The Deaths of Hintsa
The Deaths of Hintsa
The Deaths of Hintsa
za
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vi
Contents
Conclusion 253
Notes 270
Bibliography and archival sources 309
Index 329
List of illustrations
Figure 1 The cover of the Frederick IOns exhibition catalogue; there is little
clarity on whether the figure portrayed is Hintsa or Nqeno 71
Figure 2 Charles Michells cartographic representation of the landscape in
which Hintsa was killed, published in 1835 83
Figure 3 Flight of the Fingoes [sic], by Charles Michell, 1836 84
Figure 4 Warriors Fleeing Across a River/The Death of Hintsa, by
Frederick IOns. n.d. 90
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viii
Ah, Britain! Great Britain!
Great Britain of the endless sunshine!
You sent us truth, denied us the truth;
You sent us life, deprived us of life;
You sent us light, we sit in the dark,
Shivering, benighted in the bright noonday sun.
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ix
Acknowledgements
Perhaps the most daunting task in completing this book is to recall the
many people who have had to endure its long incubation. If I mention
them by name, it is not so that they may be reminded of their complicity
in The Deaths of Hintsa but to thank them for their generosity, insight,
friendship and love over the years. To them I attribute my long-held desire
to substitute a politics of despair with a politics of setting to work on
postcolonial futures.
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My first foray into writing this book began under the watchful
eye of Allen Isaacman and Jean Allman at the University of Minnesota,
as a graduate student in African History and as a recipient of a MacArthur
Fellowship grant. The more detailed study of the story of Hintsa was initially
submitted as a doctoral dissertation under the title In the Event of History
to the University of Minnesota in 2003. Thanks to Allen Isaacman, Director
of the Interdisciplinary Centre for the Study of Global Change, I was granted
an opportunity to interact with a group of thought-provoking historians of
Africa including Maanda Mulaudzi, Peter Sekibakiba Lekgoathi, Marissa
Moorman, Jacob Tropp, Heidi Gengenbach, Derek Peterson, Ana Gomez,
Alda Saute, Helena Pohlandt McCormick and Jesse Buche.
While at the University of Minnesota, John Mowitt, Qadri Ismail,
Ajay Skaria, David Roediger, Lisa Disch and Bud Duvall provided many
new and exciting directions for developing my thoughts on colonialism,
apartheid and postapartheid South Africa. John Mowitt and Qadri Ismail
gave new meaning to the idea of academic exchange, with Qadri especially
responsible for teaching me a thing or two. The members of the postcolonial
reading group fostered friendships conducive to the exploration of ideas.
Monika Mehta (for teaching me how to cut), Andrew Kinkaid, Guang Lei,
Joel Wainwright and Adam Sitze (for teaching me how not to cut) have,
unbeknown to them, been present at every stage of the writing even as I
x
deposited myself far across the Atlantic Ocean in a little-known place called
the University of the Western Cape (UWC).
The History Department and the Centre for Humanities Research
(CHR) at UWC provided the most enabling environment for the development
of new ideas and critique. The staff and students of the History Department
offered unconditional support for my research through the years. Leslie Witz,
Ciraj Rassool, Patricia Hayes, Nicky Rousseau, Brent Harris, Gary Minkley
(now at Fort Hare University) and Andrew Bank made a special effort to read
my work and comment on it. I hope this book is an acceptable response to
their many questions and queries, and that will be seen as a contribution
to the ongoing innovative research in UWCs History Department. Thanks
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are also due to Uma Mesthrie, Martin Legassick and Terri Barnes for
their encouragement over the years. The Centre for Humanities Research
South African Contemporary History and Humanities seminar provided a
privileged space for critical readings of my work. In the last years of writing,
I was encouraged by many first-year and honours history students who
took the time to engage with the ideas of this book. I would like to single
out Riedwaan Moosagee, Thozama April, Vuyani Booi, Peter Jon Grove,
Noel Solani, Virgil Slade, Maurits van Bever Donker, Shanaaz Galant and
Khayalethu Mdudumane for their interest in my work and for journeying
with me to the site of Hintsas killing on the Nqabara River. The fellows
in the Programme on the Study of the Humanities in Africa (PSHA) at
UWC were a source of encouragement in pressing me to substantiate my
argument for the need for a subaltern studies in South Africa. I would like
to thank specifically Paolo Israel, Annachiara Forte, Jade Gibson, Heidi
Grunebaum, Crystal Jannecke, Rachelle Chadwick, Annette Hoffman, Jill
Weintroub, Maurits van Bever Donker, Zulfa Abrahams, Mduduzi Xakaza,
Charles Kabwete, Lizzy Attree and Billiard Lishiko for their generosity and
friendship. Finally, Leslie Witz, Susan Newton-King and Andrew Bank
offered to take over my teaching to enable me to retreat for a sabbatical to
Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, where I put the finishing touches to
the book.
xi
A fellowship at the Centre for the Study of Public Institutions
at Emory University provided the much-needed intellectual stimulus
for fine-tuning the formulations of the book. Ivan Karp and Cory Kratz
are responsible for more than they can imagine, including much of the
discussion on the discourse of anthropology in the eastern Cape. Both
offered encouragement, support and unconditional friendship at a very
crucial time in the making of the book. Helen Moffett provided me with
significant editorial comment and engaged with the text during my
fellowship at Emory. I would also like to thank Durba Mitra, Sunandan
Nedumpaly, Ajit Chittambalam, Shailaja Paik and Swargajyoti Gohain who
invited me to be a participant in their Subaltern Studies class at Emory
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University, and Clifton Crais and Pamela Scully for the many conversations.
The research for this book was supported by the National Research
Foundation-funded project on the Heritage Disciplines based at UWC. I
would like to thank Leslie Witz and Ciraj Rassool for finding a place for
my research in the overall project that they lead. The PSHA provided a
research platform for the development of the argument. Garry Rosenberg,
Utando Baduza, Mary Ralphs, Karen Bruns, Fairuz Parker and Lee Smith
at the HSRC Press gave me support and guidance in finalising this book. I
would also like to thank the many librarians and archivists both here and
in the United States for their generous assistance, especially Simphiwe
Yako, Graham Goddard and Mariki Victor (Mayibuye Centre, UWC);
Sandy Roweldt (formerly at the Cory Library and subsequently at the
African Studies Library at the University of Cape Town); Michelle Pickover
(William Cullen Church of the Province of SA Collection, University of
Witwatersrand); Zweli Vena, Victor Gacula and Sally Schramm (Cory
Library); friends at the District Six Museum and the staff at the Albany
Museum, Grahamstown, State Archives and Manuscripts Division; and the
South African Library in Cape Town (especially Najwa Hendrickse).
Early versions of Chapters 1 and 5 appeared in History and Theory, Vol.
39, No. 4, December 2000 and in the South African Historical Journal, 55,
2006 respectively. They are included with permission; and Hilary Graham,
xii
Bobo Pemba and the staff of the Albany Museum (History) granted me
permission to reproduce the images that appear in the book.
Friendship is the basis for all writing and hospitality, its condition.
Unfortunately, writing may also inflict untold damage on friendships.
Vivienne Lalu endured most of the fallout of this project. I am truly sorry
for the harm it has caused but would like to acknowledge her steadfast
commitment over the years. Others who graciously suffered my writing and
obsessions along the way include Ajay, Kilpena, Nikhil and Rahoul Lalu,
Ameet, Nital, Meha and Amisha Lalloo, Deepak, Primal, Natver and Badresh
Patel, Jim Johnson, Latha Varadarajan, Noeleen Murray, Nic Shepherd,
Abdullah Omar, William and Sophia Mentor, Manju Soni, Carolyn Hamilton,
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Mxolisi Hintsa, Ramesh Bhikha, Dhiraj, Tara and Reshma Kassanjee, Ratilal,
Pushpa and Hansa Lalloo, Amy Bell-Mulaudzi, Suren Pillay, Kamal Bhagwan,
Saliem Patel, Fazel Ernest, Ruth Loewenthal and members of my extended
family. I am grateful for all they have done to support this book.
A book that is written over many years invariably leads to friendships
across continents and across urban and rural divides. Colleagues at the Basler
Afrika Bibliographien, Basel, Switzerland, especially Giorgio Miescher, Lorena
Rizzo, Patrick Harries and Dag Henrichson invited me to present some of the
arguments of the present book and encouraged me to think beyond borders
and boundaries. Similarly, I have made many friends in the Tsholora and
Mbhashe in the eastern Cape, amongst whom I wish to single out Kuzile Juza,
Sylvia Mahlala, Mda Mda, Nomathotho Njuqwana and Joe Savu. Mostly, the
residents who have won rights to the Dwesa Cwebe Reserve following a land
restitution process deserve my unconditional gratitude. I hope that our many
conversations, agreements and disagreements have helped to make sense of
the predicament of the rural eastern Cape.
This book is dedicated to Kiera Lalu. At the very least, I hope it
may serve to meaningfully account for my absence. As for answering her
searching question on whether this book will end up in a museum, we will
have to wait and see. It is also dedicated to Jaymathie Lalu, Hansa Lalloo, and
my father, Jayantilal Lalu, for all you have done and much, much more.
xiii
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xiv
Introduction: thinking ahead
Wherever colonisation is a fact, the indigenous culture begins to rot and among
the ruins something begins to be born which is condemned to exist on the margin
allowed it by the European culture.1
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1
colonisation more generally. The Irish Times noted that even if Chief Gcaleka
is something of a showman, his search is part of a broader, more serious
movement [through which] indigenous people are increasingly clamoring
for the restoration of human relics removed from their country during the
colonial era.3 Others resorted to descriptions, veiled in acerbic humour, of a
maverick power-hungry individual invoking a pre-modern register so as to
advance his own ambition and greed. Labelled the chief of skullduggery,
Gcaleka was accused of having a shrewd eye for publicity by his disgruntled
spokesperson, Robert Pringle, who went on to describe the mission to recover
Hintsas skull as a hoax. 4 The Mail & Guardian quoted Xhosa paramount
Xoliliswe Sigcawu, who claimed that the sangoma was a charlatan out
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Gcaleka identified himself as the person who was being ridiculed and added
that he had no faith that the scientists commissioned to study the skull had
any interest in the ancestors of the Xhosa.
If Gcaleka was overstating the point, it was only because the
scientists recalled historical narrations of Hintsas death without explicitly
suggesting how the contestations and doubts surrounding these affected
their investigations. Knobel et al. cited varied reports, [in which] it has been
claimed that the fatal short [sic] shattered Hintsas head, scattering his brain
and skull fragments, that [the shot] blew off the top of his head and that it
was apparently common practice for soldiers to decapitate victims and take
the heads as trophies.13 The forensic procedure had to be supplemented by
historical evidence about the killing of Hintsa, but no indication either of the
source of the reports or their claims to authority was required. As we shall
see, all these reports came from colonial officials who were implicated in the
killing of Hintsa.
It was not entirely coincidental that Gcaleka should be confronted
by the demand for forensic and historical evidence. The combination of the
two was in the process of being tested at the time in relation to the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). The TRC was officially established
by the postapartheid 14 state to investigate and account for gross human
rights violations under apartheid. Initially, Nicholas Gcalekas quest was not
in Gcalekas lie more of the constellation of the regime of truth, and how it
functions, than is proclaimed through the juridical foundations of the TRC
itself. Luise White has proposed that lies, like secrets, are socially negotiated
realms of information.16 Good lies, she argues, are crafted, they have to be
negotiated with a specific audience, and they have to be made to stick a lie,
a cover story, not only camouflages but explains. Lies, in this formulation, are
about excess that demands, inter alia, revised strategies of reading, different
from those that historians are accustomed to. For White, lies are not merely
inventions, but fabrications that rest at the very heart of society and its
histories. The intersection of lies and social life is, we may argue, one way of
perceiving of a narrative dimension that is central to the work of history. To
simply recognise lies as a condition of life is to neglect the structure of the
presumed lie that is so crucial to the functioning of social worlds. In other
words, it is to ignore the ways in which lies overlap with regimes of truth or,
more importantly, how regimes of truth are lodged in the articulation of what
are ultimately considered lies.
At another level, the allegations of the lie simply put into greater
doubt the very effects of a regime of truth which, while being mobilised to a
presumably noble end of national reconciliation, offered little hope of settling
the outstanding questions about the colonial past. In speaking of colonialism
I am aligning the concept with a suggestion by Nicholas Dirks, who argues
did on the judgements rendered about his personality. Much was made
in the press of the fees he charged for interviews. He was widely accused
of fabricating history by distorting the account of Hintsas death for the
purposes of self-enrichment. The accusation of distortion, however, was
based on the very colonial record of the killing that had been doubted for
more than a century in South Africa. Indeed, the historian Jeff Peires refers
to the commission of inquiry into Hintsas death as a cover-up on the part
of colonial officials.21 Lost in the denunciations were the very traces of the
contestations that lie at the heart of South African history. At the height of
a moment of political transition endowed with historic achievement and
significance, there could be no room for doubt. The introduction of the
story of the killing of Hintsa was treated as a mere distraction in the overall
objectives of transition from the apartheid to the postapartheid state that
the TRC was instituted to oversee.
The quest for Hintsas head not only called into question the categories by
which the TRC functioned, but also seemed to inadvertently short-circuit
a discussion amongst South African historians after 1994 about the crisis
in history.22 This crisis has been variously represented as a drop in student
In adhering to the broad outlines of Peiress account of the cattle killing, Mda
offers the following account of the circumstances in which Hintsa was killed.
Narrating the unfolding drama of the cattle killing, Mda reminds us of the
chasm between the administrative burden of the colonial archive and the
demands of anti-colonial memory:
The Otherworld where the ancestors lived had been caressed by the
shadow of King Hintsa. Even though almost twenty years had passed
since King Hintsa had been brutally murdered in 1835 by Governor Sir
Benjamin DUrban, the amaXhosa people still remembered him with
great love. They had not forgotten how DUrban had invited the king
to a meeting, promising him that he would be safe, only to cut his
ears as souvenirs and ship his head to Britain.29
The story of the killing of Hintsa cannot be told without blurring the
distinction between history and historiography. This is the premise of this
book, which endeavours to connect the modes of evidence of the colonial
archive with the imaginary structure that underlies its narrative possibilities.
In delineating the indistinction of the two in the story of the killing of
Hintsa, I hope also to outline a way to connect history and historiography so
as to activate a postcolonial critique of apartheid that would enable possible
new directions in the rewriting of South African history.
Tilana Gcaleka. In a bid to interpret the quest for the skull and in light of the
failure to prove the skulls authenticity once discovered, Marks declared that
Gcaleka was a man of his time.31 By this Marks meant that Gcaleka served as
evidence of an identity that mediates the economic difficulties accompanying
unfulfilled political promises in the post-apartheid period the agent that
mediates, and perhaps represents, a social reality. Now a double victim of his
own truth game, Gcaleka was to be mobilised against the postmodernists
and postcolonialists themselves agents supposedly seeking to undermine
the sacred domains of disciplinary history as a sign of the legitimacy of
what Marks calls materialist history.
Mike Nicol similarly sees Nicholas Gcaleka as adding to the modern
noise of late capitalism by making claims on shaky historical foundations.
Ciraj Rassool, Gary Minkley and Leslie Witz all refer to the difficulty that
Gcaleka poses for social history when the evidence of human remains does
not fit the requirements of histories of social change. As Gcaleka slipped
into his new representative role as a sign of the times, he came to mark the
postapartheid present as an imperfect tense. In each case, I suggest, Gcaleka
must be seen to be creating the space for thinking about historys relation
to power.
But Gcaleka simply did not seem to fit the roles ascribed to him from
high above. The misfit of the text often wreaks havoc with the prescriptions
unfolding a strategy of parabasis being outside while at once inside the play
or argument of history. By putting the subaltern into play in the discourse of
history, SSC has also realigned the principal disciplinary distinction between
history and historiography that defines the historians craft. In so doing, it
has called into question unilinear temporal theories of change that dominate
the discourse of history and the political effects of the specific histories they
give rise to.
Let me draw out the productivity of the exchange more carefully so
as to emphasise its potential in working towards an epistemic rupture. It
is possible to discern in SSC not only an argument with British liberalism
in India but also a fundamental disagreement with Marxs famous essay,
On Imperialism in India, 40 in which he proposed that colonialism was
a troublesome but necessary event in the history of capital. Ssc draws out
the inadequacies of nationalist responses to this narrative of change by
implicating its disciplinary forms in the very colonial violence that it sets out
to oppose. As I prefer to think of the work undertaken by the collective, it did
not merely follow Marx in turning Hegels inversion of things right side up,
on their feet, as in the famous metaphor for the dialectical challenge posed
by the young left Hegelians, but opted to inquire into the failed promise of
its spirit that prompted none other than Marx to explore the necessary stage
of colonialism in world history. SSC did not merely seek to react in opposition
as Prehistory. 41
This, however, was not merely to write a social history from below; one that
was additive of those who were cast as Europes people without history. The
elaboration of the concept subaltern exposed something of a categorical
crisis when historys relation to power was specifically refracted through the
prism of postcolonial criticism. As such, the subaltern marked a necessary
limit in the composition of power. This, as Gyan Prakash notes, means that
subalternity erupts within the system of dominance and marks its limits
from within, that its externality to dominant systems of knowledge and
power surfaces inside the system of dominance, but only as an intimation,
as a trace of that which eludes the dominant discourse. 42 Even as a ruse of
dominance, as a sign internal to a system or an impossible inadequation
in a sign system, the term subaltern nevertheless conveys a sense of
categorical distinction. If Prakashs formulation echoes my own reading of
Gcaleka, there is still some need to explain the shift proposed by subaltern
studies from the recuperative project surrounding the preordained subject
of history to a reading of the traces of subalternity in hegemonic discourses.
The question, it seems, is equally one about the concepts of difference that
subaltern studies entertains and whether these might help to activate a
postcolonial critique of apartheid.
My engagement with the SSC is premised not so much on its notion of the
subaltern as demographic differential but rather on its interruptive strategy
for reading, as I have already suggested, the theories of change. I am not
necessarily interested in comparative histories in the social scientific sense
of that term or in the use of the term subaltern to denote yet another subject
category in the pantheon of multiculturalism. I do not feel that the term
subaltern should limit us to a sense of categorical distinction. Mine is a
more selective advancement of the project of the SSC which stages an inquiry
about the theory of change in the transition from apartheid to postapartheid
South Africa, and allows us, as Hall would have it, to intensify postcolonial
Lines of flight allow us to relocate the force of agency in the very conditions
of constraint to which it is ultimately bound. It sheds light on the specific
This statement not only offers a way to ascertain the complicity of history
in sustaining forms of power, but also extends the critique to those
histories that present themselves as inclusive and radically opposed to
imperialism. The desire to seek an inclusionary narrative of world history
has relinquished the need for a critique of historicism which was part of the
selective narrative, and its diabolical consequences, in the first place. More
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This book is organised roughly into two related sections. The first examines
colonial modes of evidence and the imaginary structure that define the
deliberations about the killing of Hintsa. The killing of Hintsa is filtered
through complex grids of intelligibility that not only constitute the modes of
evidence of the colonial archive but also result in the subjection of agency.
These colonial modes of evidence significantly organise the deliberations of
a settler public sphere and anti-colonial nationalist responses. In the second
section, I enact a strategic invalidation of reversals of the colonial archive by
drawing on the resources of the Subaltern Studies project. In the process of
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the exchange with Subaltern Studies, I suggest ways to think about a history
after apartheid that also alters our understanding of critical possibilities that
inhere in postcolonial histories.
