two important methodological issues are tackled, namely terminological choices and the use of primary evidence. In order to avoid value judgments and possible anachronisms carried by terms such as "collaboration" and "cooperation", it is argued, historians should look for the words used by historical actors themselves, bring to light these "indigenous categories" and try to specify their meaning in relation to the historical context in which they were deployed. With regards to evidence, the problem of dissonant or contradicting sources (sometimes produced by a single author) and its implications for analyzing cooperation in imperial/colonial settings is briefly discussed. Moving to the core subject of inquiry, the paper identifies historical factors that facilitated cooperation between British and non-British (Sudanese, Egyptian, Syrian) individuals within the colonial administration of the Sudan. Various considerations and interests on both sides allowed –sometimes actively pushed– for cooperation despite political antagonisms and cultural gaps. In the Sudanese educational field of the 1940s and 1950s, collaborative mechanisms operated at different levels. Specific examples of cross-cultural cooperation at macro (broad educational planning), meso (publication of pedagogic materials) and micro (writing and experimentation of history textbooks for elementary schools) levels are provided to show the importance of multilayered cooperative dynamics in late colonial Sudan. Based on empirical evidence, the paper not only highlights significant achievements and limits of cross-cultural cooperation in a colonial context that was both incorporating and differentiating social groups ; it also points out at various ways in which the actors themselves (both colonizers and colonized) perceived and experienced collaboration in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
“Collaborating on Unequal Terms: Cross-Cultural Cooperation and Educational Work in Colonial Sudan, 1934-1956,” in Tanja Bührer et al. (eds.), Cooperation and Empire: Local Realities of Global Processes (Oxford: Berghahn, 2017), 292-322. Arabic Translation by Ibrahim Mohammad Ali Mohammad, 2020.
History of Education, Vol. 40(3), 2011, p. 333-356., 2011
This article explores the politics of literacy in late colonial Sudan. Drawing upon hitherto unta... more This article explores the politics of literacy in late colonial Sudan. Drawing upon hitherto untapped archival sources in English and Arabic, it focuses on two key-questions: what were the purposes and uses of literacy in the eyes of colonial authorities? What means were used to spread Arabic literacy skills among Sudanese people? Replacing these issues in the context of British imperial policy in Africa, I argue that mixed teams of British and Sudanese educationalists came to view literacy as a central tool to foster social progress and political modernity. The analysis puts special emphasis on literacy campaigns and follow-up literature as experimental means used to promote and perpetuate Arabic literacy in the Northern Sudan. Examining both "nation-wide" and provincially based magazines, it highlights their multifaceted role as pedagogic materials, vehicles of political, cultural and ideological representations, social networks, as well as public platforms of expression for young Sudanese literates.
in Mayeur-Jaouen, Catherine, ed., 2020. Adab and Modernity: A "Civilising Process"? (16th-21st C... more in Mayeur-Jaouen, Catherine, ed., 2020. Adab and Modernity: A "Civilising Process"? (16th-21st Century), Leiden: Brill, p. 435-462. https://brill.com/view/title/55396
in Ali Souad T. et al., eds., 2014. The Road to the Two Sudans. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, p. 177-219., 2014
Situating late colonial Sudan within the wider British Empire, this book chapter explores an unde... more Situating late colonial Sudan within the wider British Empire, this book chapter explores an understudied field in the scholarship on Sudan and empire: history teaching, namely history as a school subject that was theorized by educators and practiced by teachers and pupils in the 1940s and 1950s. Although not a colonial territory stricto sensu, the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan (1899-1956) was closely connected to other British dependencies in the educational sphere. Knowledge, debates and opinions on educational matters circulated through colonial journals and publications. A significant number of British officials serving in Sudan had past -or would have future- work experience in other parts of the Empire. Books published by British metropolitan, as well as American, pedagogues in the first half of the 20th century inspired colonial educators across the Empire. Paying attention to the crucial distinction between prescribed and taught curricula, this chapter investigates conceptions and practices of history teaching at a time when the British Empire was rapidly dismantling. It maps out the position of Sudanese school history in relation to contemporary school histories in other (ex-)British territories and in the metropole. Comparative insights are drawn with regards to the purposes of history teaching, curriculum contents, the ideological framing of historical narratives, teaching materials and methods, and teaching staff. Based on the analysis of textbooks, handbooks, reports, and journal articles from the period under review, the chapter highlights significant, though largely overlooked, commonalities between Sudan and various categories of territories within the crumbling post-war British Empire: colonial dependencies (British Africa), a semi-independent country (Egypt) and sovereign states (India, Britain).