A common structure in the argument in each chapter is to see how
a particular domain or discursive field emerges and/or is shaped by the
tensions or contradictions between other fields or forms. Each identifies a
particular constitutive tension. Following a critical reading of the archive
on the killing of Hintsa, I consider the internal dynamic of information and
aesthetics and landscape and nativesubject. In the subsequent chapters
I reflect on the tensions of Empire between settler and colonial histories
that deal with the killing of Hintsa and on nationalist narrations that seek
to invalidate this inheritance by separating landscape and nativesubject
and rewriting each in turn. In the case of nationalist narration, I argue that
it unwittingly perhaps finds itself caught up in the tensions of archive and
discipline, and also history and anthropology. The final chapters set to work
on unravelling historicist renderings of the relationship between colonialism
and apartheid so as to set the stage for a different relation between the
discourse of history and the subject of marginality.
Chapter 1, Colonial modes of evidence and the grammar of
domination, returns to the story of the killing of Hintsa by British colonial
officials in 1835. The central argument of the chapter is that the colonial
structure, the writings that belong to the corpus of Xhosa historiography fail
to attend to the disciplinary frameworks that authorise discourses on Hintsa.
Nevertheless, the attempt at strategic invalidation of colonial history posits a
disagreement at the centre of the discourse of history.
In Chapter 5, I propose to return to the scene of colonial annexation
of Gcalekaland in the nineteenth century by reading the spectral traces that
permeate the colonial archive and its modes of evidence. The chapter is
organised around the ways in which Hintsas ghost traverses the bureaucratic
finalisation of the borders that would many years later define apartheids
homeland system. Drawing on Ranajit Guhas notion of the prose of counter-
insurgency, I point to a fundamental difficulty in distinguishing between the
reliability and liability of the colonial archive.
Chapter 6 continues the process of strategic invalidation of the reversal
of the colonial archive, this time by exploring the rearrangement of the story
of Hintsa in the space of museum exhibitions in South Africa that deal
with the story of colonisation. In critiquing the way difference is invoked in
the space of the museum exhibition of colonisation, I argue that we home
in on the interstitial space between what can be said according to the rules
of colonial modes of evidence and what is actually said on the basis of the
imaginary structure. This is a space opened up by Nicholas Gcalekas mission,
which prompts the desire to step out of the shadows of the colonial archive.
31
deflects all responsibility for the story by introducing the sequence of events
with the phrase it is said. The story of the death of a moving spirit is thereby
entrusted to an anonymous third person while the implicitly sarcastic gesture
implied by such a deflection conveys a sense of narrative impasse.
Symptomatic of the predicament that surrounds the indecision of
narrating the story of the killing of Hintsa is the problem of assigning
roles to the various actors in the narrative the king, the British soldiers,
civilian conscripts, and the investigating subject. None of these
positions can be taken as given. One reason for this uncertainty is perhaps
that these subject positions are each products of an intricate and overlapping
network of evidentiary and narrative techniques discernible at the levels
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land and concludes with a summary of the event by suggesting that Hintsa
attempted to negotiate with the colonial state and voluntarily entered the
British camp in his territory. Made a prisoner, Crais adds, he attempted to
escape, was hunted down, shot and mutilated.
In perhaps the most important contribution to the history of precolonial
society in the eastern Cape, Jeff Peires only manages a brief footnote in
his House of Phalo with the rider that the entire court record that serves as
historical evidence was extensively stage-managed by Colonel Harry Smith
and is of little relevance to the historian seeking to construct an alternative or
truthful account of events. As in a recent textbook of the southern African past
by Neil Parsons, 4 Peires only manages a few lines on the killing of Hintsa.
If the story of Hintsa was glossed over in the House of Phalo it was
because the subjectivity of Hintsa is overdetermined by colonial concerns
and administrative priorities or, to phrase it slightly differently, by a
combination of cadastral prose and the prose of counter-insurgency. The
memory of Hintsa is rather inserted into the 100 years of war that engulfed
the eastern Cape. In narrating the 1840s and 1850s, for example, the memory
of Hintsa serves as a prelude to reinterpreting the reign of Sarhili, Hintsas
son, primarily by adding a quality of resistance to the narrative of the cattle
killing in which many Xhosa embraced a catastrophic prophecy which
promised the resurrection of the dead. Thus, on the eve of the War of the Axe
Phalo, under whose rule the distinction between the two houses became
noticeably marked, died in 1775. His son, Gcaleka, ascended to the
paramountcy while Rharhabe emerged as the regent of the right-hand
house. Gcaleka died three years later, in 1788, and was succeeded by his
son Khawuta. Oral traditions present Khawuta as a very weak leader by
claiming that he did not strengthen the position of his rule, which lasted
until 1794. The Rharhabe house, under the leadership of Ndlambe and
leadership dispute in the Rharhabe house and that, for his part, Ngqika had
extended an alliance with the British against his uncle. When Ngqika died
in 1829, apparently of alcohol abuse, his son Maqoma fought a guerrilla-
styled war in the Amathole Mountains in which British forces suffered
considerable losses.9 The appointment of Benjamin DUrban in 1834 and the
deployment of Colonel Harry Smith to arrange the defence of Grahamstown
where settlers had taken refuge, saw a change in tactics towards Maqoma.
The British colonial officials at the Cape chose to target the paramount king,
Hintsa, east of the Kei River in a town later renamed Butterworth for the
war being waged against the colony. They accused Hintsa of complicity in
Maqomas war and of harbouring cattle allegedly stolen from settlers along
the eastern Cape frontier. On a mission to the Mbashe River to retrieve
cattle, Hintsa was killed and his body mutilated and, some say, his head
was severed.
Narrative impasse stems from the manner in which the British
cleared the scene of the crime, removed traces that may have enabled an
alternative history and left in its place only one story: their own. It seems
ironic, though perfectly understandable, that alternative versions of the
South African past should defer the narration of this cowardly act, such a
crucial event in South African history, to the very perpetrators of murder.
More importantly, the deferrals and doubts that frame an alternative history
understood as the raw material upon which the historians practice rests.
In other words, how is an institutionally bound discourse produced as an
indispensable resource in the story of the killing of Hintsa? To pose the
question along these lines is to ask that we attend to the very constitution of
evidence. Evidence, whether in the form of the colonial archive or an archive
of opposition, does not necessarily provide a window to some prior reality,
nor should we only evaluate it in terms of the categories of objectivity
and bias. Rather, I suggest that by apprehending the procedures through
which evidence is produced and the rules that inaugurate particular ways
of knowing, we may encounter an altogether different perspective on
domination.10
This chapter explores the modes of a colonial information economy
which rested on the tactics of intelligence and surveillance as these relate
to the killing of Hintsa in 1835. My argument, briefly, is that the dismissal
of colonial records as biased limits the possibilities of understanding the
interior logic and effects of domination, and unnecessarily suggests the
possibility of an objective history of the episode in which Hintsa was killed.11
Colonial domination could not have proceeded without the accommodation
of the African in the narratives that it produced of the conquest of African
societies, even when the narrative was explicitly premised on the will of the
coloniser. The terms of that incorporation are crucial to an understanding
The colonial archive is not merely a condition for knowledge but an apparatus
that inaugurates a very specific form of the subjection of agency.14 Whereas
the colonial archive is usually read in relation to its exclusions, its function
in the process of subject constitution, its process of objectification in other
words, reveals the techniques of colonial governmentality interlaced with
the grammar of domination. The colonial archive thereby combines and
orders dispatches, cartographic representations, information and intelligence
reports, commissions of inquiry and the orders of language in a very specific
way to keep the subject in its place.15 Taken together, we may discern very
specific modes of evidence in the colonial archive as well as the effects of
such an assemblage of evidence.
Ultimately, these modes of evidence of the colonial archive operate
in a manner that organises our reading of its subjective effects. If we
consider the archive along a reformulated notion of agency that does not
merely hark back to nostalgic constructions, then we may have to attend
to the further question of the materialisation of subjectivity in the colonial
archive and the ways in which the latter is conditioned and sustained by
Fort Willshire offered a suitably safe venue to hear evidence about the
killing of Hintsa, especially when compared to the gruesome detail that
surfaced at the commission of inquiry convened in 1836. The metaphorical
resonances in the selection of the fort to conduct the investigation into
the death of Hintsa were not lost in the choice of venue. It was Colonel
Willshire, in whose honour the fort was named, who in 1819 had given
Hintsa the assurance that the amaGcaleka would not in the slightest be
interfered with if the king complied with what was right and reasonable.21
That warning seemed to confirm a long-standing belief that Hintsa
had been plotting against the British and that his death might be tracked
to the first indications and suspicions of treachery. The sense of suspicion
that dated back to the governorship of Lord Charles Somerset was
reaffirmed through the commission of inquiry into Hintsas death,
instituted by Sir Benjamin DUrban in 1836. Through the investigation
of the commission of inquiry, Hintsa was blamed and held responsible
for his own death.
For scholars who stumble upon the military commission of inquiry
convened by an embattled governor, Benjamin DUrban, a year after the
histories that mark a break with the repertoires of colonial and apartheid
narration. Neither is the colonial archive a storehouse of documents. It
should be approached, rather, as a mode of evidence in which one can
discern the social process for the subjection of agency. As an apparatus that
activates and assigns subjects, even fabricates these, the archive specifies
a level of facticity indistinguishable from an obscured, but necessary,
technique of narrativity. The colonial archive is thus not a documentary
collection but a technique of historical narrativisation a distinguishable
archival genre with, I will show later, considerable implications for
imagining a postapartheid future. First, however, I propose that we consider
how the archive operates at the levels of facticity and narrativity in the
specific production of evidence about the killing of Hintsa.
In contrast to the brevity of contemporary historiographical accounts
of the killing of Hintsa, for the period from 1835 to 1836 the colonial record
consists of more than 500 official documents of correspondence and
reports on conditions in the eastern Cape, and 200 pages of military court
records pertaining to the death of Hintsa. Countless adventure novels,
diaries, memoirs, autobiographies and travelogues supplement this list.
At first glance, the size of the documentary expanse simply reaffirms our
general sense of the bureaucratic procedures upon which colonialism came
to depend. A close reading, however, suggests that the colonial archive is
If such statements were clearly motivated by colonial racism, they may also
be said to allude to the way in which colonialists presented themselves as
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victims rather than perpetrators and this in spite of all their attempts at
civilising the Xhosa for what DUrban thought to be their own interests and
gratification in the matter.26
Colonial officials achieved the reversal whereby they represented
themselves as victims rather than as perpetrators through two key
mechanisms. Firstly, by reversing the order of subject and object, the
Xhosa (and Hintsa in particular) were guaranteed a certain agency. Hintsa,
after all, could not be presented as a threat as an instigator if he had
been rendered incapable of acting. Secondly, the need to confer upon the
colonised subject an agency, without denying the British their belief in their
superiority or the very justification of colonial rule, depended on a repressive
tactic of colonial domination in which assumptions were transformed into
facts. This tactic was given the sophisticated and surreptitious name of
intelligence gathering.
The collection of dispatches and reports that makes up the bulk
of the archive pertains to the communications between frontier and
colonial headquarters in Grahamstown and Cape Town, between colony
and metropole and between traders, missionaries, colonial bureaucrats
and military officials situated in Xhosaland and along the frontier. Official
reports generally relate to military strategy, the positioning of British troops
and the costs both financial and in terms of the loss of troops of the
should be registered every man wearing on his neck a thin plate of tin
containing his name and the name of his chief to identify offenders and
enable the British government to know the number and strength of frontier
tribes.28 The claims of expertise and dominance were premised on a desire
to know. The correspondence that forms such a core component of the
colonial archive on the eastern Cape, however, may also be read in terms of
an inability to penetrate the veils of secrecy that so confounded British forces
during the period of the wars of conquest in the Cape. In a letter from the
trader John Rowles on 17 December 1834, for example, we find suggestions of
the limits of colonial knowledge. Rowles writes:
I can state, from my own knowledge, that Hintsas chief councellors
[sic] have been, for last six months, that is to say, from the period
when Hintsa went to the upper country on the pretext of hunting
in close communication with the frontier Caffers; as soon as one
of them returned, another was despatched and this intercourse was
continued. Those councellors [sic] remained upward of a month before
they returned to Hintsa. I never knew this kind of intercourse to
subsist before between Hintsa and the Frontier Caffers. When I asked
them what they had been doing among the Frontier Tribes, they made
some trivial pretext, such as they went to get assegais, or some cattle
or to pay a visit.29
At a glance, there is very little discrepancy between the two reports. Both
point to the threat posed by Hintsa and to the possibilities open to the British
if this were to materialise. One small, though extremely significant exception
for my argument emerges upon a closer reading. This relates to the certainty
within which the second report is framed. If in the earlier report Hintsas
actions are presented in terms of possibilities, in the later report we learn
colonial forces as to the whereabouts of the stock they sought. The messages
that were sent out to the Xhosa chiefs, Harry Smith would admit years later
in his autobiography, were always secretive.32 After five days, Hintsa himself
had asked to be taken to his people, accompanied by British troops, so that
he could attempt to convince them to surrender the remaining cattle. In this
instance, too, Hintsa proved tentative in notifying the British as to where he
was leading them. It was during that journey that Hintsa escaped and was
subsequently shot in the head and killed while attempting to hide along the
bank of the Nqabara River.
There are two instances in the report that may help to sustain
the claim that an unverifiable colonial imaginary played a crucial role
in the killing of Hintsa. In the paragraph where the single reference to
15 May is made three days after the shooting of Hintsa it is stated that
the extension of the colonial border had become not merely expedient but
absolutely and indispensably necessary and unavoidable. The statement
reads as follows:
The only measure that could promise to repay the expenses of the
war, which the colony had been most unwillingly compelled to wage
pro aris et focis, and place a defensible barrier between the heart of the
colony and the savage tribes of Central Africa, provide security for the
future, and a just indemnification for the past.33
reliability of their intelligence work. While they suspected that Hintsa was
organising an attack against the British, they were unable to decipher the
messages conveyed either in code or in secrecy, according to DUrban that
Hintsa had dispatched to the outer reaches of the frontier. Hintsa was capable
of threatening the colonial project from both within and beyond colonial
spheres of control or surveillance. The sentiment of doubt expressed in the
first report that DUrban sent to the Colonial Secretary was therefore resolved
through an act of violence in which those who threatened the extension
of a line on a map and the securities that attended to that cartographic
practice were killed and mutilated. Hintsas death was necessary for colonial
expansionism.
If cartographic representations were produced in relation to what
I have suggested were colonial insecurities and anxieties, how did these
simultaneously come to produce a sense of security and certainty? To
answer this question, we need to consider the way mapping worked and was
organised in the Cape. According to JS Bergh and JC Visagies cartographic
guide of the Cape frontier zone, two maps were central to the unfolding
drama in the region.39 The first 40 was drawn by surveyor-general CC Michell
and the second, 41 a sketch map, was, according to Bergh and Visagie, clearly
carried and used by Governor DUrban to record landmarks and place names
as the invading force progressed. 42
It is not certain that the Xhosa shared the conception of the frontier that is
suggested by Giliomees research on the Cape frontier from 1770 to 1812.
This is a point I shall return to in a later chapter. For the moment
I wish to pause and contemplate a different answer to Martin Legassicks
suggestion that more attention be paid to the frontier itself.50 Based on
the preceding discussion on the rules of the formation of evidence, the
frontier was also a conceptual or imaginary formation premised on the
rules of an information economy, cartography, colonial myth models and
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Whom did you see on the spot when you came up to the body of Hintsa?;
In what part of the body did he receive his mortal wound?; Did you think
the brains you saw was [sic] the consequence of the gun-shot wound? and
so forth.
In his study of the military court of inquiry records, the historian
JG Pretorius warns against too easy an acceptance of the explanation offered.
According to Pretorius, it is difficult to establish what exactly happened
after Hintsa arrived in the British camp, because of the lack of disinterested
evidence. Pretorius claims:
The official accounts those of Harry Smith and DUrban were
written only after the chiefs death, and so were the accounts of
other eyewitnesses. Not much importance should be attached to
the depositions of chiefs and other persons collected by Smith
after Glenelg [Secretary of State for the Colonies] had censured the
DUrbanSmith settlement. The whites among these persons, such
as the Wesleyan missionaries, were all friends of DUrban and Smith,
while the Xhosa, such as Tyali and Maqoma, could have made their
depositions under pressure or by means of the question-and-answer
method, and made to say whatever Smith wanted. All this evidence
had the purpose of proving in retrospect certain things about Hintsa
and must therefore be treated with utmost care.54
games and discourses that produce the effects of the subjection of agency.
As a mode of evidence, the colonial archive invites examination of the
processes by which the subject of history is grounded and repeatedly
returned to the exercise of power as subaltern. Mostly, it allows us to track
the complicity of the discipline of history in this double move at the heart
of the colonial archive, even when work on the subject is conducted in the
name of resistance. My argument, as also stated elsewhere, is for reading the
colonial archive as complicit in the process of the social subjection of agency
and, as such, to view it as operating not as a source, but as a discourse as a
specific mode of evidence. The colonial archive should not be seen merely as
composed of techniques of governmentality but as a narrative strategy in its
own right, one that is capable of organising our reading.
I believe that the challenge to historians reading the colonial archive
is to point out the inconsistencies (where it stutters in its articulation, as
Guha so eloquently puts it) in the story of colonialism and to mark them
as sites where another story may have taken place. To claim that subaltern
consciousness, voice or agency can be retrieved through colonial texts
is to ignore the organisation and representation of colonised subjects
as a subordinate proposition within primary discourses. While colonial
discourses are premised on a subordinate will Foucault would say that
silence and marginality are constitutive of a discourse that will is neither
64
the deaths of hintsa
2
Mistaken identity
65
The killing of Hintsa was rapidly absorbed into the deliberations
of a settler public sphere in Grahamstown. This sphere represented the
contestations emanating from the war of 183435 in which Hintsa was
killed and connected the relatively isolated settler society in and around
Grahamstown to a larger framework of Empire.2 A settler community,
locked away in the far reaches of the eastern Cape frontier zones, could not
merely rely on conventional forms of communication to establish its place
in the world of the nineteenth-century bourgeoisie. The debates that raged
in the pages of The Grahamstown Journal and the South African Commercial
Advertiser during the 1830s between humanitarian liberals and settler
conservatives, which Andrew Bank persuasively marks as an inaugural
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broader politics of Empire. This they did in part by implicating Hintsa in the
practices of slavery, thereby hoping to win greater support in the midst of a
burgeoning anti-slavery movement. The formation of a settler public sphere
in Grahamstown, in other words, benefited from the publicity generated
by Hintsas killing. Given that it was in part sustained by an act of colonial
violence, the deliberations of the settler public sphere allow us to review the
civility generally accorded to the deliberative aspects of the bourgeois public
sphere by critical scholars such as Jurgen Habermas.5 The point is not merely
to pit bourgeois sensibility against colonial culture but also to probe how the
colonial archive impinges on an imagined settler public sphere.
Ultimately, the very perspectivalism that punctuated the proceedings
of the commission of inquiry in 1836, replete, as shown in the previous
chapter, with references to the distance from the scene of the killing and the
privileging of the scopic over the sonoric, produced a surplus of words and
images that seeped into the deliberations of the settler public sphere. As
the deliberations between settlers and colonial officials intensified around
the outcomes of the war of 183435, the need to contain the proliferation
and circulation of the name of Hintsa resulted in an attempt at what I call
a grounding of the subject. By this I mean specifically the way words and
images combined to constitute the subject, not only for the purposes of
colonial governmentality but also as the subject that most cogently mediated
mistaken identity 67
and served the emergent interests of a settler public sphere. I want to refer to
this excess as an imaginary structure, in part because it continues the process
of the interpellation of the subject begun by the colonial archive as it also
seeks to limit the scope of enunciation to the dominant interests of settler
society. This overlap of elements of the imaginary structure consequently
produced a subject of mistaken identity, as the memory of the king was both
literally and figuratively pinned to the metonymic grounds of his killing.
The deliberations surrounding Hintsa in London and Grahamstown
not only reveal how public spheres constitute subjectivities; they also allow us
to track the function of the imaginary structure in producing the subaltern
as a subject effect. Thinking ahead to 1996, this relationship between
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enunciation in the public sphere and the grounding of the subject in colonial
discourse was perhaps what was also elided in the many responses to
Nicholas Gcaleka. In thinking about the imaginary structure that is elided in
the public responses to Gcalekas dream, we might begin by first considering
the place that Hintsa occupied in the discourse of a fledgling settler public
sphere in the early nineteenth century. To fully understand this process
I want to turn to the textual productions of Hintsa in portraits, diaries,
travel writing and art to explore how the subjection of agency was rendered
complete in the aftermath of the kings killing. The subjection of agency, I
argue, is achieved by relating the colonised subject to the landscape or what I
call the process of grounding Hintsa.
The image of Hintsa that today features in museums, popular histories and
academic texts belongs to the colonial archive and an emergent settler public
sphere on the far reaches of the eastern Cape frontier zones in the 1830s.
Images of unreliable and treacherous Xhosa chiefs characteristically mediated
the formation of a settler identity on the eastern Cape frontier during the
nineteenth century. Specifically, the most persistent image of a cunning,
untrustworthy and treacherous chief was that associated with a portrait of
mistaken identity 69
Hintsa by colonial officials. While the regime of truth reminds us of the
status of Hintsa as object of colonial discourse, the imaginary structure of
colonial enunciation reminds us why the truth about the killing of Hintsa is
anything but self-evident.
Lucy Alexanders retrospective exhibition on IOns is critical for
precisely this reason. It draws us into a strategy of reading that compels us
to confront the referential illusion of portraiture with the accompanying
demand for exploring the subjects position in the grammar of domination
that supports and sustains it. She encourages us not to think of portraiture
as a series of objective representations, a point supported by the confusion
that surrounds the image of Hintsa. In the catalogue to the retrospective
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Far from being objective portrayals, Alexander suggests that many portraitists
subsumed the colonised subject into the genre of nineteenth-century
English artistic traditions, especially the picturesque a distinct product of
the nineteenth-century Romantic imagination. In the case of the portrait of
Nqeno probably mistaken by its present owner as Hintsa, Alexander tells us
that the depiction is not devoid of colonial desire. In her reading of the case of
mistaken identity, she suggests that the elegant pose of the subject resting on
a rock signifies possession of land and its underutilisation the issue allegedly
around which the Sixth Frontier War was fought. For Alexander, it is the
landscape that invites interpretation of the portrait. Another way of stating this
is that the work of interpretation is a necessary condition for understanding
portraiture because, even in this most literal sense of grounding, the subject
of the portrait is meaningful only insofar as it is related to the circumstances
mistaken identity 71
of its production.12 If reading the portraits of Xhosa chiefs produced in the
1830s can only be made sense of through the circumstances of their making,
we might suggest that it was not to the English picturesque that Alexander
should have turned to provide a reading of the portraits of Xhosa chiefs, but
rather to more localised settler productions of history.
In the years following the conclusion of the Sixth Frontier War in 183435, the
genocidal attitudes of settlers on the eastern Cape frontier became increasingly
apparent, especially in response to the failure of the colonial government to
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compensate those subjects of the British Crown who claimed to have lost their
livelihoods in the war. A growing sense of disgruntlement, if not anger,
amongst settlers in the eastern Cape towards the colonial government can be
traced in the letters that circulated amongst those who experienced, directly or
indirectly, the war of 183435. This was a battle between political missionaries
as some aggrieved settlers labelled the officials seeking treaties with the
Xhosa chiefdoms and land speculators, comprising settlers and their local
representatives, which continued well beyond the events of 1835.13
These letters articulated views that were often echoed in the public
outcry about the war of 183435. For the settlers on the eastern Cape
frontier, the recalling of Benjamin DUrban from the position as governor
and the return of the ceded territory to its original inhabitants were
construed as acts of betrayal on the part of the colonial office in London.
Adding insult to injury, Secretary of State for the Colonies Lord Glenelgs
insistence on the institution of a commission of inquiry into the death of
Hintsa clearly angered settlers in the eastern Cape. The local press was
increasingly filled with outraged responses at what was seen as a sleight
of hand on the part of Glenelg. In the settler mindset, and even more so
after official decrees against settler society as a whole in the eastern Cape,
the memory of Hintsa could not be erased because it defined the political
contests between settlers and metropolitan policy in the 1830s. The memory
mistaken identity 73
his people in the Free State.17 Many settlers in the eastern Cape, in keeping
with the vilification of Hintsa, sought to continue the process of expropriation
of land despite the reluctance of the colonial state, which had returned land in
the ceded territory that had initially been expropriated from the Xhosa after the
Battle of Amalinde in 1819 involving Ngqika.
Settler interests in the eastern Cape mediated the tensions that
surfaced in a discourse that designated the rules of the true following the
commission of inquiry into Hintsas death. They achieved this mediation
partly by rearranging and redeploying the referent Hintsa in colonial
discourse. The desire to colonise land occupied by Xhosa chiefs had as its
correlate the radical rearrangement of the colonised subject in colonial
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who may feel interested in the subject, some notes of the events of
the war of 18341835. I may at once state that I make no pretensions
whatever to write in a style intended to produce any other feelings
than that of perfect reliance on the part of the reader that what I
write in the plainest language is true [emphasis in Andrews] and is
compiled from notes made daily during that war, when the writer
served as Secretary to the Burgher forces under Colonel Smith,
Chief of Staff, afterwards Sir Harry Smith, the hero of Aliwal. I have
considered it best to sketch the daily incidents from my diary as they
occurred after my duties as Secretary were complete, for, being a
tyro in the art of writing, I have feared to lose in accuracy through
attempting to gain in style.20
mistaken identity 75
already mentioned, is contained in the introduction to the diary when he
connects Hintsa to Sarhili, and by extension insinuates a continuity of
characterological traits. The second example is by way of a parenthetical entry
to a description of the events following the killing of Hintsa. The entry reads:
Taking his son Kreli [Sarhili] with us, we pursued the spoor of cattle
towards the Bashee and came in sight of them before sunset. We
observed vast herds being driven off in all directions on the opposite
mountain range (Bomvanaland in 1877, where Kreli has recently done
the same repeating history).21
by the commission of inquiry. Regretting not having found any record of the
evidence in the court of enquiry, Andrewss narrative nevertheless supports
Smiths actions in much the same way as the court record does.23 References
to Hintsa appear in the midst of the enunciation of settler interests set against
metropolitan hegemony over the colonial enterprise.
The autobiography of Harry Smith, published in 1901, consolidates
this ambition by elevating the settler as unified subject at the expense of the
diminishing agency of Hintsa. It proceeds by distinguishing between the
subject of history and the subject with history. Having described his journey
to the Cape and his first months there, Smith turns to the beginning of
DUrbans role as governor in 1834. DUrbans ascendancy was accompanied
by the decision to dispatch Smith to the frontier to deal with the Xhosa, who
at the beginning of Chapter 33 of the autobiography burst into the Colony,
carrying with them fire, sword, devastation, and cold-blooded murder and
spoiling the fertile estates and farms like a mountain avalanche.24 Smiths
entire narrative is built around the adventures of the journey east from
Cape Town. Interspersed in the telling there are extensive references to
James Edward Alexanders writings, especially his Narrative of a Voyage
of Observation. We are referred to Alexanders texts for descriptions of
particular events, such as those of 9 March when the Boer Commandant
Rademeyer is said to have evacuated a large number of Xhosa from the
mistaken identity 77
once impenetrable Fish River, or to verify DUrbans positive impressions
of Smiths actions.25 Cross-referencing offers more than simply a device
for filling narrative gaps. It also gestures, I would argue, towards a secular
knowledge that is indispensable for determining the subject of history
through the method of proof. The properly historical subject, moreover, is
one that separates pleasure from mission, that possesses a consciousness of
the importance of pastness, especially those aspects of the past which define
the destiny of the self-proclaimed hero.
Let us join Smiths story at the point at which he provides justification
for his mission to the Kei River to retrieve what he calls colonial cattle.
Crossing the bed of the Tsomo, Smith describes his most precipitate march
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on Hintsas kraal.26 Not finding him there, Smith set about burning the
kraal. This provocation, it is claimed, brought Hintsa into the British camp
in an undaunted manner.27 It is at this point in the narrative that Smith
places before us the weight of secularity, mobilising it against the inveterate
weakness of desire:
(The poor savage always buries the past in oblivion, and regards the
present only. He has not the most distant idea of right or wrong as
regards his line of conduct. Self-interest is his controlling impulse,
and desire stands for law and rectitude).28
Travel writing
On its own, Michells portrait of Hintsa had little meaning until placed
in a larger textual network. Shortly after the commission of inquiry into
Hintsas death, its meaning was genealogically altered when it was included
in the travel writing of James Edward Alexander, a member of the Royal
Geographic Society, in the 1830s. Alexanders An Expedition of Discovery
into the Interior of Africa professed a strong desire to discover some of the
secrets of the great and mysterious continent of Africa while consenting
to exchange civilized for savage life, a view that was not too far from the
mistaken identity 79
prevailing views of most of the inhabitants of Grahamstown.29 Desire
and discovery, secrecy and mystery belonged to the ongoing saga of the
competitive spirit of being the first to find, enter or discover areas unknown
to Europeans Gordon in 1777, Patterson in 1778, Le Valliant in 1781, Barrow
in 1797, Truter and Somerville in 1801, Lichtenstein in 1805, Burchell in 1809,
Campbell in 1813, Thompson in 1827, Hume in 1834 and perhaps Alexander
in 1838. So powerful was the desire to be part of the list of firsts that from the
seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, no less than 175 names of travellers
and explorers, including that of Alexander, were carved into the walls of the
Heerenlogement Cave in the north-western Karoo in the hope of posterity.30
To have his name included in this list, Alexander had set his sights on the
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area between the 21st and 24th parallels the area he identified as being
inhabited by the Damaras. His arrival at the Cape early in 1835, sponsored by
the Royal Geographic Society, unfortunately coincided with a South Africa
that he would later describe as being in a state of commotion. As Alexander
notes, tensions between the Amakosa and the Cape colony meant that it
was evidently not the time for geographical research.31 Instead, he opted for
military service and became an aide-de-camp and private secretary to the
governor, DUrban, in 1835.
The interruption profoundly affected relations between explorer and
sponsor, so much so that in its recollection of the period in the centenary
commemorative history of the Royal Geographic Society, Hugh Robert Mill
(the Societys president in 1930) alluded to the tensions that emerged around
Alexanders expedition. Alexander, it appears, was thought of as a promising
traveller who would contribute significantly to the map collection in the
Societys library. Given limited financial resources, the Society, according to
Mill, made arrangements for Alexander to travel as a man of war and the
Government.32 Effectively, this entailed a nondescript passage, the benefits
of which could be shared by settler society and the colonial government. The
uncertainty surrounding the terms of contract, then, may have been at the
core of the tensions that would engulf Alexanders mission to the Cape. Mill
writes of this tension as follows:
As for the gains for geography as Mill put it with a tone of disappointment,
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partly at the losses incurred by the Society the Delagoa Bay expedition was
terminated and instead excursions were undertaken across the Orange River
into Damara and Namaqua lands, reaching Walvis Bay on the West Coast.
To salvage something of this generally described failure, Mill notes that
Alexander enjoyed much big-game shooting and rendered good services to
the Cape government, for which he was knighted. Similarly, he is recognised
for having gone on to fight in the Crimea and in New Zealand and for rising
to the rank of General, until his death in 1885.
Alexanders oeuvre, consisting of five book-length accounts of his
travels and experiences, defies the general assessment of failure offered by
Mill in 1930. Neither simply a representative oeuvre of colonial mindsets nor
merely a window to a colonial context, Alexanders writing permits us to
explore the relationship between discourse and narrative and to investigate
the way an imaginary structure is folded into the operation of a system
of knowledge. It also reveals what knowledge and the limits of knowledge
meant for the colonial enterprise.
The war of 1835 that interrupted Alexanders geographical research
and, consequently, the Royal Geographic Societys ambition of cartographic
procurement, was later incorporated into a book on travel writing entitled
Narrative of a Voyage of Observation, published in 1837. Chapter 23, which
is dedicated to the events that make up the reason for the supposed
mistaken identity 81
interruption, begins with a cartographical sketch of the Gnanabaka
(Nqabara) River. The sketch, produced by the surveyor Charles Cornwallis
Michell, was first made available as an accompaniment to the record of the
inquiry compiled in the aftermath of the events of 12 May 1835. Michells
map, appropriately titled Plan of the Ground where Hintsa attempted his Escape,
and was killed, featured a representation of the four miles over which the
action in which Hintsa was killed occurred (see Figure 2). A distance of one
mile was covered in the approach of Hintsa and his escort of British forces
as they reached the Nqabara River from the direction of the Guada River (a
to h on the map). The second mile started at the point at which the Nqabara
River was crossed and illustrates, by way of a perforated line, the decision to
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follow the cattle trail to the right. The third mile (marked a to b) indicates
the distance covered by Hintsa as he tried to escape from Smiths escort, the
chase by Smith and the eventual dislodging of Hintsa from his horse. From
the letter marked b to an almost undecipherable e placed in the Nqabara
River, we have the distance covered by Hintsa as he is dislodged from his
horse, pursued by Southey and Lieutenant Balfour and eventually shot and
killed. The fourth mile brings into view a kraal to which Hintsa was allegedly
heading before Smith stopped him. Two further points are f and g, which
respectively position Umtini (Hintsas councillor) who had earlier left the
party escorting Hintsa and who observed the events and the other spoor of
cattle to the left, which Hintsa dissuaded Smith from pursuing.
Like the sketch, the summary of topics that precedes Alexanders
account in Narrative of a Voyage repeats a familiar story of the event. Phrases
like The General Proclaims the Kye to be a new Boundary A Short Review
of a Change in Sir Benjamin DUrbans sentiments His Declaration to
Hintsa The Policy of Extending the Colony Duplicity of Hintsa Return
of Colonel Smiths Corps Death of Hintsa all work to conjure up the
terms of a familiar story. One consequential exception relates to the alleged
treachery of Hintsa who had set a trap in advance of the British forces.
While there is significant repetition of the plot of the story about
the killing of Hintsa in Alexanders travel account, there is also a unique
mistaken identity 83
It has thus been seen that, during the whole course of the negotiations
and transactions with this savage chief, he never acted otherwise
than with the greatest duplicity and bad faith; and only in the single
instance of his stopping the massacre of the Fingoes, when under
the influence of fear for the consequences to himself, did he ever act
otherwise: but the day of retribution was at hand.35
this, when other vegetation is scanty, the cattle devour, with fatal
effect to themselves. As we ascended the heights, we passed ox after
ox in the agonies of death; and we lost by the poison plant, which
inflamed and swelled their insides, at least a hundred head of cattle.
Some Fingoes also died from eating the tainted flesh.36
After JE Alexander, Excursions in western Africa
mistaken identity 85
Consider, for instance, a square redoubt of sixty yards each face, enclosing
a circular cattle kraal for forty horses, with a ditch and abattoir outside,
and the fence fifty yards distant, out of assegai range, all speedily traced,
and with jackets off and working parties of pick, shovel and hatchet men
set to vigorously complete the work, 40 as opposed to the banks of a small
stream called the Impotshana, near a ravine three hundred feet deep, with
precipitous sides which almost approached each other, throwing the bottom
filled with trees, into deep gloom, becoming a valley of death. 41 The story
of colonial advance and the tone in which the death of Hintsa was to be
narrativised privileged order and reality over a sentimental attachment to the
landscape. In Alexanders text, the actual event of 12 May is explained over six
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pages, with little if any digression from the script that was performed in the
preceding commission of inquiry in 1836. However, colonialism was not only
a story of advance but also of retreat, repetition and loss.
Alexanders entry on 13 May, the day after the killing of Hintsa,
tells a different story. It warns that the conceptualisation of space
emphasising the importance of surveying the desire to capture, describe
and inhabit was never beyond the spectre of danger. The day is marked
in colonial memory by the calamity that befell Major TC White the
assistant Quartermaster General of the burgher force. White, regarded
in colonial circles as an excellent scholar and surveyor, was anxious to
add to his carefully constructed map of the country through which the
troops had passed since the commencement of the war. 42 Having ignored
the dissuasion of Captain Ross and Caesar Andrews, it is believed White
proceeded to a hill above the camp where he was attacked and killed. The
mourning of the death of White pointed to a double tragedy, for in the event
that saw the demise of White, his vast cartographic output, sophisticated
equipment and intricate sketches had also disappeared lost, as it were, to
history. Alexander quotes the three troopers who had accompanied White, to
narrate the story:
The major had placed [them] at different points of observation; and
with the corporal beside him, and his surveying table before him, he
The bodies were discovered, we are told, stripped and bloody, and the
double-barrelled guns, the majors gold chronometer, surveying instruments
and map carried off. The mourning implicit in Alexanders writing of the
event conscientiously claimed it as a sign of the revenge effected by Hintsas
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people for the loss of their great chief , 44 and not as an attack on the systems
of knowledge which inaugurated such violence. The decision to interpret the
killing of White as a consequence of revenge for the death of Hintsa perhaps
confirms the sense of security provided by the forms of colonial knowledge.
Read as metaphor, however, the killing of White served as a warning that
the secular was no guarantee of security or, perhaps, that insecurity had
penetrated and infected the domains that colonial officials thought of in
terms of their gift to colonised subjects.
Two deaths dotted the colonial landscape: one, Hintsas, which was the
result of colonial advance; the other, Whites, which placed before the secular
project of which surveying and cartography were such crucial components,
the image of extinction and loss. In the end, the secularisation of knowledge
that supported colonial advance and its justification was little more than a
position from which to control realms originally perceived to be obstacles
in the story of Europe. Europe emerged as the only story worth telling and,
indeed, worth remembering.
Both Michells map of the scene of Hintsas killing (Figure 2) and
his portrait of the king (Figure 5a), appeared in the second volume of
Alexanders travel narrative. In that textual setting the portrait highlights
the idiosyncrasies of character much like the relief lines sketch the contours
of the landscape. Alongside the cartographic survey of the area in which
mistaken identity 87
Hintsa was killed, Michells portrait conveys an impression of Hintsa, his
downward gaze conveying a sense of cunning and intrigue, his mouth and
ears shadowed so as to portray a sense of hidden intent. Both portrait and
cartographic inscription reflect a sense of betrayal by the landscape which
Alexander had previously anticipated as tameable and inhabitable. There is
an attempt to associate difficult terrain and impervious country with Hintsa.
The convergence that results from the textual network that operates
in Alexanders travelogue and the conjuring of a sense of danger might be
explained by the inability of the British intelligence apparatus to anticipate
competing linguistic registers through which the landscape was mediated.