in Djurovic, Arsen and Matthes, Eva, eds., 2010. Freund- und Feindbilder in Schulbüchern / Concepts of Friends and Enemies in Schoolbooks. Bad Heilbrunn, Klinkhardt Verlag, p. 217-229., 2010
This paper investigates the impact of decolonization on history teaching in Sudanese elementary s... more This paper investigates the impact of decolonization on history teaching in Sudanese elementary schools. Drawing on successive editions of a fourth-grade history handbook (1949, 1957, 1958), it analyzes how notions of “friends” and “enemies” were constructed and transformed against the background of British disengagement, Sudanese-Egyptian relations, and politics of cultural homogenization in late colonial and early post-independence Sudan. The evolution of textbook content, it is argued, needs be scrutinized in the light of political processes, ideological needs and material constraints. This approach allows appreciating both the relevance and the limits of categorizations such as “friends” and “enemies”. Incoherencies within the handbook and ambivalent representations of historical characters are not spared by the analysis, which seeks to recontextualize them in a web of ideological and practical considerations.
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Sudan Studies by Iris Seri-Hersch
This book starts from the premise that the study of "exceptionally normal" women and men – as conceived by microhistory – has radical implications for understanding history and politics, and applies this notion to Sudan. Against a historiography dominated by elite actors and international agents, it examines both how ordinary people have brought about the most important political shifts in the country’s history (including the recent revolution in 2019) and how they have played a role in maintaining authoritarian regimes. It also explores how men and women have led their daily lives through a web of ordinary worries, desires and passions.
The book includes contributions by historians, anthropologists, and political scientists who often have a dual commitment to Middle Eastern and African studies. While focusing on the complexity and nuances of Sudanese local lives in both the past and the present, it also connects Sudan and South Sudan with broader regional, global, and imperial trends.
The book is divided into two volumes and six parts, ordered thematically. The first part tackles the entanglement between archives, social history, and power. The second focuses on women’s agency in history and politics from the Funj era to the recent 2018-2019 revolution. Part 3 includes contributions on the history and global connections of the Sudanese armed forces. In the second volume, part 4 intersects the themes of urban life, leisure, and colonial attitudes with queerness. In part 5, labour identities, practices, and institutions are discussed both in urban milieus and against the background of war and expropriation in rural areas. Finally, part 6 studies the construction of social consent under various self-styled Islamic regimes, as well as the emergence of alternative imaginaries and acts of citizenship in times of political openness.
Book Discussion: Livres & MAM online discussion (in English): https://youtu.be/97nyoit-zc4
This article offers a critical reflection on the field of Sudan Studies in light of the partition of Sudan into two states in 2011. It charts the emergence of Sudan Studies as a distinct research field, emphasising the temporal gap between the beginning of scholarly writing on Sudan and the moment when the labels “Sudan Studies” and “dirāsāt sūdāniyya” appeared. The current relevance of a “transnational” field of Sudan Studies is questioned, leading the author to suggest various criteria that may legitimise the existence of a distinct -if not unified- “Sudanist” field. Finally, the article envisions the future evolution of the historical scholarship on the two Sudans, both in the new political and ideological context that has been taking shape since 2011, and from a more specifically historiographical perspective.