Displaying a specific linguistic incompetence in anything not English,
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Smiths forces were unable to decipher the geography signalled in the name
Nqabara given to the river they had crossed on 12 May 1835. Translated
from Xhosa into English, nqaba at best designated a difficult, impregnable
and inaccessible place a place that was literally fortified. One wonders
whether Hintsa read this linguistic incompetence, this oversight, as a
general weakness on the part of the British before deciding to escape from
his captors if indeed we assume that he did make such a decision at all.
Alexanders travelogue, however, suggests that Hintsa was implicated in a
specific reading of the landscape.
When confronted with other modes of colonial expression, such
as the diary and the autobiography, the solidity of the travelogue with its
accompanying portraits and maps resembled the information economy
of the colonial archive more than the deliberative aspects of the settler
public sphere. The homology that emerges from reading Alexanders travel
writing in which the dangerous and impervious country is conflated with
the image of Hintsa reaches something of an impasse in the logic of colonial
expansion when considered in relation to the demands of the settler public
sphere. This impasse relates to the conflicting demands made on the
subjectivity of the king by the different genres of narration. In the diary
and autobiography there is a necessity to complicate the relationship
between landscape and colonised subject to support a stereotypical
Images that exceed words: the limits of the settler public sphere
mistaken identity 89
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Collection: Private
Figure 4: Warriors Fleeing Across a River/The Death of Hintsa, by Frederick IOns n.d.
Across a River, although this might be an error of listing. 47 Only once the
painting was included in the inventory of IOnss collection in the possession
of a descendent, Douglas Galpin, does the title The Death of Hintsa appear.
Some art historians interpretations of the painting support this naming.
In her analysis of IOnss painting, Marijke Cosser proceeds by placing
IOns in the turmoil of the 1830s in the eastern Cape when he first arrived
and then by alluding to the possibility based on family accounts and on
the fact that IOns had supposedly served in the Grahamstown Mounted
Volunteers that the artist had witnessed the event of the killing of Hintsa.
Cosser also notes that the painting of the demise of Hintsa was, by IOnss
own admission, thought to be one of his best. Cosser tells us the painting
the painting. 49 This, we are told, contradicted official versions that held that
British soldiers killed Hintsa in self-defence.
IOnss painting engages a spatial slice in time in the composite
sequence we have come to call the killing of Hintsa. It is a slice that
positions four subjects viewed, it seems, from a position further
downstream. On the left bank we have a subject who has fired his rifle
(whom Cosser names Southey with the help of the archive); in the centre
of the river we have another subject with rifle aimed at a fleeing figure.
Wedged between the two we have an injured subject, blood oozing out
of a wound to the right side of the body, and perhaps penetrated by another
bullet from the fired gun on the left. A fallen assegai lies to the right,
its pointed edge directed towards the placidly flowing water, as if to
underline an intention to use the weapon. On the opposite bank we see
another subject in the motion of escape with his back turned to the observer
of the painting.
The colonial archive provides a necessary index to the portrayal of
the unfolding saga in the painting. As such, the work of art becomes, in this
reading, a mere illustration of the archive or one amongst several expressions
of witnessing. Viewing the painting as a supplement to the archive may
derive from the burden of the title that the work acquired in 1958. In some
sense then, the title commits us to a reading of the painting that foregrounds
mistaken identity 91
the action associated with the killing of Hintsa. Read under its former
(presumably incorrect) title, Warriors Fleeing Across a River requires a
closer, if not different, reading and analysis of the painting. Here the
landscape takes precedence over the space of death. However, neither
approach, in my view, is adequate because both fail to come to terms
with the paintings categorisation as an example of historical painting.
Nineteenth-century artistic taste, we are told by some art
historians, held the historical painting in considerably high regard.
The historical painting took the production of the significant moment
seriously, even though its concept of event was only one element of
a larger composition.50 Analyses of IOnss The Death of Hintsa often
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neglect the fact that there is more to the historical painting than
simply conveying the impression of documenting an event, although
we must acknowledge that this was the impression created by the
form. The Death of Hintsa places the observer at the limit of the
historical and the aesthetic, between image and word, demanding to
be read in the encounter with this limit.
In relation to the depth and vastness of the landscape, painted
with astonishing detail and with an abundance of the eastern Capes
signature aloes, the killing is an enticing foreground to what had
hitherto remained unspoken in the archive of the killing of Hintsa
that the king had in fact been shot in the back.51 The painting made
possible a sense that the king was neither escaping nor attacking
his pursuer. The overlap with the minority humanitarian view in
Grahamstown might explain why IOns refused to allow it to be
publicly displayed, given that it ran counter to the general tenor of
the settler public sphere which implicated Hintsa in his own death.
In IOnss painting, landscape and danger once again merge but
with danger represented by the figure of Southey, not Hintsa. This
dramatic reversal in the narrative of the killing has implications for
the archival reading of the story of Hintsa. By following the narrative
in the space of death, the eye is also drawn towards the immense
When Nicholas Gcaleka set off in search of Hintsas skull, there was a general
feeling that this was an expression of someone whose speech fell outside of
the norms of an emergent public sphere in democratic South Africa. Yet, as
publicity and indeed curiosity increased about the search for Hintsas skull,
there was a need for the public sphere to ground the subject. Left to his
own fantasies, Nicholas Gcaleka was seen as a threat for having introduced
a sense of incoherence to an already fractured public sphere. In arriving at
such a hasty conclusion, the question of how the public sphere deals with
that which is incommensurate was left unattended. In short, this meant
that any response to Gcaleka in the public sphere would be measured by the
violence that marked the emergence of that sphere at a point of departure
in nineteenth-century colonialism. Rather than his claim leading to the
formation of a subaltern counterpublic,53 Gcaleka emerged as a subaltern
effect in the sanctioned narrative of postapartheid South Africa.
The subaltern entry into the realm of the public sphere, insofar as it
fails the requirements of property, publicity and rationality, registers a failure
mistaken identity 93
that is not only constitutive but also a prerequisite for the functioning of
that public sphere. It is for this reason that a public sphere would seemingly
expend its resources and energies on deliberating the highly unlikely claims
of someone who professed to speak and act on behalf of the ancestors. I want
to propose that the entry of the subaltern into the historical formations of the
bourgeois public sphere is enabled by the grounding of the colonised subject
and sustained by the repetition of the subaltern effect.54
If we were to set this against the expansive publicity that surrounded
Nicholas Gcalekas search for Hintsas skull, we might inquire into how
potentially effective the notion of a subaltern public sphere is in diminishing the
hegemony of the bourgeois public sphere. If Gcalekas mission is anything to go
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by, then we might say that the search for Hintsas skull lent itself to bolstering the
liberal rationalist alignments of the public sphere drawn from the colonial past.
The publicity surrounding Gcalekas mission had effects that
corresponded with the publicity generated by the killing of Hintsa in 1835.
Both revealed a logic of domination that accompanies the rise of the public
sphere rooted in hegemonic discourse; and in both instances the ruse of
mistaken and conflicted identity lent itself to shaping the deliberations of a
public sphere which reinscribes their respective subordinate positions.
If in his search for a meaningful Hintsa, Nicholas Gcaleka was
represented as something of a trickster in the media, it was only because
he adopted the very strategies of make-believe that defined colonialism.
Many of the colonial modes of evidence that organised the archive on the
killing of Hintsa, we will recall, called into play the figure of the witness
as an authenticating device of a regime of truth. The sonoric resonance of
Southey hailing Hintsa to stop before the fateful shooting, and which served
as a justification for an act of violence, was significantly diminished in the
colonial account. As in the commission of inquiry, the demand for seeing
leaves little room for undercutting the dehumanising trajectories of colonial
discourse premised on the primacy of vision. The world filtered through the
colonial retina is often the condition of possibility for history and, it might be
safe to argue, colonial hegemony privileges such a visual economy.
Here was a below-the-line project that was good for major media
coverage not only in South Africa but in Britain too. It tapped a historic
resonance that bound the two countries. It was dramatic. It involved a
skull, a sangoma, leopard skins, traditional weapons and some catchy
lines. That the project was based on shaky historical foundations
was clearly of no concern. This was free advertising. Whats more,
the copy wrote itself and the photo opportunities were endless: chief
brandishing his cultural weapons bound in airline tape; chief being led
through the streets of London by a po-faced bobby; chief getting into
large black car; and finally, chief holding skull. This was made for the
media: A novelty, a distraction, something more to add to what author
Saul Bellow calls the modern noise.56
mistaken identity 95
undermines the theoretical potential of his own claim. To treat this search
for the skull as part of a corporatist plot was to lose sight of the tropes that
allowed for this slippage. Let me return to this oversight in Nicol by exploring,
once again, what we are made to understand by seeing and believing.
Ordinarily, the importance of seeing is ascribed to its immediacy,
a point I argued in the previous chapter. But it may also be explained
in terms of its relation to consciousness, the process of its filtering. The
retina, as Marx claimed in The German Ideology,58 conveys the clarity of
consciousness. The name for this relation is ideology and if, as Marx informs
us, in all ideology men and their circumstances appear upside-down as in a
camera obscura, this phenomenon arises just as much from their historical
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life processes as the inversion of objects on the retina does from their
physical life processes.59 Wendy Brown has offered a provocative rereading
of this argument, suggesting that for Marx the remedy to the inversion of
reality in consciousness may be corrected as completely as the brain corrects
the inversion of images on the retina.60
The eye, Lacan would later claim as if implicitly revising Marxs earlier
formulation is a rather discerning organ, endowed with the fatal power to
separate between a visual grammar on the one hand and, on the other, relating
to the gaze which establishes the subjects position in this grammar. If anything,
the subjects position in this grammar is a matter of instability, as in the case
where the subject does not fit the language of original conceptualisation.
Clearly, the Lacanian refinement contributed significantly to the model of
interpellation that inspired Althussers forays into the operation of ideology.
But the overemphasis on the scopic has left much of the discussion of ideology
somewhat deficient in explaining the instability that attends to the subject.
This is where Nicols reading of Nicholas Gcalekas mission is most
thought-provoking. In the midst of the imagery of Gcaleka bearing a skull,
Nicol recalls the cacophony that engulfs the subject.61 This combining of the
scopic and the sonoric helps us to conceptualise the subject as more than just
that which is seen, but also how it is made to resonate in the public sphere. The
coincidence of the scopic and sonoric I call the act of communicability through
mistaken identity 97
had been produced by Pemba, probably in the 1930s. But one nagging
question remained. On what did Pemba base his portrait of the king?
Mda Mda, a prominent lawyer in Butterworth who introduced me to sites
related to Hintsa, suggested that Pembas image was largely drawn from the
descriptions of the king in the opening lines of a commemorative poem by
SEK Mqhayi, written at the time of the hundredth anniversary of the killing.
Mdas lead made sense in terms of my estimated dating of Pembas portrait
to the 1930s. I assumed that in versions of the portrait in circulation, the
name of the artist had simply and perhaps unfortunately been removed.
Two weeks before Pemba passed away, I travelled to his house in
Motherwell in the eastern Cape to conduct an interview on history of
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the portrait. Having suffered several strokes by then, Pemba was not very
lucid and barely managed a few recollections about his artistic creations.
Midway through our discussion, I presented him with a programme from a
conference held at the University of Cape Town in 2002, on which a sketch
of Hintsa was featured. At first, Pemba looked at the sketch and asked why
his work was being used without his permission and without payment.
After JE Alexander, Excursions in western Africa
as he set off in pursuit of the king down the banks of the Nqabara River,
Stop! Or Ill Shoot! It is only in listening that deception and nobility are
recognisable in the portraits, and through which the attributes of treachery
and bravery are discernible. The very contingency that followed from reading
the colonial portrait was the cue for impeding the effort to construct a settler
public sphere through recourse to the colonial story of the killing of Hintsa.
The name of that intervention was anti-colonial nationalism. However,
to accomplish its task of interfering with colonial narratives, anti-colonial
nationalist narration had first to overcome the historical and aesthetic
foundations of a settler public sphere in which the story of Hintsa featured
so prominently. That historiographical encounter is the subject of the next
two chapters. For now, we must conclude that the portrait of Hintsa offers
the outlines of colonial interpellation and enunciation as it participates in the
formation of a settler public sphere that is aligned to colonial hegemony.
mistaken identity 99
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100
the deaths of hintsa
3
101
struggling to come into its own at the expense of the Xhosa. Symptomatic
of these tensions was the often rancorous public debate in the newspapers
of Grahamstown, the Cape Colony and Britain involving representatives of
settler opinion and humanitarian sentiment.
Given these tensions of Empire, and the animosity that defined the
relations between colonial officials and settlers in the eastern Cape, how
is it even possible to conceptualise a version of the South African past as
settler colonial historiography?4 Most responses to this question tend to
be caught in the impasse of the race versus class debate in South African
historiography. Very little, if any, attention is paid to the epistemological form
of settler colonial history which also, I suggest in the next chapter, enables
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 103
significantly affected the approaches adopted, presumably by historians, to
colonialism and to South African history more generally. As he wrote in the
1930s, perhaps anticipating the restrictive anti-colonial nationalist narrative
of colonial dispossession:
Out of the heaving and thrusting of the nineteenth-century there
has emerged no romantic tradition comparable with the literature
of adventure in which the North American Redskins [sic] were the
heroes. The explanation is at least partly to be found in the different
social and political position of the descendents of Pontiac, Sitting
Bull, or Osceola in the forgotten and inoffensive Indian reservations
of modern America, and the descendents of Hintsa, Chaka, and
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 105
precolonial social formations. Here he invoked the homestead principle
which, he argued, coexisted with a royal ideology to define Xhosa political
and social formations.
Clifton Craiss study of the making of a colonial order in the
nineteenth-century eastern Cape, published almost five decades after
De Kiewiets Imperial Factor, expresses the ambition of exploring the
emergence of the combinatory formation he calls racial capitalism.9
Crais sees the colonial order that emerged in the eastern Cape as paradoxical,
formed out of discrepancies of colonial culture between metropolitan
control and settler capitalist ethos. It is then the working out of this paradox
through redefining power and profit in dominant discourse that produced
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Whereas De Kiewiet argued in terms of the necessity of black labour for the
South African social formation, Crais articulates the concomitant force of
culture and limits of power that accompanied the making of a servile black
labour force. Crais marks the process of servility as uneven and haphazard
thereby wedging a space in De Kiewiets story for an African agency and
resistance so that it deepens the incidental nature in which black labour is
Or in reverse:
It was the development of agrarian capitalism and the protracted struggle
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 107
encountered in nationalist narration. The convergence of a developmentalist
conception of history and nineteenth-century colonialism, however,
facilitated the assignment of subject positions and also later enabled a
nationalist response by making available the techniques of subjection
necessary for the functioning of power.14 As competing and complementary
forms of social subjection, apartheid and colonialism may be differentiated
systemically even though they are essentially cut of the same epistemic
cloth. This is not to conflate nineteenth-century colonialism and twentieth-
century apartheid but to explore their shared expressions in determining
the conditions of possibility for the production of subalternity, which is a
major feature of postcolonial subjectivity. The mission to retrieve Hintsas
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skull is in this sense critical for debates about postapartheid South Africa
because it calls attention to how difficult it would prove, under conditions
of this colonial inheritance, to walk out of the narrative of power in which
the subject is returned, again and again, to the position of mere supplement
of power.
One reason for this uncertainty was that claims were being submitted
on behalf of family members who resided at a distance. The possible
exaggeration of losses may similarly have proved beneficial in justifying
colonial encroachment but it also placed strain on colonial officials to meet
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 109
the reparation demands of claimants, especially after the war. The facts
pertaining to losses sustained are therefore complicated by the ways in which
the archive records and presents its figures.
It is this interplay of calculation and miscalculation, of doubt
expressed as numbers, that enters the field of history, first as a factual basis
for DUrbans demand to Hintsa for the return of the cattle and other items
and then as factual pretexts that were always [also] becoming texts.19 Alex
Wilmots biography of Richard Southey, published in 1904, went on to draw
on this factual base to come close to hinting at revenge as a reason for killing
Hintsa. Wilmot writes:
The Southeys had lost their all stock, house and furniture.
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Once again the discrepancy is only slight and since Wilmot avoids the
academic protocols of referencing in this instance, it is difficult to ascertain
from where he derives his figures. Crucial for the purposes of the discussion
here, however, is the way in which the ledger of losses seeped into a settler
history and a biography as the basis of fact. There were, however, other
consequences. If, as I argued earlier, the conditions of knowledge, and
indeed the settler public sphere, always also articulated with the conditions
of violence, then we may have to inquire into the specific forms of historical
knowledge about the Xhosa produced as a result of this coincidence. My
initial suggestion is that the histories of the killing of Hintsa were products
of discrepant ways of knowing. In this respect, the ethnographic concerns of
Colonel Collins in the early nineteenth century combined with a more open
contest about who earned the right to be called victims of the war of 183435.
Hinsas people, is situated near the sea, between the Kyba and the
Bassee, rivers of equal magnitude, and distant about forty miles
from each other. In addition to the Gooa several more small streams
serpentise through this fine tract, among which the Koho at a short
distance east of Hinsas residence, which is situated in the middle of
his territory, and the Juguga, a few miles beyond the Koho, are most
deserving of notice. As the Kaffirs are themselves unacquainted with their
population, it is impossible for a stranger to know it. We guessed, however,
that this tribe might consist altogether of about 10 000 souls. They are all
under the absolute control of Hinsa, but divided among a number of
subordinate chiefs. It is not less difficult to form an estimate of the
numbers of their cattle, than respecting their population. I think it
probable that they may exceed 20 000.21
The report is significant for at least two reasons. Firstly, all the proper names
relating to the Xhosa underwent significant orthographic alteration in
subsequent years. Thus, Hinsa would later be written in the colonial archive
as either Hintsa or Hinza, Gyka would become Nqika and later Ngqika,
and Bassee would be rendered as Bashee and later Mbhashe. What might
be too easily dismissed as inconsequential relates to a second aspect of the
excerpt, namely the desire to know the population.22 Knowing the population
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 111
in this ethnographic exercise pointed to something other than its cultural
formation or its orthographic inscription. It also pointed to the demand for
a census a counting of people and cattle. Shortly after Collins estimated
the size of Hintsas polity, he turned his attention to a breed of cattle, observed
in the different kraals, that had colonial marks and to Hintsas two horses,
thought to be of colonial stock. Avoiding the consequences of unsubstantiated
accusation, Collins issued a friendly caution to Hintsa, informing the
latter that he understood the cattle to have been stolen from colonists and
then exchanged for others in order that the proprietors should not be
enabled to discover them.23 Collins promised advantageous bargains if the
chief desisted from the temptation to participate in exchanges of this kind in
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the future.
Early travellers such as Colonel Collins made every effort to deploy
the voice of the informant as integral to the knowledge that was produced
in order to subject the Xhosa to ethnographic scrutiny. Judging from
the presentation of the report and its subsequent reproduction in Donald
Moodies The Record, Collins gave an account of his travels based on
interviews with leading Xhosa chiefs such as Hinsa and Gayka. One
result of these conversations was detail relating to the everyday life of the
amaXhosa: the division of labour, rituals around marriage and, more
importantly, what was described as differences between the Gcaleka and
Rharhabe houses. In almost every consideration of the detail, the centrality
of cattle as cultural symbol was identified. In Collinss account of his journey,
this knowledge supposedly acquired through the medium of orality was
further substantiated by the practice of observation that distinguished travel
writing from other forms of narration.
Travel ethnography was an interested enterprise on at least two levels.
Firstly, Collins used the acquired knowledge ethnographic snapshots to
define the relationships that were desired by settler society with the Xhosa.
In other words, by narrating difference, Collins tried to insert settler society
into perceived and prevailing social relations without disturbing prefigured
cultural distinctions between colonist and Xhosa. His mission was to
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 113
discrepancy was to collapse notions of cattle as property the basis for
settler relations with the Xhosa and cattle as the distinguishing referent
of Xhosa culture.
The recommendations that followed Collinss ethnographic
conclusions were implemented by the British governor at the Cape, Lord
Charles Somerset, before 1820. If we are to extend the general argument
of a recent history of the frontier by Tim Keegan,26 we might say that the
implementation of policy based on Collinss report resulted in the area
between the Fish and the Kei Rivers being declared neutral and ceded
territory after the battle of Ndlambe in 181819. The result was a marked
separation between Xhosa and colonist. By the late 1820s, however, Collinss
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and trade and also, in the case of an infringement of the rules of property,
of punishment.
A concept of property in cattle therefore connected the Xhosa to
the realms of settler accumulation and simultaneously produced the
Xhosa as an uneven factor in the paradigm of European development.
The war of 183435 may be considered as an attempt to risk a decision
that would clarify the form of subjection of the Xhosa. But a conception
of difference premised on race presumably proved highly contentious
under conditions of changing trade relations. Here Glenelgs response to
DUrbans expansionist policy and his desire for normalised trade relations
simultaneously illustrates the demand for representations of the Xhosa
as worthy of being trading partners. In December 1835, Glenelg, who
eventually went on to reverse DUrbans expansionist policy following the
war of 183435, refuted the latters characterisation of the Xhosa as
irreclaimable savages on several counts. Most important for our purposes
was Glenelgs argument about the inappropriateness of applying the label
of irreclaimable savages to natives with whom a trade amounting to about
30 000l per annum in the purchase of European commodities had been
established on the frontier.27 In addition, as many as 200 British traders
were living far beyond the boundaries of the colony, protected only by the
integrity and humanity of the uncivilized natives. . .To such a people,
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 115
Glenelg added, the character of irreclaimable savages cannot with
justice be assigned.28 The self/other distinction, we could say, proved to
be inadequate when considered in relation to the emergent demands of
trade on the frontier. The respective positions of Glenelg and DUrban
reflected a larger metropolitan debate about pursuing a policy of either
free trade or colonisation. But in reversing DUrbans expansionist
policies, Glenelg had effectively bypassed settler interests and structures
of accumulation on the one hand, and settler constructions of race-based
difference on the other.
In the midst of this controversy between the government and a settler
public sphere, however, a new history would be forged to legitimise the
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claims of those subjects of the British Crown who lived in the eastern Cape.
Robert Godlonton, a journalist and vocal proponent of settler interests, would
contribute significantly to what I shall call settler history.
Settler history
One of the foundational texts of settler collective memory and history was, as
Alan Lester has suggested, Robert Godlontons A Narrative of the Irruption of
the Kafir Hordes published in 1836 in the immediate aftermath of the Sixth
Frontier War in which Hintsa was killed.29 Godlontons narrative was aimed at
the reconstruction of the settlers past, an analysis of the present predicament
of the colonists and a defence of their activities.30 In Lesters assessment,
Godlontons text pointed to the demands for a specifically settler identity that
promoted unity and cut across class, gender and political divides. Godlontons
text, in this reading, was aimed at narrating the cause and course of the Sixth
Frontier War and sought to win favour with metropolitan audiences who may
otherwise have sided with humanitarian propaganda about the extreme forms
of settler violence against colonised peoples.
Irruption is a text that leads us towards an understanding of how the
Xhosa came to be known, defined and colonised. We could argue that the text
is invariably, if not specifically, about the Xhosa even though it is often seen
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 117
circumstances that led to the killing of Hintsa through a mixture of
journalism and history.
The benefit of the use of journalism as a strategy in this context was
that it produced a totalised sense of process composed of the movements
captured in unfolding events and the development of history. These two
complementary temporalities not only reveal the texts operation but also
point to the totalising claims of settler histories. The movement of unfolding
events, of the everyday in other words, I will call for the purposes of the
argument movement in the first degree; larger-scale movements of society
I will refer to as movement in the second degree.33 Such a metaphorical
distinction is intended to help us understand the intersection between
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Combined with this, we are treated to the story of the advance of colonial
forces under Somerset into what was considered neutral and later ceded
Cadastral prose served movement in the first degree well because, firstly,
it highlighted, as I suggested earlier, the agency of the Xhosa and opposed
their characterisation in humanitarian discourse as victims of settler
excesses. Secondly, it narrated events in such a way as to demonstrate a unity
of purpose on the frontier, especially when this concerned relations between
the British and Dutch farmers. Godlonton, for example, emphasised the
fact that:
several of the most gallant affairs which took place during the war
were those in which the Dutch farmers particularly distinguished
themselves. It is pleasing as it is just to accord this need of
praise. Much has been done to excite between the English and
Dutch inhabitants a suspicious jealousy; but we are happy to
say that late events have discovered the injustice of the attempt;
and it may be confidently expected that the only rivalry between
them in future will be a generous emulation as to who shall
most efficiently advance the true interests of this land of their
joint adoption.36
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 119
Finally, cadastral prose served movement in the first degree insofar as it
tabulated the extent of losses of cattle, horses, sheep and other commodities.
Drawing on the ledgers of reported losses and the general calculations
produced to cost military operations, Godlontons narrative of atrocities
produces a corresponding number to substantiate his elaboration of an
argument in favour of those he thought to be true sufferers those
incidentally vilified in humanitarian propaganda.
Movement in the first degree would end with a quarrel, a set of
demands and a killing a kind of synthesis aimed at turning the accusation
of the humanitarians on its head. In the quest for reversing blame, the
narrative outlines Hintsas evasion of colonial attempts to negotiate the
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Five days later, on 29 April, the quarrel was translated into demands, which
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were not only written but also translated into Xhosa by Shepstone for the
benefit of Hintsa.
1st I demand from Chief Hintsa the restoration of 50 000 head
of cattle, and of 1 000 horses. 25 000 head of cattle and 500
horses immediately, as hostilities will continue till they are
delivered, and 25 000 head of cattle and 500 horses in one year
from this day.
2nd I demand that Hintsa, as the acknowledged chief of western
Xhosaland, shall lay his imperative commands, and cause them to be
obeyed, upon his chiefs of the tribes Tyali, Macomo, Eno, Bothma,
Dushani, Tslambie, Umhala, and their dependents, instantly to
cease hostilities, and send in, and give up to me, all the fire-arms
which they may possess.
3rd I demand that the murderer of William Purcell be immediately
brought to the condign punishment of death by the Kafir authorities,
and in the presence of Commissioners, whom I shall appoint to
witness the execution and to whom the Chief Hintsa will cause to
be delivered 300 head of good cattle for the benefit of the widow and
family of the murdered man.
4th I demand, that the same atonement be made for the murder of
Armstrong, as that demanded for the murder of Purcell.
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 121
5th I demand that for the due and full execution of the above
conditions, the Chief Hintsa shall deliver into my hands here, on the
spot, and immediately, two hostages, to be chosen by me from among
the chief persons about him. 40
The act of writing and translation was more than a summary of the
grievances held by colonists against the Xhosa. It was also the culmination
of a general belief in what colonial officials thought to be their moral right
and legitimate purpose. It was a right demanded on the basis of prefigured
notions of private property and justice the foundational concepts of an
order fundamental to settler ideology and accentuated by movement in the
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first degree.
However, concepts of private property and justice, so crucial in
movement in the first degree, could not exist without movement in the
second degree that is, movements ascribed to society on a larger scale.
In Godlontons narrative, movement in the second degree is introduced by
way of a digression in the plot by the happenings of 17 April 1835, when the
Mfengu were said to have approached the colonists for protection against
their Xhosa overlords.
Taking advantage of the anti-slavery sentiments in the metropole,
Godlonton describes the life of the Mfengu as a dislocated and enslaved
population. The term Fingo, Godlonton noted, is not their national
appellation, but a reproachful epithet, denoting extreme poverty and
misery, a person having no claim to justice, mercy or even life.41
Having been dispersed by Shaka, the Mfengu had fled westward and
there, Godlonton claims, they were received by Hintsa and his people
and rendered entirely dependent. 42 In fact, they were thought to have
suffered in the tenure of the most abject slavery. Their general tasks,
we are told, were herding cattle, hewing wood, drawing water and
cultivating the ground for their supposedly cruel taskmasters. But that
was not all. As if to recognise the injustices of serfdom and slavery,
Godlonton pointed out that:
More damning was the information gathered from Reverend John Ayliff,
who had spent five years as a missionary near Hintsas residence, and the
researches of Reverend Kay regarding the capture of female children from
the Mfengu for the most odious purposes. 44
The nuanced distinctions between possession and ownership that
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 123
sense it was a truly colonial history because it promoted progress at all costs
a progress guaranteed by force and not, as in the missionary constructions of
humanitarian lobbyists, by gradual conversion and improvement. Ultimately,
in Godlontons depiction of the war of 183435, the difference between the
settlers and the Xhosa was increasingly defined in terms of a combination of
movement in the first degree and movement in the second degree.
in terms of an agency tasked with the possibilities of change and one whose
subjection was necessary for such change to occur.
In Godlontons narrative, the elevation of the concepts of progress,
justice and property significantly elided the reliance on a constitutive
imaginary structure. He was, after all, a journalist. Godlontons was
an account of the war of 183435 that had seemingly been necessitated
by the outcry amongst a small but vocal humanitarian lobby about the
killing of Hintsa. The anthropological presuppositions that gave rise to a
colonial imaginary structure, which I called attention to in the discussion
of grounding Hintsa in the previous chapter, would resurface later to
undermine the counter-claims about the killing of Hintsa and the distinct
possibility of an alternative history that emerged from within a fractured
public sphere.
The fracture was formed around a vocal liberal campaign that
charged the settlers with abuse of local populations without, we should note,
surrendering the story of the master journeymen of the British Empire
leading the way to progress and civilisation. The pronouncements that
sparked the crisis in Grahamstown were made by humanitarian liberals and
organised around the reports of Reverend John Philips. Philips provided
the humanitarians with the basis for arriving at competing versions of what
happened to Hintsa, which detracted from the official version that surfaced
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 125
in the commission of inquiry in 1836 and instigated a deliberation that
was indispensable to the formation of a settler public sphere. Much of this
deliberation was carried out in the pages of the South African Commercial
Advertiser, a newspaper that professed the humanitarian course and that
itself prompted the journalist Robert Godlonton to offer his history of the
war of 183435.
Based on the report of the commission of inquiry in 1836 which
became the official statement on the killing of Hintsa and the defensive
stance adopted by Godlonton and others in Grahamstown towards the much
smaller, yet vocal lobby of the humanitarians, the story of the killing of
Hintsa affirmed the modes of evidence of the colonial archive and supported
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the process of the subjection of agency. However, for all their expressions
of the higher pursuits of property and progress, settler historical narratives
could not escape the effects of the imaginary structure, discussed in the
previous chapter, upon which they were founded in the first place.
Godlontons record of the events of 183435 expresses a commitment
to applying universalising concepts of progress and property drawn from
nineteenth-century bourgeois economics to a notion of history that privileges
proximity to the events recounted. It has pretensions of an objective history
by connecting things as they appear in ideas to things as they really are.
In a Marxist reading, it would qualify for the pejorative charge of being
ideological because of an inversion of the concept of property at work in its
narration. In other words, Godlonton needed to distort the representation
of cattle in Xhosa society in order for his notion of progress to work.
The underlying distortion has resonances with Marxs discussion of the
universalising claims of bourgeois economics in his study The German
Ideology. There Marx notes:
Although it is true that the categories of bourgeois economics
possess a truth for all other forms of society, this is to be taken
only with a grain of salt. They can contain them in a developed,
or stunted, or caricatured form, but always with an essential
difference. 47
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 127
of violence and to justify these actions by linking progress and property to
presupposed bonds amongst settlers, colonial officials and metropolitan
elites.
Contemporary historiographical evaluations of settler history tend
to emphasise the ways in which these histories are produced in the
cleavages of the public sphere or they tend to construe settler histories
as purveyors of racial ideology. These arguments are of course crucial
in the political positions adopted by the discipline of history to oppose
apartheid, although these very epistemological choices remain aloof of the
Mannheimian paradox in which the charge of ideology boils down to yet
another ideological claim. Perhaps by alternatively setting our sights on the
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 129
himself on this occasion, and was caught in the trap he had set for
others. It was but too clear why the troops had been led into that wild
region, and also what would have been the fate of a small force had it
accompanied him; for the hills and the immediate surroundings were
crowded with his people. And there had been wanting, any further
evidence of the mischief premeditated by Hintsa, it was supplied by
the presence of Umtini and the servant with the fresh horse which
had been sent so mysteriously from the camp and which was there
in readiness for the chief. Hintsa got no more than the reward for
his perfidy.51
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How did Cory arrive at such a characterisation of Hintsa, especially after all
his effort to interview a descendant of the king? Corys perspective had to be
supported by a particular organisation of the narrative of the killing which
corresponded to the modes of evidence of the colonial archive described in
Chapter 1 of this book. Interspersed in the six volumes of The Rise of South
Africa, Cory engages a portrait of Hintsa that serves to repeat not only the
content of the colonial archive but also its form. Some of this content is
derived from Lindinxuwa; the remainder is derived from the visit by Colonel
Collins to the Great Place between the Kei and Mbashe Rivers in 1809. In the
nearly 100 years that passed following the encounters between Collins and
Hintsa on the one hand, and Cory and Lindinxuwa on the other, the marks
of uncertainty in the original report from Collins to Lord Caledon, colonial
governor in the early 1800s, were noticeably erased.
Cory made an appearance in Willowvale on 28 January 1910
specifically to meet Lindinxuwa but was disappointed to find that the chief
was not there; he had, Cory learnt, travelled some 20 miles to sort out a land
dispute. Hargraves, the resident magistrate, sent a messenger to request
Lindinxuwa to return as soon as possible. The interview commenced on
29 January in the courthouse. I was furnished with a table, noted Cory,
below the magistrates desk.52 The description of the setting of the interview
was not inconsequential, as I will show.
The historians description of the setting replays the themes of doubt and
certainty expressed through descriptions of Lindinxuwa and Gosani that
marked the strategies generic to the colonial archive for narrating Hintsas
killing. Corys meticulous recording of the circumstances and the content
of the interview was not merely a product of the standard of historical
methodology. It plotted in detail what would be Corys conclusion about
the character of Hintsa. After a familiar outline of family genealogy and
geography by way of the indexicality of graves of his ancestors, Lindinxuwa
proceeded to narrate the story of the killing of Hintsa, with a few twists to
the official tale. Corys account selectively drew on this narrative, especially
by taking seriously Lindinxuwas insistence that Hintsa had lost his temper
and decided to escape. While latching onto the affirmation of Hintsas escape,
he ignored suggestions of the king as a prisoner. He also tended to ignore
Lindinxuwas response to the question about the mutilation of the body.
Asking him about the mutilation of Hintsas body, he said it is true
Hintsas head was cut off. It is a disgraceful thing to say that thing
[i.e. to talk about it]. All the Gcalekas say that Hintsas head was cut
off. That is why Kreli never had any peace of mind with the Europeans
until his death and ever since we have been fighting with the white
people until now, on account of that thing. Hintsa was buried at
Nqabara by his chief councillor, Ncoko.54
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 131
Quite clearly, Lindinxuwas testimony was beginning to show signs of the
nationalist retrievals of the story of the killing of Hintsa, especially with the
probable threats of land dispossession on the horizon at the beginning of
the twentieth century. There was, however, another more telling reason for
ignoring the bulk of the account supplied by Hintsas son. Midway through
the interview, the chief explained that he was thirsty because of all the
talking. Gosani, according to Corys notes, concurred. With the permission
of the magistrate, a permit was issued for Cory to purchase a bottle of brandy
which, we are told, Lindinxuwa and Gosani took neat, before proceeding to
speak about the beheading of Hintsa.
Cory may have been encouraged to complete the portrait of Hintsa
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as a treacherous and unreliable king after hearing the account given by the
supposedly inebriated Lindinxuwa, in spite of what the chief communicated
to him about the killing of Hintsa before taking a swig of brandy. That view
would, however, have to take into account his more accommodating stance on
John Philips or his later invitation to poet and writer SEK Mqhayi to produce
what Cory called a native version of the killing of Hintsa. On Philipss
humanitarian pursuits, Cory suggests that future students of African
history may find in the personal papers of John Philips, unavailable to him
at the time, that all the dispatches of Governors, statements of Judges and
officials are unworthy of credit.55 This attitude sits uncomfortably with his
dismissive or at best selective treatment of Lindinxuwas comments in 1910.56
The dismissive attitude towards the content of the interview was not merely a
question of bias on the part of Cory or his distrust of what might be said after
half the bottle of brandy was drunk neat, as he tells us. What we have here is
a relation to the archive that bears heavily on the effort to produce coherence
in the nineteenth-century settler narrative. Cory ought to be read seriously,
not only because his is a corpus that can be cast as an example of settler
colonial history, but also for allowing a glimpse into how settler history
is made out of disparate strands of official and public deliberation and, of
course, reliant on the accretion of narrative and discourse through which
Hintsas killing is mediated. Corys history is responsible for reconciling
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 133
than the fact that Buru was unwilling to discuss matters related to
Hintsa or the tribes that fell under him.59 Yet, Cory provides a detailed
description of Buru as being of about twenty-four years of age; his
countenance was rendered interesting by a good-humored smile and a
very fine set of teeth; his figure was tall and elegant, but, as well as his
face was rendered more like that of a Hottentot than a Kaffir by being all
over smeared with ochre.60 About Hintsa, Cory cites the degrading analogy
found in the autobiography of Harry Smith in which it is claimed that the
king was a very good-looking fellow, his face though black the very image
of poor dear George IV.61
In narrating the story of the killing of Hintsa, Cory was faced with a
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 135
himself and his son as hostages. They were, however, assured that they were
not prisoners and free to leave when they chose. At this gesture, we are told,
the governor was disarmed of suspicion towards the king. Cory does not
tell us here what the cause for suspicion was in the first place. That much
must be inferred because it cannot be corroborated. This is precisely where
the imaginary structure is called into play in the work of history, often
organised around those who fail to function by the rules governing the true.
Once again, a subaltern effect reveals the compromise between a regime
of truth and the imaginary structure that constitutes the colonial archive.
Settler colonial history therefore demands a reading in reverse or, as Marx
put it in The German Ideology, with a grain of salt. Such a reading grasps
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The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 137
of leading the British troops into a trap. At another level, this information
derived from a rascal such as Hermanus served to anticipate but did
not determine British actions. This is why the intelligence provided by
Hermanus did not feature in the commission of inquiry convened in 1836.
Yet, it was critical to the justification for the killing of Hintsa in the context
of the public sphere.
What Corys voluminous history of the rise of South Africa achieved
in respect of the story of the killing of Hintsa was to realign the fissures and
discordant elements that had appeared between the settler public sphere and
the colonial government. Such a history functioned to undermine the liberal
humanitarian appeals that drew on acts of colonial violence such as that
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related to the killing of Hintsa. To achieve this, Cory was compelled to justify
the killing of Hintsa by making an ideological choice. In the process, he drew
on narrative elements that fell outside of official records, but nevertheless
were known in the public sphere, to produce a syncretic tradition of
historiography that folded an imaginary structure expressed through the
sentiment of suspicion into a documentary trace that, together, brought
about the coherence of an ideology of settler colonial history.