Education in Colonial & Post-Colonial Sudan by Iris Seri-Hersch
The last colonial decade (1947–1957) witnessed a triple process of educational expansion, unification, and nationalization. Mounting Anglo-Egyptian rivalries over the control of Sudan and the polarization of Sudanese nationalists into “pro-British” independentists and “pro-Egyptian” unionists led the British authorities in Khartoum to boost government education while giving up the policy of separate rule between North and South. In practice, educational unification of the two Sudanese regions meant the alignment of Southern curricula on Northern programs and the introduction of Arabic into Southern schools, first as a subject matter, then as a medium of instruction. Missionary and other private schools were nationalized one year after Sudan gained independence from Britain and Egypt (1956).
During the first half of the 20th century, the Sudan was theoretically ruled by a dual Anglo-Egyptian administration known as the "Condominium". The country was not a colonial territory in the legal sense, being attached to the British Foreign Office rather than to the Colonial Office in London. Besides, it was never the home of any significant British or European settler community. In practice, however, Britain detained all decision-making powers in the Sudan, for Egypt was herself subject to British subordination to varying degrees from 1882 to 1956. The Sudan Government was dominated by the British Sudan Political Service, an elite corps modelled upon the Indian Civil Service. This did not mean that the British ran the country alone; as in most other territories under imperial/colonial rule, they had to rely on the collaboration and work of thousands of local clerks, translators, tax-collectors, judges and teachers. In the Sudanese case, these local or regional actors were mostly Northern Sudanese, Egyptians and "Syrians" (a category that usually included all Levantines). Cross-cultural mechanisms of cooperation existed both within the Khartoum central government and between the central government and local or provincial administrations , as well as between the colonial state apparatus and Sudanese organizations (Sufi orders and later political parties). After the Second Word War, in the context of a heightened Anglo-Egyptian dispute over the Sudan, the British authorities in Khartoum decided to speed up the Sudanization of the administration, namely the replacement of British with Sudanese officials. This process significantly affected cooperation dynamics, as more and more key positions were taken up by (mostly Northern) Sudanese between 1946 and 1954. Power relations, social hierarchies and mutual perceptions between British and Sudanese in and outside the government service were reshaped to a considerable extent.
The paper seeks to shed new light on the politics of cooperation in colonial Sudan by focusing on education, an understudied field of cross-cultural interaction. Colonial education is both relevant and fascinating because it involved at once collaborative processes, unequal power relationships, disciplining mechanisms and emancipating dynamics. Moreover, the paper provides a detailed analysis of historical dimensions of cooperation that have not hitherto been adequately or fully addressed: specific modes of collaboration, concrete results produced by joint work, difficulties and obstacles to cooperation, mutual perceptions of the collaborating actors.
In a first part, two important methodological issues are tackled, namely terminological choices and the use of primary evidence. In order to avoid value judgments and possible anachronisms carried by terms such as "collaboration" and "cooperation", it is argued, historians should look for the words used by historical actors themselves, bring to light these "indigenous categories" and try to specify their meaning in relation to the historical context in which they were deployed. With regards to evidence, the problem of dissonant or contradicting sources (sometimes produced by a single author) and its implications for analyzing cooperation in imperial/colonial settings is briefly discussed. Moving to the core subject of inquiry, the paper identifies historical factors that facilitated cooperation between British and non-British (Sudanese, Egyptian, Syrian) individuals within the colonial administration of the Sudan. Various considerations and interests on both sides allowed –sometimes actively pushed– for cooperation despite political antagonisms and cultural gaps. In the Sudanese educational field of the 1940s and 1950s, collaborative mechanisms operated at different levels. Specific examples of cross-cultural cooperation at macro (broad educational planning), meso (publication of pedagogic materials) and micro (writing and experimentation of history textbooks for elementary schools) levels are provided to show the importance of multilayered cooperative dynamics in late colonial Sudan. Based on empirical evidence, the paper not only highlights significant achievements and limits of cross-cultural cooperation in a colonial context that was both incorporating and differentiating social groups ; it also points out at various ways in which the actors themselves (both colonizers and colonized) perceived and experienced collaboration in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
This book starts from the premise that the study of "exceptionally normal" women and men – as conceived by microhistory – has radical implications for understanding history and politics, and applies this notion to Sudan. Against a historiography dominated by elite actors and international agents, it examines both how ordinary people have brought about the most important political shifts in the country’s history (including the recent revolution in 2019) and how they have played a role in maintaining authoritarian regimes. It also explores how men and women have led their daily lives through a web of ordinary worries, desires and passions.