The properties of facts (or how to read with a grain of salt) 139
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140
the deaths of hintsa
4
. . .who would not drink nectar but from the skulls of the slain.1
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141
The attempt to dislodge the monopoly of the colonial archive in talking about
the history of the eastern Cape resonates with Chatterjees concern that
opposition to colonialism may turn out to be merely, or simply, derivative.
If we were to rephrase Chatterjees question slightly, we might ask what
the utopian underpinnings of nationalist history were and to what extent
these formative conditions of opposing colonialism allowed it to extricate
itself sufficiently from the prescriptions of colonial history. More succinctly,
we might revitalise a phrase coined by Shula Marks several years ago in
her discussion of the ambiguities of dependence to capture the sense of
entanglement mentioned by Chatterjee. 4 One of the sources of nationalist
ambiguity, according to Marks, is that it was staffed by men of two worlds.5
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independence of the right-hand house, located west of the Kei River, in relation
to Hintsas Gcaleka east of the Kei River. In other instances, the conclusions
relied on deliberately distorted colonial administrative accounts. The problem
for Peires lay in the sources of Xhosa history and the ahistorical approach of
anthropologists understanding of the right-hand house.
The ambiguities of nationalism presumably lie in attempts to
construct a history of Xhosa society in opposition to that described through
the colonial archive but ultimately understood through the frameworks of
disciplinary knowledge. Filtered through the disciplinary grids of knowledge,
nationalist historiography was reductively read as cultural history. The
implicit refusal to abide by the terms of the colonial archive in the former was
mobilised in support of a disciplinary response to segregation in the case of the
latter, at times to reinforce the very segregationism that was the object of critique.
Nationalist historiography was understood as supplementing disciplinary
disagreements, debates and contests that were either explicitly or implicitly cross-
referenced. At times, it rejected ethnic signifiers tout court in exchange for more
universal categories of class and progress. At other times, it recuperated ethnic
signifiers only to attempt to exceed the limitations posed by those very categories
in a period of segregation. In this, nationalist historiography was often appended
to the competing configurations of historicism and culturalism that marked
disciplinary debates. Given that some of the foremost contributors to writing in
Strategic invalidation
played off divisions between the amaRharhabe and the amaGcaleka in the
period preceding the Sixth Frontier War. Soga noted that in 1817 Somerset
acquired land from Gaika (Ngqika). Since Gaika was not the sovereign chief
of the Xhosa, Soga argued, he had no authority to alienate their land.24
Similarly, DUrban quite strategically targeted Hintsa as the paramount
chief to articulate demands for the return of cattle supposedly belonging
to colonists in order to advance the limits of the colonial frontier.25 Yet, in
Sogas estimation, Hintsa was uninterested in the tensions between colonist
and amaRharhabe and only got involved upon the provocation of the British.
Representations of the Xhosa as a divided house were therefore exploited by
British officials for narrow political reasons, not least to extend the frontier
by expropriating land belonging to the Xhosa. Recognition of authority was
determined by prior design on the acquisition of land or strengthening the
political position of the colonists.
The reference to the split in the House of Phalo was therefore also
one that attempted to revise the basis of Hintsas involvement in the war
of 183435. The first element of nationalist strategic invalidation available
in Sogas text is an effort to change the dominant signifier by translating
cultural traits assigned by colonial discourse into legitimate history. It is
worth quoting Sogas text at length to grasp the tenor of this process of
translation from culture to history:
had been content to accept the misrepresentation as fact. Sogas point was
not a minor one. The entire historical foundation upon which the history of
colonialism was premised was questionable, especially since it was largely
formed by the archive that itself was created to justify acts of violence and
misrepresentation.
Sogas argument depended on the example of misrepresentation of
the Mfengu. His aim was to dispel conceptions of a lagging Xhosa economic
formation supposedly dependent on serfdom and slavery. As in settler
colonial accounts, Soga too proceeds with the displacement wrought by the
mfecane.29 This was a familiar story of the southward migration of destitute,
famine-stricken and helpless subjects who entered Hintsas country. Hintsas
response, according to Soga, was to welcome the newcomers, to grant them
land and to place them under their own chiefs the latter highlighting their
semi-independent condition. So Sogas answer to the question Were the
Fingoes really slaves under Hintsa? was a categorical denial. Fingoes, he
argued, were in no sense slaves under Hintsa.30
The idea of the Mfengu as slaves of the Xhosa is attributed to the
missionaries (especially Ayliff, who was noted to have been on unfriendly
terms with Hintsa) and traders who resided amongst the Xhosa. In addition
to this, Soga bemoaned the absence of the private correspondence of
DUrban, which he believed might hold the key to conferring upon the
In Mqhayis account of the death of Hintsa, the level of the fact is treated
as an extension of the act of colonial violence. The facts of history are
surrendered to the actions and demands of colonial forces, dislodged from
playing a double game. For Mqhayi, Hintsas diplomacy while in the British
camp with Buru and his son, Sarhili, was met with threat and intimidation.
Demanding that Hintsa issue a law that would prevent his people from
interfering with the Fingoes (Mfengu), DUrban threatened to hang Hintsa
if he used the opportunity to send through underhand messages to his
people to engage in warfare. Later the king was threatened with banishment
to the island of Nxele (commonly also known as Robben Island) or with
being shot. 40
Faced, we are told, with these pressures, Hintsa was compelled to
escort the British to retrieve the cattle that had been demanded. This was
later construed by the British as a plan to escape which meant the war
would be heavier than it otherwise would be. 41 In Mqhayis qualification
we have an implicit indication of the motive for the killing of Hintsa. In its
careful phrasing, the statement alludes to a further threat by DUrban to
banish Hintsa to the island while being concerned with the implications of
an escape for the British more generally.
The figure of Hintsa that was crafted in this short counter-narrative
is intricate, especially when considered in relation to the rather stereotyped
descriptions emanating from Corys history. Here we have the ingredients
necessary for a recasting of Hintsa as a leader endowed with the qualities
of diplomacy in the face of engulfing violence, a victim of intimidation, a
begin with a brief synopsis of the plot of Ityala Lamawele. The story relates
the struggle between twins, Wele and Babini, each seeking to lay claim to
being the heir of their deceased father, Vuyisele. The point of irresolution
leads to the case being transferred to an imbizo, constituted under the
auspices of the king, Hintsa. At first the case seems to be a simple one of
establishing who is the older of the twins, and therefore the rightful (read
customary) heir. However, as the deliberations unfold, we are introduced to
a level of intense difficulty. Wele, who is alleged to be the younger of the
two given that he was delivered after Babini, claims to be the heir on the
grounds of: a) receiving inquithi (the ritual cutting of a finger of a first born);
b) exchanging an inkwili (bird) for the heirship when the twins were younger;
c) being circumcised before Babini; and d) looking after his fathers house
and everything in it. Babinis counter-claim is that he is the heir because
of birthright.
Hintsa summoned several witnesses to testify on the matter,
including the midwives (Singiswa, Teyase and Yiliwe) who delivered the
twins, the headman of the clan, elderly experts on questions of custom and
so forth. Each, in turn, acknowledged the complexity and uniqueness of the
case. Throughout, Hintsa is said to have offered an attentive ear (ironic when
thought of in relation to the mutilation of the ear by Smiths forces), listening
carefully and seldom intervening in the unfolding saga. Having heard all the
The relations between the Xhosa and these new-comers, the diplomacy
exercised by the White men in driving a wedge between the Xhosa and
the Fingos on the one hand and between the two rival sections of the
Xhosa on the other, the mutual jealousies and the bitter rivalry that
broke the unity of the Xhosa and contributed towards their downfall,
all these are related with commendable restraint by Mqhayi. In
beautiful style he traces the fortunes of the Xhosa people beyond the
emancipation of the Fingos, beyond the death of Hintsa, beyond
Sandiles exile, beyond Maqoma and Sir Harry Smith, right up to the
disaster of the Mendi, by which time the subject is no longer the Xhosa
alone, but the Bantu of South Africa more generally. 44
( When the white people arrived among us, there was questioning and
debating among them, some saying there was no form of government
among the Xhosas, the only thing that existed was the despotic rule
of the chief. He had the power to bully and to pass verdicts that would
be final, whether the society was satisfied or not.)
the latter having devoted considerable attention to the life of Sarhili, Hintsas
son, in his writing. In some respects the return to origins must be treated as a
response to the insufficiency of colonial history by invoking the category of the
prehistory of colonial violence. Historians have often critiqued this view for its
overt romanticism a critique that says very little about Europes romances of its
origins or for its historicist implications. For nationalism the return to origins
even when presented as a foundational fiction is crucial for a story of identity
and necessary for pointing to the insufficiency of the temporal plot of colonial
violence. The notion of origin is freed from history as progress and redeployed in
the affirmation of cultural difference.
Without reifying this sphere of difference, we might argue that it at
least designates the productivity of nationalist narration. Edward Said has
instructively drawn our attention to the productivity of nationalist narration
in his reflections on the poetics of Yeats and the problem of nativism.
Although Said critiques this nativist tendency for its pursuit of a precolonial
essence, he nevertheless argues that it:
re-inforces the distinction (between ruler and ruled) by revaluating the
weaker or subservient partner. And it has often led to compelling but
often demagogic assertions about a native past, history, or actuality that
seems to stand free not only of the coloniser but of worldly time itself.51
that issues from the character of Wele. The competitive spirit of firsts
displayed in the ambitions of Alexander, Andrews and Smith discussed
earlier in this book is rendered insufficient in Mqhayis writings.
Instead, it is the combination of this competitive spirit with the demand
for responsibility (Wele) that produces the ethical subject of history. In the
end, Ityala Lamawele may be read as a text which rescues justice from the
monopoly of truth and relocates it in the realm of ethics. Ityala Lamawele
displaces the work of colonial repetition, which produced the categories
of real dangers and the figure of history in colonial discourse, and recasts
the ethical subject of history as indistinguishable from the discourse
surrounding the construction of an ethnic subject.
The silent and measured figure of Hintsa is contrasted in the quest
between Wele and Babini. Hintsa is given the task of a just resolution to the
conflict and it is to justice that the attributes of listening and reconciliation
are assigned. The figure of Hintsa issues wisdom that reconciles the origin
of essences to a politics of the present. As a consequence, the temporal and
figural referents of colonial narratives are thereby provisionally reconstituted
in the writing of Mqhayi. In the process of rewriting, a certain displacement
occurs in which the secular project of history is confronted with the force of
an imaginary structure.
for responding to settler colonial histories, was reworked and inserted into
competing ideological positions? What Soga and Mqhayi accomplished was
to resurrect the figure of Hintsa, endowed with the moral qualities of a great
leader but ultimately caught between the spirit of world history and the
notion of vanishing cultures. In various ways these respective disciplinary
positions echoed many of the controversies in the nineteenth-century
settler public sphere, especially the diametrically opposed positions held by
Godlonton and the Reverend John Philips referred to in Chapter 3.
Soga and Mqhayis texts seemingly wrote themselves into the
bifurcated state that Mahmood Mamdani describes in terms of the
creation of citizens and subjects in the 1930s.57 Both indirectly produced
the cultural and historical raw materials that would be used against their
very own political projects. Segregationist and apartheid discourses needed
the resources of citizen and subject to produce their diabolical constructs
of racial difference. The state that produced this bifurcation through the
instruments of customary law and decentralised despotism required both
cultural and historical resources to achieve the political formation that
Mamdani so productively outlines. Customary law was being upheld by a
vast network of shifts in disciplinary knowledge, both in terms of the impact
of economic change and the need for cultural preservation. Ultimately, the
coincidence of developments from within disciplinary knowledge allied to the
By the 1930s, at the time when Soga was writing, the forging of a historical
figure in nationalist narration could not avoid the interpretive frameworks
created by the insertion of South Africa into global capitalist relations of
production and exchange. What emerged was an increasing production of
economic histories that sought to locate the local in the expansive dynamic
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sufficient unto itself. The natives bought, they sold, they worked. The
racial separation of white and black could not obscure how much
they were part of one another. The distinction drawn between the
civilisation of the European and the barbarism of the native no longer
corresponded in adequate manner to the difference in their economic
and social positions. Their contact, and ultimately their conflict, were
caused not by different but by similar interests. Tribe was linked to
tribe in a subtle bond, welded not by the natives themselves, but by the
European; for everywhere the stronger pressed upon the land and the
life of the weaker, appropriating the one and transforming the other.61
The other version of Geists career also acknowledged the widespread effects
of industrialisation. Rather than proclaiming the transformation of the
colonised subject into industrial worker, it set out to reclaim the last vestiges
of this subject in the name of culture. Between 1928 and 1930, Duggan
Cronin travelled some 2 718 miles from the diamond fields of Kimberley
through the towns of Elliotdale, Tsomo, Ngqanakwe and Idutywa, amongst
others, to produce a faithful photographic record of native life before the
opportunity [was] lost.64 The areas he visited formed part of Gcalekaland,
the seat of Hintsa at the beginning of the nineteenth century. Following
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Beyond the specific paternalism attributed to the visual referent lies the
network of citations that enabled a recuperation of a culture presumed
to be fast fading away. Duggan Cronin would mark his project by way of
declaring a genuine interest in the Native and sharing in the remorse that
Bantu culture should fade away.66 To counteract the negative consequences
of civilisation on native life, Duggan Cronin set out to capture the fine
physique of the natives industry and their peculiar customs, superstitions,
art and all the different aspects of their lives.
The photograph mediates an encounter with modernity and, in
the case of Duggan Cronins photographic studies, with an African life
supposedly eroded by modernity. We may even say that the photograph
The work of recuperating the subject, and the disciplinary subjection of those
thought to be the last remaining traces of precolonial tradition victims, so
to speak, of the march of progress depended extensively on discovering the
historical basis for ethnographic research. Before undertaking his journey
to Gcalekaland, Duggan Cronin scoured the existing historical writings on
the eastern Cape, which included those of Moodie, Theal and HA Bryden.
His field notes also refer to assistance gained from, amongst others, John
Henderson Soga. Among his research concerns, once again extensively
reflected in his notebooks, were the histories about the killing of Hintsa in
1835 and the cattle-killing episode of the 1850s, especially the role of Sarhili,
Hintsas son, in the latter event.
While the specific relationship between historical research and the
photographic enterprise is generally difficult to ascertain, the implications of
the connection should not be underestimated. The connection has serious
consequences for the treatment of the photographic oeuvre as not merely
a repetition of an earlier ethnographic practice but a concerted attempt at
photographing African history. Many commentators have viewed Duggan
Cronins work as an ethnographic record of a vanishing culture. For example,
in 1954 the Cape Times noted that the collection of over 4 000 photographs
is a remarkable record of the dress, ornaments, weapons, customs and
Re-imagining Hintsa
By the 1930s the story of the killing of Hintsa was deeply ensnared in
nationalisms encounter with colonialism, segregation and disciplinary
knowledge. The entanglement would haunt subsequent efforts at recasting
Hintsa. In 1937 Lovedale Press issued a poem by Mqhayi to commemorate
the hundredth anniversary of the death of Hintsa. Mqhayis poem consists of
a 35-line introduction, followed by seven sections ranging in length from 21
to 65 lines addressed to the British, the Ngwane, the Thembu, the Bomvana,
the Zulu, the Mfengu and the royal Xhosa house.
The days have come! The days have come!
The days of the remembrance of Hintsa have come.
This Hintsa belongs to the Khawuta of Gcaleka
The days, as it were, had clearly come for re-imaging Hintsa. In order to still
say great things to the nations of the world to world history perhaps
Mqhayis poem was prefaced by the revised image of the king referred to in
Chapter 2. The artist George Milwa Pemba, while enrolled in the department
of Fine Arts at Rhodes University in the eastern Cape, produced the sketch
of Hintsa that accompanied the poem. Pembas sketch, as suggested earlier,
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eulogy and narrative impose competing claims on the reading of the poem.
If eulogy builds on the theme of unity (Praise Hintsa, nations of the world!),
the narrative components of the poem pave the way for an entry into the
story that goes by the name of Europe (He should be acknowledged by the
whole of Africa,/Because they have learned about the white man from him,/
The nations benefitted, he was blunted).
What, we may ask, has been learnt about the white man from the
demise of Hintsa? Which nations benefited when he was blunted? Should
these lines be read as a negation or an affirmation of the trajectory charted
by the west for the career of Geist? The repetition of the filial relationship
contained in the eulogy leads to an implicit critique of a history Which
is also inscribed in European books and which has the potential to incite
old Xhosa men. Like Ityala Lamawele, the poem also establishes levels of
difference through which culture enables a particular critique of history.
Culture, in fact, emerges as an objection to the colonial monopoly of history.
The difficulty of rewriting history in the presence of the legislator
that these intellectuals were compelled to deal with highlights a specific
problem of nationalist history. Its attempts to serve as a corrective of colonial
constructions or its attempts to haul out its cultural treasures or its attempts
to resurrect its fallen heroes failed to displace the underlying historicism
of its cultural reconstruction. That failure necessarily made its resources
Great Trek, that iconic event that defined a nascent Afrikaner nationalism,
from a scattered sentiment to a politically cohesive action. Whether or not
beginnings tally with ends in nationalist narration, its modes of subjection
should make us wary about its transformative potential.
Border discourse
190
the deaths of hintsa
5
191
The study of racial formations often flowed from the potential of
Martin Legassicks seminal The Frontier Tradition, which challenged the
liberal views of the historian Eric Walker by highlighting the functionality
of race to the sociology of class. The frontier tradition which served liberal
historiography failed to relate race to the changing material base of society.
The inspiration of the later turn to racial formation was in the normalisation
of race in the practices of power, derived in part through models of dispersal
rather than a concentration of power. What these scholars were stressing was
that the postapartheid might be met with the capillary structure of power
that Foucault described for his metaphor of the process of subjectivation.3
This, I would argue, was the latent, and at times unanswered, postcolonial
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question coming home to roost. The move in the direction of studying racial
formations more singularly was, however, somewhat tentative, perhaps given
that it was presented on the cusp of the end of formal apartheid. What I call a
tentative first step can be discerned in a polemic about South African history
by Clifton Crais, in which he points out:
The first [opening for a more emancipatory production of history]
concerns the deconstruction of the white mythology of history in
South Africa, a critical analysis of the relationship between the
production of history and the stabilisation of power. Read against
itself, the canonical writing of the South African past unfolds as a
series of transpositions and, ultimately, a sort of incessant struggle
with the ghosts of Theal and Cory. Each new school of historians
invents, so that it can destroy in almost Oedipal fashion, its
intellectual progenitor. 4
to heed its own advice. The question of South African history was not
merely one of the subaltern subject speaking, or its role in mediating
historical consciousness, but one of subalternity, the very structural
condition of constraints and forms of history that ended, repeatedly perhaps,
in an Oedipal drama. This difficulty is not entirely unforeseen in Craiss
polemic. Very early on he poses a question which I believe we must take
up through the question of subalternity, if only to join him in a search for
an opening. Does historys inability, he asks, to offer itself as an emancipatory
practice stem from its own unwillingness to confront its origins and its
will to power, its own suppression and silence? If we answer this question
via a traversal of the range of subaltern positions in the aetiology of the
historical consciousness of the oppressed, as Crais suggests, then Im not
sure that we can heed the advice not to make the same mistake twice. This
is because the subaltern subject is also an effect of an apparatus of power,
a theme I have threaded through notions of the subjection of agency or
subjectivation in earlier chapters. While I am sympathetic to the gesture
proposed by Crais, I would prefer to establish different relations with the
question of subalternity without the burden of expectation of living up to
a prefigured emancipatory ideal or the resurrecting nostalgic notions of
agency. Rather, the figure of subalternity might only lead us to the very
limits of a discourse that functions to produce the subject in the quagmire
apartheid that has contained the story of the killing of Hintsa thus far as a
story of the homeland.
We might say that this chapter is about the virtuality of the border
as much as it is about its actuality. We might also say that it is a story of
how boundaries become borders when folded into the circuits of a colonial
archive. Borders form, I wish to argue, in the prose of counter-insurgency.
The notion of the prose of counter-insurgency is of course indebted to
the work of Ranajit Guha, who has implicitly asked that we not only see
the colonial archive as producing an imagined community but also anticipate
its operation as an imaginary structure. Guha encourages us to consider
the distributions of metaphor, metonym and, we might add, synecdoche
in translating the consciousness of the rebel into terms familiar to power
and history terms that resonate with the spontaneity associated with
colonial charges of insurgency and revisionist constructions of anti-colonial
resistance.
As I see it, the argument proposed by Guha does not merely
call for accounting for colonialism via its archive, but also for working
towards effecting an epistemic break with its conceptual reign over the
postcolonial present.7
severe. If the effects were borne by those who were targets of a civilising
mission, and if those effects doubled as strategies for entrapping Africans
in a colonial tribalism, such a claim is established by recourse to the very
archive of colonial governmentality. This, for example, is what Crais tells us
midway through his discussion on the production of boundaries:
The colonial archive for the 1870s and 1880s is replete with
discussions of boundaries, their drawing up and the anxiety and
contestation they invariably caused, and the displacing of people
that frequently followed the colonial organisation of political space.
Africans made it clear that they lived in a world in which boundaries
were not fixed and in which political claims very frequently
overlapped. People living in what became known in anthropological
discourse as maximal lineages did not inhabit contiguous areas.
There is no fixed boundary, one chief told the chief magistrate; our
people are intermixed. Some of his people were about 18 miles from
my Kraal. The space between us is filled up by people attached to
other chiefs.16
story of colonisation in the eastern Cape, especially the area east of the Kei
River known as Gcalekaland. The two reigns Hintsas and Sarhilis
are connected by the archivists timeline which serves to introduce the
inventory of the chief magistrate of Thembuland and his respective resident
magistrates.19 It is worth quoting the timeline in full because it coincides
with the framing of my contribution to the discourse of the border, one
punctuated by the grammar of domination and the subjection of agency.
We might call it a bare bones narrative of the historical time of a border.
In 1835 the eastern boundary of the Cape Colony was extended to the
Kei River [Cape of Good Hope Government Gazette no.1536, 29.5.1835,
Proclamation 10.5.1835]. East of the river the tribes [sic] remained
independent although government representatives were stationed
with the important chiefs to enforce the treaties [W.M. Fynn with
Kreli and H.F. Fynn with Mapas: CO 5831, proclamation 29.12.1836].
In 1858 the area between the Kei and the Bashee rivers was
conquered by the colonial forces and settlements of Fingoes and
other favourably disposed blacks from British Kaffraria established
at Butterworth and along the Bashee River (Idutywa) under the
supervision of a Special Magistrate.
In 1864 the formerly hostile Gcalekas were allowed to return west
of the Bashee and a British Resident for all the tribes and magistrate
The extension of the colonial border to the Kei River in 1835 was folded into
the making of the story of the killing of Hintsa. This, as I argued earlier, was
achieved through a process of the subjection of agency specific to a colonial
mode of evidence.21 The dispersal of the effects of an information economy
combined with a grammar of domination that involved making the active
verb of colonial reportage instigate, invade, contrive and plunder resonate
with the object nouns of its discourse primitive, uncivilised, savage and
Cafre. The grammar of domination was never too far from the effects of
colonial domination. The one is incomprehensible without the other.
In keeping with the initial elaboration of the concept of a colonial
mode of evidence, I wish to argue that the finalisation of the border can be
traced in the cracks that appeared in the system of indirect rule involving
the late kings son, Sarhili. On 16 October 1885, the resident magistrate in
Elliotdale in charge of Bomvanaland sounded an enthusiastic note of victory
over having secured Sarhilis registration and also that of his subjects.
Assuring the chief magistrate, Major Elliot in Umtata, that he was unable
We might pause to ask how this knowledge of Sarhili being haunted by the
spectre of his father was arrived at so that Walker might conclude, subtly
perhaps, that Sarhili was effectively resisting the power of the Cape governor.
The answer to this question is not as easily supported by a a self-referential
verification within the colonial archive. The ghost of Hintsa travelled a
more circuitous route into the history of the last nineteenth-century war
of conquest involving Sarhili, and became a more complicated presence in
defining the borders and boundaries of the colonial imaginary.
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a large number of armed followers. They claimed that between 1 000 and
2 000 men hostile to the colonial government28 had amassed in the area.
In particular, the detectives claimed that the armed men had been on
the lookout for government spies whom they were ordered to kill without
mercy upon discovery, and that Sarhili was in contact with the Pondo chiefs
and the baSotho who were expected to provide assistance in ensuring the
subjugation of the white man and the overthrow of the Government.29
The nature of these suspicions corresponded in their broad outline
to the story of the killing of Hintsa in 1835. Hintsa, too, had been suspected
of plotting against the British in what the colonists called Maqomas war.
He too was seen as setting a trap for the British and accused of liaising with
Rharhabe chiefs to rebel against the British. Most importantly, colonial
officials suspected Sarhili of playing a double game that allegedly repeated the
tactics adopted by Hintsa.30 In this discourse, Hintsa was not merely invoked
as exemplar but as the return of the repressed. Echoing the latter coincidence,
the resident magistrate confirmed that Sarhili was trying to use the colonial
administration to secure land for settlement, as he was plotting to rise again
from the ashes of defeat31 and attempt to overthrow the British government.
A few days after the first report, on 19 May 1881, the resident
magistrate wrote that messengers were sent from Captain Blyth to inform
Sarhili of a mistake made in conveying the idea that he would be given a
one such report gives us a precise basis from which to evaluate such skill:
Late events, especially the tacit non-acceptance by Kreli [sic] of the
terms afforded him by government have shown how suspicious he
is, or rather how covetous and exacting under the pretence of being
suspicious and afraid of the Government; but when it is remembered
that his people have flocked around him and have for several months
past been jealously watching, lest government exasperated by his
persistent finessing should send a patrol in pursuit of him it can
readily be understood, how this district has been kept in anything
but a quiet settled state and how its office work has been impeded.
Scarcely can a constable from this office go through the district on
duty but what it is considered that he is a spy from the Government,
endeavouring to find out Krelis hiding place and his life is therefore
by no means free from danger.36
Sombali sent a message to the resident magistrate stating that Mbebe was
not a government man but was rather one of Krelis men. 40 The statement
from the policemen, Langeni and Nenka, painted a macabre picture of
the discovery:
We first came across the head apparently that of a girl, a number
of bones were lying about, a little further on I saw the head of a
woman. Quwe was present and recognized it to be that of his wife. On
enquiring from the young man who first discovered the bodies he told
me they were very much decomposed and saw several dogs tearing
them to pieces. . .I then said I must arrest Mbebe. Sombali said Mbebe
is Krelis man and that no magistrate can arrest him. 41
Failure to arrest Mbebe and Sombali, even after receiving permission from
Sarhili, proved to be a major setback for Vice. By seeking the extradition of
Mbebe, Vice sought to make inroads into areas claimed to be under Gcaleka,
rather than colonial, authority. This made the work of colonial officials
exceedingly difficulty. Vice might have believed that receiving permission
from Sarhili to arrest Mbebe and Sombali would be seen as a tacit acceptance
of his attempts to extend colonial authority to the Mbashe valley. But when
Sombali and Mbebe escaped, and when Sarhili handed over five cattle
belonging to Mbebe to the policemen, Vice was left profoundly embarrassed.
indirect rule.
The effect of the prose of counter-insurgency was that it produced
a state of insecurity. This insecurity, we might argue, could be gleaned
from the cracks that appeared in the system of indirect rule. Coupled with
a desperate famine in the region, the question of boundaries became the
only mechanism for creating peace of mind amongst colonial officials. Yet,
the ghosts that haunted the securities of colonial administration would
not rest. The raw materials provided by the detectives, colonial police and
resident magistrates were replete with a prose that was wholly other, yet
simultaneously indispensable. The resultant impasse compelled a breakdown
at every level. Morris wrote of the inability to administer hut tax in May 1884
and a few months later decried the Bomvana for being incapable, because of
their presumed backwardness, of fulfilling the requirements of the system of
taxation. The Bomvana complained about the uneven application of the law.
Morris pointed out that he had no jurisdiction over Sarhili. Any attempt to
ask the latter to mediate in questions related to transgressions of colonial law
would merely secure Sarhilis legitimacy.
The boundary was more than a means of creating administrative
units for the efficient functioning of government. It also served to demarcate
the realms of the secure and the insecure, certainty and uncertainty. It was
not so much an instrument as it was a product of the difference at the heart
put down all arms from today that these have got me into trouble. 49
A few weeks later Sarhili sent another message assuring Elliot that he would
not cause the Major the slightest trouble when he came to point out the
boundary. He even joked that he believed Elliot had forgiven him on account
of his (Sarhilis) birthday.50 But Elliot never arrived. Instead, the boundary
was proclaimed by the resident magistrate, Morris. The chief magistrate,
for his part, may have calculated that the Gcaleka/Bomvana boundary paled
in comparison to the ability to extend the Thembuland boundary further
to the Hole-in-the-Wall. The prose of counter-insurgency had created a
minor distraction in the form of the Gcaleka/Bomvana boundary in order
that it might extend its grip over Gcalekaland. Sarhili had forgotten to glance
over his shoulder to guard his rear, as he was said to have remarked
while preparing for a meeting with the resident magistrate some years
earlier. In the three submissions by Chief Sirunu, Chief Tyali and Sarhili
in October 1885, attention was devoted entirely to the extension of the new
boundary that limited and constricted the territorial claims of both Bomvana
and Gcaleka.
Crais tells us that a meeting had indeed taken place between Elliot
and Ngangelizwe, although the document is now damaged and no date
is discernible.51 However, he concludes that Ngangelizwe considered his
line was made without any of the Bomvana being consulted. I allude,
he added, to the boundary of the Mcwasa River, and further when I once
mentioned the matter to major Elliot, chief magistrate, he was quite ignorant
with regard to a boundary line having been laid down.54 Then he made it
clear that the boundary of Bomvanaland as known was from Nzulu (Mpaku
River mouth) to its source at Ngcwaguba.
Tyali recalled a past that reached back in time to relations between
the Bomvana and the Gcaleka. He spoke of an exodus from Pondoland
when the Bomvana killed Ngungushe, the Pondo chief. Hintsa, chief of
the Gcaleka, had offered them the area between the Mbashe and the Umtata
border, taking the area of Old Morley as the boundary with the Thembu.
The Bomvana Chief Gambushes son had married Hintsas sister, and
Hintsa had married Gambushes daughter, Nomsa. Although given the
area up to the Umtata, they had only settled it up to the Mpaku River
mouth (Hole-in-the-Wall), the rest given up to Chief Palis amaTshezi.
Tyali pointed out that:
the land now occupied by Pali was never Tembuland, it was
Gcalekaland; as proof of what I am saying the father of Gcaleka died
and was buried at the Ngcwaguba and you will not even now get a
Gcaleka woman to drink of the water of that stream nor gather wood
from the forest close by.55
218
the deaths of hintsa
6
219
as a driving force in the discipline of history is the subject of marginality.
The study of African history has repeatedly sought to offer this subject a
role beyond its subservience for which it is produced by hegemonic forms
of power. The subject of African history is a willing subject of resistance,
adaptation, consciousness, collaboration, speaking of its victimisation,
perpetration, or set to work in the unenviable role as cultural broker.
In re-evaluating Nicholas Gcalekas search for Hintsas skull by way of
a discussion of the subjection of agency, I have asked not only for unravelling
the work of history in facilitating the subjection of agency but also whether
it is possible for the discipline of history to have a different relation to those
who do not make the cut of its discourse. Is it possible to adopt a different
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Figure 6a: The death of Hintsa, by Hilary Graham, 1990, Panel 1: The tragic death of
Hintsa (Chief Hintsa and Harry Smith negotiate the return of stolen cattle).
Figure 6b: Panel 2: Smith shoots Chief Hintsa (in fact George Southey fatally shot Hintsa).
Figure 6c: Panel 3: Smith cuts off Hintsas ear (this is the artists view and not a proven fact).
The unspoken desire expressed here is, of course, that the assemblage of
quotes, pictures and objects the products of a history of colonisation may
inspire another interpretation. The curators of the Albany Museum find the
potential for interpretation in stories, such as that of the killing of Hintsa,
which have for so long been understood as a dead end amongst historians.5
Reminding readers that historians are not time travellers who can leap back
into the distant past to study it first-hand, Gerard Corsane argued in the
pages of The Phoenix, the museums magazine, that:
historians can seldom claim that they know or can present all the
exact details of what happened in the past. Although they should aim
at being objective and disciplined they will not end up with absolute
truths. Instead, using the evidence critically and professionally,
they can only ever hope to provide an interpretation of what they
think occurred. The readers of historical interpretations will also be
two rather discrepant propositions: Although the true facts of Hintsas death
will remain shrouded due to a lack of evidence, he has since been seen as a heroic
symbol of Xhosa nationalism. For the purposes of this chapter, I will refer to
these as propositions A and B respectively.
Not too long ago the renowned British historian and philosopher
Robin Collingwood would have dismissed the first proposition as a problem
that should not occupy the historian. So far as Collingwood was concerned,
the rules of the game of history meant interpreting all the available evidence
with the maximum degree of critical skill. In his famous The Limits of
Historical Knowledge, Collingwood suggested that historical thinking does
not mean discovering what really happened, if what really happened is
anything other than what the evidence indicates.7 He, of course, did not
anticipate the problem that emerges when the evidence itself produces
doubt when it was constituted as doubt over what really happened, as
we shall shortly see in the discussion on the story of the killing of Hintsa.
The suggestion implicit in the Albany Museums text is that it was precisely
the lack of evidence that produced the conditions for another history, one
that symbolically deployed the figure of Hintsa in the narrative of
anti-colonial nationalism.
How then did the project of refiguring Hintsa in Xhosa nationalism
bypass the despair that Dipesh Chakrabarty once claimed had accompanied
The slippage into multiculturalism that concerns Zizek has of course also
troubled many postcolonial critics. Leela Gandhi, for example, points out
that it is Saids contention that in their desperate assertions of civilisational
alterity, postcolonial nations submit all too easily to a defiant and puerile
rejection of imperial cultures.16 The result is an acceptance of nativism by
postcolonial nations which, according to Said:
is to accept the consequences of imperialism, the racial, religious,
and political divisions imposed by imperialism itself. To leave the
techniques by which the discipline of history gathers the past in its orders
of knowledge. I argued that the order of historical knowledge confronts,
from the vantage of postcolonial criticism, its limit in the very practices that
framed the logic of colonisation. I was especially interested in tracking the
assemblage of rules, techniques, practices and discourses of evidence that
characterise the grammar of colonial domination.
By bringing the archive to a crisis, by subjecting it to a form of radical
critique, I want to explore the conditions of possibility that may have given
rise to the statement about Xhosa nationalism in the Albany Museum as
it sought to reinterpret the colonial past for postapartheid times. In other
words, I wish to understand how proposition A enables proposition B in the
Albany Museum, to suspect it, so to speak, of a quasi-transcendentalism. In
so doing, I do not simply wish to show how B was excluded from A, or how
B posits a limit to A, but rather how A and B in their cross-hatching define
the epistemic crisis of history. That is to say, in what way is the commonplace
proposition that the true facts of Hintsas death will remain shrouded
completely consistent with the apparently discrepant proposition that he
has since been seen as a heroic symbol of Xhosa nationalism? The crisis of
history is marked by the way in which incommensurable propositions are
rendered meaningful through a system of representation that elides its own
operation at the expense of a process of subjection. Making sense of the crisis
In Halses recollection, it was after this incident that Hintsa made his
escape and was pursued and shot. Interestingly, in Smiths autobiography,
Caesar Andrewss diary and James Alexanders travel narrative respectively,
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the killing of White is dated as 13 May, a day after the killing of Hintsa.
Theophilus Shepstone, the interpreter, claims in his diary that Hintsa died
on the 12th and Major White on the 14th.25 In these narratives, it is claimed
that White was probably killed in revenge for the killing of Hintsa. However,
Halse allows us to ask whether the accusation of revenge, perhaps, did not in
fact belong to the British soldiers charged with escorting Hintsa.
Secondly, Halses account contradicts those testimonies that denied
that Hintsas body had been mutilated following his death. Having killed
Hintsa, Halse tells us that William Southey cut off Hintsas ears and Dr.
Ford of the 72nd [cut] the upper lip and flesh of the cheeks and chin, which
they carried off as souvenirs.26 This, Halse added with hindsight, was a very
wrong and barbarous thing to do, but we did not think so at the time, and it
might have been the cause of doing the colony a serious injury.27
Reference to injury to the colony possibly reflects the responses,
especially in London, to news of the killing and mutilation of Hintsa. In the
metropole, news of the killing was greeted with widespread moral outrage
and protest. The burning of an effigy of Southey in the streets of London
is taken to indicate how strong the response was to the killing and to news
of the mutilation of Hintsa.28 Much of this protest coincided with the rise
of liberal humanitarian opinion and the slave emancipation lobby in the
metropole in the 1830s.
the British settlers and was entirely carried away with sympathy towards the
natives, whom he looked upon as a people who were oppressed and robbed by
the colonists.30 Missionaries such as Philips were held entirely responsible
for stirring up sentiment against the colonists in England and for the reversal
of DUrbans colonial policy that favoured settlers.
As for the killing of Hintsa, colonial officials painted a picture of a
treacherous Xhosa king who was ultimately responsible for his own death.
Sir John Herschel, the Cape intellectual, regarded the death of Hintsa as
a casualty naturally incident to the attempt to escape, in which a man
knowing his wish takes the chances and fails.31 Had Hintsa escaped,
Herschel continued, it would have placed Smiths troops in danger. George
Southey, who shot Hintsa, was seen by many to have operated purely and
legitimately within the parameters of duty. In a letter claiming to furnish a
true statement of Hintsas death dated 7 February 1836 from King Williams
Town and probably addressed to Southey, the writer claims:
The conspicuous part which you performed in the affair will naturally
excite you on perusal of the false statements which have been sent
forth to deceive the public; but feel satisfied that you only performed a
duty which however disagreeable, circumstances rendered necessary
and which entirely resulted from the treacherous conduct of the chief
himself. Whoever knows the character and habits of the Kafir is well
(after Hintsa had escaped) and snapped his pistol. Finding that it
misfired, he threw it at Hintsas head, the second pistol also misfired
and that followed the first. The Colonel then struck him with the first,
but all to no purpose. He then seized him by the Kaross at the back
of the neck and pulled him from his horse. Hintsa finding himself
on the ground and closely pursued, drew an assegai and threw it at
the Colonel. While this was going on I gained ground on him, sprang
from my horse and called out to him to stop or I would shoot him
He looked round but took no further notice and I fired and struck
him in the left leg, just under the calf and close to the bone. He fell
upon his hands, got up again and went down the hill. . .the Colonel
ordered me to fire again. I did so and the ball passed through his body
on the right side just under the ribs he fell and rolled over but was
soon on his legs again and kept the same way down the hill and into
the bush A rustling of assegais brought me to a spot where Hintsa
lay, concealed under a large stone in the river and while in the act of
lifting his assegai, I shot him through the top of his head which laid
him dead on the spot.33
analysis, part of a premeditated plan that deserved the outcomes that were
achieved. Taken together, Southey, Halse (notwithstanding the points of
contradiction relating to the death of Major White and the issue of mutilation
alluded to earlier) and Shepstones accounts correspond to the narrative of
treachery which was held to be the central reason for killing Hintsa and
upheld by the portrayal of the king. This was a story that would be repeated
at the military commission of inquiry in 1836 and the revisions the inclusion
of additional information such as the distance of 200 yards from which Southey
first shot at Hintsa were all marshalled as authenticating techniques. In the
spirit of collective memory, the basic claim that Hintsa deserved his fate
was proven.