The book includes contributions by historians, anthropologists, and political scientists who often have a dual commitment to Middle Eastern and African studies. While focusing on the complexity and nuances of Sudanese local lives in both the past and the present, it also connects Sudan and South Sudan with broader regional, global, and imperial trends.
The book is divided into two volumes and six parts, ordered thematically. The first part tackles the entanglement between archives, social history, and power. The second focuses on women’s agency in history and politics from the Funj era to the recent 2018-2019 revolution. Part 3 includes contributions on the history and global connections of the Sudanese armed forces. In the second volume, part 4 intersects the themes of urban life, leisure, and colonial attitudes with queerness. In part 5, labour identities, practices, and institutions are discussed both in urban milieus and against the background of war and expropriation in rural areas. Finally, part 6 studies the construction of social consent under various self-styled Islamic regimes, as well as the emergence of alternative imaginaries and acts of citizenship in times of political openness.
Book Discussion: Livres & MAM online discussion (in English): https://youtu.be/97nyoit-zc4
This article offers a critical reflection on the field of Sudan Studies in light of the partition of Sudan into two states in 2011. It charts the emergence of Sudan Studies as a distinct research field, emphasising the temporal gap between the beginning of scholarly writing on Sudan and the moment when the labels “Sudan Studies” and “dirāsāt sūdāniyya” appeared. The current relevance of a “transnational” field of Sudan Studies is questioned, leading the author to suggest various criteria that may legitimise the existence of a distinct -if not unified- “Sudanist” field. Finally, the article envisions the future evolution of the historical scholarship on the two Sudans, both in the new political and ideological context that has been taking shape since 2011, and from a more specifically historiographical perspective.
The last colonial decade (1947–1957) witnessed a triple process of educational expansion, unification, and nationalization. Mounting Anglo-Egyptian rivalries over the control of Sudan and the polarization of Sudanese nationalists into “pro-British” independentists and “pro-Egyptian” unionists led the British authorities in Khartoum to boost government education while giving up the policy of separate rule between North and South. In practice, educational unification of the two Sudanese regions meant the alignment of Southern curricula on Northern programs and the introduction of Arabic into Southern schools, first as a subject matter, then as a medium of instruction. Missionary and other private schools were nationalized one year after Sudan gained independence from Britain and Egypt (1956).
During the first half of the 20th century, the Sudan was theoretically ruled by a dual Anglo-Egyptian administration known as the "Condominium". The country was not a colonial territory in the legal sense, being attached to the British Foreign Office rather than to the Colonial Office in London. Besides, it was never the home of any significant British or European settler community. In practice, however, Britain detained all decision-making powers in the Sudan, for Egypt was herself subject to British subordination to varying degrees from 1882 to 1956. The Sudan Government was dominated by the British Sudan Political Service, an elite corps modelled upon the Indian Civil Service. This did not mean that the British ran the country alone; as in most other territories under imperial/colonial rule, they had to rely on the collaboration and work of thousands of local clerks, translators, tax-collectors, judges and teachers. In the Sudanese case, these local or regional actors were mostly Northern Sudanese, Egyptians and "Syrians" (a category that usually included all Levantines). Cross-cultural mechanisms of cooperation existed both within the Khartoum central government and between the central government and local or provincial administrations , as well as between the colonial state apparatus and Sudanese organizations (Sufi orders and later political parties). After the Second Word War, in the context of a heightened Anglo-Egyptian dispute over the Sudan, the British authorities in Khartoum decided to speed up the Sudanization of the administration, namely the replacement of British with Sudanese officials. This process significantly affected cooperation dynamics, as more and more key positions were taken up by (mostly Northern) Sudanese between 1946 and 1954. Power relations, social hierarchies and mutual perceptions between British and Sudanese in and outside the government service were reshaped to a considerable extent.
The paper seeks to shed new light on the politics of cooperation in colonial Sudan by focusing on education, an understudied field of cross-cultural interaction. Colonial education is both relevant and fascinating because it involved at once collaborative processes, unequal power relationships, disciplining mechanisms and emancipating dynamics. Moreover, the paper provides a detailed analysis of historical dimensions of cooperation that have not hitherto been adequately or fully addressed: specific modes of collaboration, concrete results produced by joint work, difficulties and obstacles to cooperation, mutual perceptions of the collaborating actors.
In a first part, two important methodological issues are tackled, namely terminological choices and the use of primary evidence. In order to avoid value judgments and possible anachronisms carried by terms such as "collaboration" and "cooperation", it is argued, historians should look for the words used by historical actors themselves, bring to light these "indigenous categories" and try to specify their meaning in relation to the historical context in which they were deployed. With regards to evidence, the problem of dissonant or contradicting sources (sometimes produced by a single author) and its implications for analyzing cooperation in imperial/colonial settings is briefly discussed. Moving to the core subject of inquiry, the paper identifies historical factors that facilitated cooperation between British and non-British (Sudanese, Egyptian, Syrian) individuals within the colonial administration of the Sudan. Various considerations and interests on both sides allowed –sometimes actively pushed– for cooperation despite political antagonisms and cultural gaps. In the Sudanese educational field of the 1940s and 1950s, collaborative mechanisms operated at different levels. Specific examples of cross-cultural cooperation at macro (broad educational planning), meso (publication of pedagogic materials) and micro (writing and experimentation of history textbooks for elementary schools) levels are provided to show the importance of multilayered cooperative dynamics in late colonial Sudan. Based on empirical evidence, the paper not only highlights significant achievements and limits of cross-cultural cooperation in a colonial context that was both incorporating and differentiating social groups ; it also points out at various ways in which the actors themselves (both colonizers and colonized) perceived and experienced collaboration in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan.
Alors que les combats de la Seconde Guerre mondiale achevaient de dissoudre le mythe de la supériorité de l’homme blanc, le Soudan était disputé par ses deux maîtres officiels, la Grande-Bretagne et l’Égypte. Le territoire s’acheminait-il vers l’indépendance ou une union politique avec son voisin méditerranéen ? La rivalité anglo-égyptienne, couplée à un impérialisme britannique soucieux de « préparer » les sociétés africaines à la souveraineté nationale, déboucha sur l’unification hâtive du Nord et du Sud-Soudan en 1947. Parvenues à des positions de pouvoir une décennie avant l’indépendance (1956), les élites du Nord s’attachèrent à faire du Soudan, pays à forte pluralité ethnolinguistique et religieuse, un État-nation arabe et musulman.
Dans ce contexte, un nouvel enseignement d’histoire fut élaboré pour les écoles élémentaires soudanaises. Quels en étaient les acteurs, les récits, les pratiques ? Cet ouvrage décortique les représentations, les apprentissages et les rapports sociaux sous-tendant la production et l’usage de manuels en langue arabe dans le Soudan colonial tardif. L’auteure propose également un éclairage comparatif sur l’histoire enseignée dans d’autres territoires de l’empire britannique en voie d’émiettement.
Ce livre offre de nouvelles clés de compréhension d’une séquence charnière dans l’histoire du monde contemporain. Au regard de l’actualité plus récente, il montre quel rôle l’histoire scolaire a pu jouer dans l’éclatement du cadre national soudanais après 1956, aboutissant à la scission du Soudan en deux États en 2011.
L'article s'attache à répondre à ces questions à travers l'analyse d'un manuel de "sciences militaires" publié en 2006 à destination des lycéens soudanais de 1ère année (15 ans). Il fait partie d'une série de trois manuels en usage non seulement durant la période transitionnelle, mais également après la partition du pays en deux États (2011) et la révolution qui renversa le président ʿUmar al-Bashīr (1989-2019). L'étude linguistique et sociohistorique du texte scolaire permet de mettre en lumière une dissociation intéressante entre guerre et violence; une stratégie de légitimation de l'armée via la représentation de celle-ci comme vecteur de paix et de démocratie dans l'histoire soudanaise; et un silence assourdissant autour des guerres civiles qui ensanglantèrent le Soudan dans le passé et au moment même où les élèves étaient abreuvés de cet enseignement. À partir de l'analyse empirique, l'article développe une réflexion théorique sur la violence tantôt décrite, tantôt produite et légitimée par un texte scolaire supposé faire autorité. Outre la violence physique à laquelle prépare un discours diffusé aux futures recrues de l'armée et plus largement à des citoyens en devenir, il s'agit aussi de repenser différentes définitions de la violence symbolique et d'évaluer l'opérabilité de celles-ci pour les recherches en histoire et sociologie de l'éducation.
Situating the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan in the wider frame of British imperial history, this dissertation investigates school history in late colonial Sudan. Didactic materials, prescribed contents and pedagogic practices are analyzed against the background of five major developments of the 1945-1953 period: the shifting of British imperialism in Africa towards “paternalist-progressive” policies aiming at preparing colonial peoples for self-government; the polarization of British and Egyptian positions on the Sudanese issue; mounting rivalries between the independentist and unionist wings of Sudanese nationalism; the hasty unification of Northern and Southern Sudan after more than half a century of separate rule; and Northern Sudanese policies of Arabization and Islamization in the South as a tool for achieving “national unification.
In a second part, the innovative character of post-WWII history teaching in Sudan is assessed by examining earlier patterns of Sudanese school history. History teaching in late colonial Sudan is then compared with history teaching in other territories of the (ex-)Empire (Uganda, North Rhodesia, Nigeria, Egypt, India, Great Britain). Two central postcolonial issues are further explored, namely the decolonization of school historical narratives after independence (1956) and the role of history teaching in fuelling the North-South conflict in Sudan.
Guillaume Blanc, Antonin Plarier et Iris Seri-Hersch
"Vers une histoire socio-environnementale des empires contemporains"
Émilie Pasquier
"La Société des eaux du Caire (1865-1919) : entre bien commun et intérêts privés"
Catherine Mayeur-Jaouen
"Culte des saints et histoire environnementale dans l’Égypte des XIXe et XXe siècles"
Hugo Vermeren
"Des agents au service de la protection de l’environnement ? Le service des gardes-pêche en Algérie (fin XIXe – début XXe siècle)"
Jonas Matheron
"Les forestiers français en Algérie : des administrateurs au service de la protection des forêts ?"
Nessim Znaien
"Faire face à la sécheresse : politiques du blé et fixation du prix du pain dans la Tunisie coloniale (1919-1925)"
Elisabeth Mortier
"Calculer les terres cultivables de la Palestine mandataire (1920-1939) : un enjeu environnemental, social et politique"
Damiano Matasci
"Gouverner la nature, moderniser le colonialisme : Hans J. Brédo, la recherche antiacridienne et la coopération interimpériale en Afrique (années 1930 – années 1950)"
Depuis sa naissance officielle aux États-Unis dans les années 1970, l’histoire environnementale s’est développée en s’intéressant tout particulièrement aux empires, avec des historiens comme Alfred Crosby. L’histoire environnementale des empires a ensuite été renouvelée sous l’impulsion pionnière des chercheuses et chercheurs indiens dans les années 1980, puis britanniques dans les années 1990. Les empires restent, depuis, l’un des objets constitutifs de l’histoire environnementale. Pourtant, les renouvellements théoriques et méthodologiques obtenus grâce au croisement de l’histoire sociale et de l’histoire environnementale se sont peu déployés vers des espaces coloniaux ou postcoloniaux. Par des analyses situées sur des terrains africains et moyen-orientaux, ce dossier propose d’apporter une pierre à l’édifice de ce projet historiographique.
Since its beginnings in the United States in the 1970s, environmental history has developed a particular focus on empires, thanks to scholars such as Alfred Crosby. In the 1980s, pioneering efforts by Indian scholars brought fresh perspectives into the field, before British historians took the lead in the 1990s. Since then, empires have remained one of the core subjects of environmental history. Nevertheless, the theoretical and methodological innovations gained by combining social history and environmental history have seldom been used in colonial or postcolonial studies. Exploiting a number of case studies from Africa and the Middle East, this thematic issue contributes to a socio-environmental history of empires.
This book provides fresh insights into colonial and imperial histories by focusing on spatial appropriations. Moving away from European notions of property, appropriation encompasses the many ways in which social actors consider a space as their own. This space may be physical or immaterial, public or intimate, lived or imagined.
In modern empires, spatial appropriations amounted neither to a material and violent dispossession orchestrated by European or Japanese powers, nor to an ongoing and unquestioned resistance by subaltern peoples. They were rather sites of complex interactions, in which the part of each actor owed as much to “foreign” domination as to other political, social, economic and environmental factors.
Cutting across common historiographical boundaries, the chapters of this book bring to light the declination and conjugation of various forms of spatial appropriation in the modern imperial age (1820-1960), taking readers on a journey from Russia to China, from the United States to South America, and from the Mediterranean world to Africa.
Scientific Editors: Didier Guignard and Iris Seri-Hersch
Contributors: Jean-Marie Bouron, Anna Bruzzone, Clélia Coret, Emmanuel Falguières, Didier Guignard, Lydia Hadj-Ahmed, Odile Hoffmann, Didier Inowlocki, Agnès Lainé, Qieyi Liu, Hinnerk Onken, Heloisa Rojas Gomez, Iris Seri-Hersch, Isabelle Surun.
Publisher's website: https://www.cambridgescholars.com/spatial-appropriations-in-modern-empires-1820-1960
Lien Zoom: https://univ-amu-fr.zoom.us/j/95470471526?pwd=elJ1dDd6MWlQNUU2VHF1eVhrQTQvZz09
Organisateurs: Antonin Plarier (Université Lyon 3) et Iris Seri-Hersch (Aix-Marseille Université)
Programme en ligne: https://iremam.cnrs.fr/fr/journee-detudes-articuler-lhistoire-sociale-et-environnementale-proche-orient-maghreb-afrique-xixe
Cette journée a pour objectif de rassembler des historien-ne-s contemporanéistes spécialistes du Proche-Orient, du Maghreb et de l’Afrique travaillant dans une optique environnementale. Si la trame politique globale de l’histoire moderne et contemporaine de ces régions est bien connue (domination impériale ottomane ou monarchique locale, tutelle coloniale européenne, accession à la souveraineté nationale), les dynamiques sociales, juridiques et environnementales sont sous-documentées. Cette rencontre ambitionne de renforcer les liens entre des « aires » habituellement séparées tout en englobant une diversité de zones climatiques et d’écosystèmes, des côtes méditerranéennes aux forêts tropicales, en passant par les milieux désertiques. Afin de permettre un dialogue heuristique, il s’agira de réfléchir plus particulièrement aux manières d’articuler histoire sociale et environnementale, à partir de cas précisément situés et dans une approche comparatiste attentive aux sources mobilisées.
Dans son dernier numéro qui sort en kiosque ce mois-ci, notre partenaire, la revue Moyen-Orient, propose un focus sur les Palestiniens. Israël, Cisjordanie, Gaza, c’est un dossier complet qui, évidemment, a été construit avant l’attaque terroriste du Hamas, le samedi 7 octobre 2023. Parmi les articles, et à quelques jours d’un scrutin municipal qui devait avoir lieu le 31 octobre, nous plongeons avec Iris Seri-Hersch, du Département d’études moyen-orientales de l’Université Aix-Marseille, dans le quotidien des habitants de Jisr al-Zarqa, près de Césarée, seul village restant sur la côte méditerranéenne après 1948.