In an environment where colonial homogeneity was assumed but never
really guaranteed, there were always other stories that would inadvertently
surface. Moral outrage at the killing of Hintsa was not merely the preserve
of metropolitan lobbyists or the amaXhosa. In his recollections of frontier
experiences, Captain Charles Lennox Stretch made clear his view of the
killing as brutal conduct. For expressing these views, Stretch was approached
by both Captain Murray and Lieutenant Balfour and cautioned about his
pronouncements on the event. And while Balfour accused Stretch of a personal
vendetta, the latter referred him to four officers of Balfours regiment Peddie,
Leslie, Fisher and Lacy who all remembered Mr Driver, Southey and Shaw,
encountered by the universal signifier but not belonging to its own life
processes as antecedent. But in Chakrabartys formulation of the problem,
there is also a need to maintain some conceptual independence for the
antecedent by proclaiming it as not part of the life process of the universal
signifier. In some respects this mark of difference the identification of the
antecedent is always also a strategy, which in the hands of Chakrabarty
carries the potential to modify and interrupt the totalising thrusts of history.38
The question, of course, is how effective this strategy is for enabling
thinking after apartheid, by which I mean not only its historical contextual
specificity, but also its operation as a watchword for the intrinsic violence of
a politics of difference. Framed as such we may ask how proposition B in the
Albany Museum as an expression of history 2 undermines and perhaps even
renders ineffectual the tasks of modification and interruption ascribed to it
by Chakrabarty. We could say then that it is equally important to track the
process through which the antecedent was incorporated into or resonated
with an archive that both enabled and prescribed the realms of discourse.
The ascendancy of Hintsa within nationalist narration more broadly
speaking, accompanied a view that everybody belonged to history and that
everyone in fact possessed history. Claiming this history in his Nobel Prize
address in December 1961, Chief Albert Luthuli, then president of the ANC,
noted how:
Six months later, in June 1962, Luthuli made a similar plea in the pages of
New Age, a left-wing newspaper, in which he called on non-whites to draw
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inspiration from the great battles of Shaka, Mosheshoe [sic], of Gandhi and
Hintsa. 40 Thomas Karis and Gwendolen Carter, in their documentary history
of South Africa, remind us of the lurking presence of the legislator, pointing
out that Luthulis exhortation was to be his last public statement in South
Africa. The new Sabotage Act of 1962, they add, prohibited the reproduction
of any statement made anywhere at any time (including any time in the past)
by a person who was banned from attending public gatherings. Mandela, too,
would recall at his trial in 1962 how:
Many years ago, when I was a boy brought up in the village in the
Transkei, the elders would tell tales about the wars fought by our
ancestors in defense of the fatherland, as well as the acts of valour by
generals and soldiers during those epic days. The names of Dingane
and Bambatha among the Zulus, of Hintsa, Makana, Ndlambe of the
AmaXhosa, of Sekhukhuni and others in the north, were mentioned
as the pride and glory of the entire African nation. 41
In his statement during the Rivonia trial on 20 April 1964, Mandela repeated
this anecdote. This time, however, he added that these stories motivated
him to serve his people. Both Luthuli and Mandela narrate the nation in
terms of the inspiration drawn from the founding fathers. The male subject
notwithstanding, both Luthuli and Mandela allude to the need to reconstruct
for a battle to be waged on the ground of history came from Steve Biko, the
leader of the Black Consciousness Movement who was killed in 1977. Writing
in 1972, a few years before his untimely death, Biko noted with dismay that
the history of the black people is presented as a long lamentation of repeated
defeats. In the same piece he notes:
Strangely enough, everybody has come to accept that the history of
South Africa starts in 1652 [the date that mythologises the arrival of
Van Riebeeck at the Cape of Good Hope]. No doubt this is to support
the often-told lie that Blacks arrived in this country at about the same
time as Whites. Thus, a lot of attention has to be paid to our history if
we as Blacks are to aid each other in coming into consciousness. We
have to rewrite our history and describe in it the heroes that formed
the core of resistance to White invaders. More has to be revealed and
stress has to be paid on the successful nation-building attempts by
people like Shaka, Moshoeshoe and Hintsa. 44
In this search for history, Hintsa emerged alongside many other founding
fathers such as Shaka and Moshoeshoe. For nationalist narration these
founding fathers embodied the discrepant values of difference and sameness,
the latter in the articulation of their contribution to the first semblance of
anti-colonial nationalism. Nationalism qualifies as a quasi-transcendental
endeavour for the last twenty years to keep on good terms with the
English nation.46
Dancing to the tune of the colonial master was not without its problems,
especially when it involved figuring the category of the people who were
presented as the subjects of such a benevolent chief. Despite the sense of
generosity towards the settler society conveyed in the Castle of Good Hope,
we are given a glimpse of the consequences of the failure of colonial society
to recognise the deep sense of responsibility that Xhosa chiefs had towards
their subjects. Chief Sarhilis relationship with the colony, the exhibition
suggests, was always troubled as he tried to protect his territory:
The 1857 Eastern Cape disaster [referring to the cattle-killing
episode] should be told for its tragedy and its meaning. Therefore,
the chiefs support for the Nongqawuse cattle killing episode led him
to admit responsibility for the suffering of his people. Thus he said:
I was a great chief, being as I am the son of Chief Hintsa, who left
me rich in cattle and ordering my people to do the same, and I shall
be left alone as my people must scatter in search of food; thus I
am no longer a chief. It is all my fault; I have no one to blame but
myself. Such words reveal the obligation of trust chiefs had towards
their people. 47
Dalasile and tell him I want to see him. Andiz ukuya, andi nguye
umntu wako (I am not going, I am not one of your people). The wise
old Chief Kreli saw under the surface of this unusual behavior, but,
secretly amused, determined to draw out bit by bit this rude servant
until the cause of his pantomime was laid bear [sic]. Kreli had a deep-
seated but quiet humor which he allowed play as a counterfoil to the
tedium and boredom of official duties. 49
akunakuti kutyiswe inja silambile (we are the children of the chief, it
cannot be that a dog should be fed while we are hungry). Kreli then
took the little dog and placed it between his knees, and fed it by hand,
thus circumventing his attendants.50
The nationalist desire for history, that is, its desire in part for a re-evaluation
of its precolonial past in the light of what it considers colonial distortion, is
also the logic by which it necessarily pursues the ideal of the nation state.
all the components of the exhibition that convey the history of 100 years of
warfare in terms that mourn the passing of the dissolution of the precolonial
state. The Albany Museum is not, as it first appears these days, a contact
zone but a representation of the order of a form of nationalism founded on
the legitimacy derived from the resource of the precolonial state. This is
its interpretive limit, which it unfortunately fails to acknowledge when it
invites viewers to use the exhibition as a stepping stone to develop their
own interpretations.
The routes from nationalist standpoint to Spivaks museumized
access to ethnic origin, however, are punctuated by the vast edifice of
apartheid which redirects difference and sameness, essentialism and
universality into the oppressive and detested homeland or bantustan system.
It is this modality of indirect rule under apartheid that rearticulates the
logic and teleology of the precolonial state, what in Mamdanis terms may
be thought of as the conditions for the emergence of the bifurcated state
in Africa.52
The productivity of the interpretive limit rests with its ability to shape
the politics of reparation in the name of an oxymoronic formulation called
Xhosa nationalism. Paul Salopek of the Chicago Tribune writes about the
demand by the Xhosa royal house for reparations amounting to 1.5 billion
dollars and for which they were prepared to go to the World Court.53 Citing
But where, asks Guha, lies the originality of Indian culture of the colonial
era and why does it defy understanding either as the replication of
the liberal-bourgeois culture of nineteenth-century Britain or as mere survival
of an antecedent precapitalist culture? In his response to this question, he
attributes the availability of the antecedent to the necessary failed universalism
that resulted in dominance without hegemony and a nationalist claim to
history that entailed a struggle for recognition. This failure by design on the
part of British colonialism was accompanied by a condition of power which
Guha represents diagrammatically as shown in Figure 7.
Coercion
D
Persuasion
Dominance
Power
Subordination Collaboration
S
Resistance
Figure 7: Guhas representation of power.
and B, we might conclude that history 1 and 2 are in fact cut of the same
epistemic cloth in affirming the destiny of the state as passage of all history.
Subaltern studies is, in my understanding, less about representation
than it is a way to disentangle the ways histories have functioned to subject
agency. It contributes to unravelling the epistemic inheritance of colonial
subjection. However, what is quite clear is that the project has not adequately
come to terms with the concept of difference that flows from the contingency
it institutes in the discourse of history by recalling the paradoxical
consciousness of the subaltern. It is no wonder that the project, since its
inception, accommodates several concepts of difference which include the
figure of the subaltern as demographic differential or as a signifier of the
radical plurality of history.
What I have argued is that the subaltern does not recall the difference
in the system that Guha and Chakrabarty might be suggesting. Rather,
subalternity recalls the radical singularity of historical discourse which
dissolves difference and leaves in its place the bare outlines of the way history
has come to serve power. A history after apartheid must recall through the
figure of the subaltern the marks of this singularity as it helps to chart lines
of flight from its entangled predicament.
To inculcate the evidence of subalternity is to opt to study the ways
in which evidence has operated in the discipline of history, much like the
constitutive of power and, of course, vice versa. I have tracked the contours
of an archive dedicated to constituting the will to power of colonial rule, the
ambitions of nationalism in its claim to history, the institutional investments
of the discipline of history and the museum of the frontier in prolonging a
programme of truth as a will to power. Most importantly, I have engaged
Gcaleka in ways that recall for us Foucaults intervention that transgression
is not related to the limit as black to white, the prohibited to the unlawful,
the outside to the inside, or as the open area of a building to its enclosed
spaces.60 Rather, Foucault argues, a transgression:
is like a flash of lightening [sic] in the night which, from the
beginning of time, lights up the night from the inside, from top to
bottom, and yet owes to the dark the stark clarity of its manifestation,
its harrowing and poised singularity; the flash loses itself in this space
it marks with its sovereignty and becomes silent now that it has given
a name to obscurity.61
Throughout this book, I have attempted to argue that Gcaleka was not
evidence of some prevailing socio-economic crisis but a product of a mode
of evidence that operated to demarcate what can be said and what is actually
said. He is subaltern by virtue of being an effect of a vast colonial and
epistemological complicity in which his suggestion of Hintsas beheading
252
the deaths of hintsa
Conclusion
Discourse is not life; its time is not yours.1
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Where does Nicholas Gcaleka leave us? I have argued through the
pages of this book for a reworking of the concept of the subaltern at the
heart of what has come to be known as subaltern studies. Rather than
limiting the use of the term subaltern to a representative sign of the
position of the subject, we might think of activating a discourse against
subalternity through a critique of disciplinary reason.2 Subalternity, I
suggest, is not to be confused with the project of social history which
seeks to recuperate a repressed or forgotten subject of history. The
subaltern is not the other of historical discourse, as Dipesh Chakrabarty
reminds us. And the word subaltern does not function merely as a place-
keeper of categorical difference but as a subject in/difference between
what can be said and what is actually said. If anything, the subaltern is
constitutive of historical discourse, if not its most elided effect. Working
against subalternity is to place the reality effects of the discipline of history
alongside its subaltern effects. Similarly, calling attention to this elided
sphere not only highlights the relationship between history and power but
also how the subaltern is repeatedly read as the subordinate proposition in
historical statements. In terms familiar to the argument of this book, I have
253
attended to the question of how it is that Nicholas Gcaleka became a sign of
post-apartheid times.
Three tactical considerations define my response to this overriding
question. The first relates to the way the subaltern effect is the mark of
difference between what can be said and what is actually said, under
conditions in which the latter is elided by the reality effect of the discourse
of history. I argue that this level of difference essentially helps us to see
how the modes of evidence of the colonial archive might serve as the
condition of possibility of apartheid as both a system of exclusion and
inclusion. I have attempted to show this paradoxical but necessary operation
through accounts of the subjection of agency related to the story of the killing
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of Hintsa in 1835, which in part prompted Gcalekas quest for the return
of the kings skull.
The second tactical consideration relates to the disciplinary formations
to which modes of evidence of the colonial archive give rise. I have argued
that the colonial archive produces a second level of distinction at the core of
a system of representation by distinguishing history and historiography. The
distinction functions primarily to once more elide the imaginary structure
upon which the discourse of history depends. Even when nationalist anti-
colonial narration seeks to strategically invalidate the claims of the colonial
archive by setting to work on the imaginary structure, it nevertheless runs up
against the constraints posed by the orders of discipline.
Finally, I have tried to take forward the task of strategic invalidation by
making nationalisms encounter with the limit placed on it by the orders of
discipline, the very target of critique. I have not only attempted to step out of
the shadows of the colonial archive or call attention to the disciplinary forms
of history and historiography to which it gives rise. I have also attempted,
with the help of Nicholas Gcaleka and the Subaltern Studies Collective, to
argue for a critique of disciplinary reason so that the very notion of apartheid
is reconstituted and given new meaning in a critique of the postapartheid
present. In so doing, I have called attention to the normalising effects of
apartheid that haunt the present.
In this book I have argued that the figural realism that operates in the
discourse of history will only ever produce the figure of the subaltern as an
object. At most it will produce the subaltern because of an attachment to a
nostalgic sense of agency. Rather than reproduce this subject position, we
might see subaltern studies as a limited field of critique that is aimed at
forging the beginnings of a postcolonial episteme. Given the long nineteenth
and twentieth centuries of colonial and neocolonial violence against which
it works, subaltern studies does not, nor should it, strive to produce a
single monolithic research agenda. Subaltern studies is neither a gesture
of pluralising history nor a process of objectifying the subject of history.
It takes as a point of possible dialogue the singularity of the effects of an
episteme that is founded on colonialism and the struggles against it. The
work undertaken in South Asia under the banner of subaltern studies is
instructive in the sense that it sets forth a possible platform for engagement
and places before us the demand for a rigorous understanding of those
critical models that have sought to work against domination. Taking Edward
Saids spectre that haunts the discourse of this book seriously, we are bound
to make the same mistake twice if we do not see knowledge as integral to
the exercise of power.3 Subaltern studies does not constitute a discernible
historiographical current that can be taught as an appendage to the graduate
introductory class in world history, as a sign of the inclusive benevolence
conclusion 255
of the masters narrative. 4 It is not a school of history but a long-drawn-out
effort at creating the conditions for an epistemic rupture of the European
narratives of progress that reorient the pursuits of knowledge away from the
forms of power they have hitherto upheld.
This explains the variety of subaltern studies. In the South Asian
context, subaltern studies was marked as a specific and limited project
of investigation, a process of ground clearing, to use a phrase coined by
Gyan Pandey, a leading member of the Subaltern Studies Collective.
The term subaltern was deployed in the context of the discussion to
reassess the inheritance of Cold War political narratives as they defined
theories of change in India and Africa. This is work that is yet to be
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conclusion 257
globalisation and its corporate facades mask a more fundamental and
growing interdependence between discipline and technology in Africa,
a convergence that I would argue is a particular hangover of the Cold
War. Often this convergence takes shape in development discourses in
contemporary Africa. The historicism of much of this development discourse,
directed as it often is at creating efficiency of government, technological
acquisition among elites and token relief for the poor, merely reproduces
the conditions of marginality that have been well-known features in African
societies. The models of the convergence of discipline and technology produce
the dual and interchangeable effects of intrumentalisation of power and, once
again, the normalisation of its exercise.
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conclusion 259
History/historiography
By this very logic, neither the postapartheid nor the postcolonial can be seen
as mere outcomes of the processes of apartheid and colonialism respectively.
That transition will depend on the self-criticism that attains to the most
recent installation of a social form. In this book I have argued for a critique
of the very foundational categories which today have come to obscure the
origins of apartheid in rather normative forms of the exercise of power.
Rather than seeing apartheid as aberration, we should heed Foucaults
reminder that the racial state can in fact be traced in the institutional forms
that served the interests of defending society more generally. Apartheid
was not racisms first word, but its last. The violence of apartheid was, we
might say, a latent feature of the formation of the modern state. In staging a
conclusion 261
postcolonial critique of apartheid, I have attempted to offer some possibility
for constituting a concept of the postapartheid which discerns it from
the genealogies of the modern racial state. In the process, I have defined
apartheid as a constellation of colonial modes of evidence that threaten the
elaboration of a meaningful concept of the postapartheid.
For postcolonial criticism more generally, the insistence on the
schism between history and historiography as a defining feature of the
discourse of history disavows the necessary relation between colonial
violence and the discipline of history. Postcolonial criticism, on the one
hand, operates in relation to a discipline of history which derives many of its
methods, materials and frameworks from colonial discourse. On the other
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conclusion 263
to insulate the memory of violence from its supposed aestheticisation. Yet,
elsewhere, the futility of distinguishing the components of a representational
system into what Shahid Amin calls event, metaphor and memory has
resulted in a feeling that the effects of violent histories have been short-
changed in modernist narrativisation, which emphasises progress at all
costs. If violence is the signature of our modernity, then perhaps we might
say that this very violence is that which we cannot seem to escape.
The uncertain relation of history to the intrinsic violence of modernity
also places it in an uncertain relation to the encounter with the violence of
apartheid. Given the aporia, it has become necessary to return to the place
of history in this modernist predicament, not as a source but as a symptom.
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that flow from the ways in which the colonial archive ultimately organises
our reading of the story of Hintsas killing. I have asked that the archive be
construed as central to defining the modernist event. As a regime of truth,
it polices the difference between what can be said and what is actually said.
The language game of the archive, however, does not allow for the recovery of
subjectivity. The archive, and the colonial archive in particular, does not merely
produce the colonised subject as an effect but as a subaltern effect. It produces
the colonised subject, we might say, as incomplete, as not quite a subject even
mutilated in the case of Hintsa. The archive functions as a mode of evidence
and an apparatus of constraint even at the expense of dispensing with the
imaginary structure so central to its constitution. It should not therefore be
read against or along the proverbial grain. It is for this reason that the archive
in this book is not construed as a system of representation but as an apparatus
essential for the process of the subjection of agency.
Nicholas Gcaleka became embroiled in this notion of the historical
event. In the process, his emergence as an object of the discourse of
history in which he sought to participate recalled precisely how such a
transformation was brought about through a realignment of the archive,
nationalist narration and the postcolonial recovery of subjectivity. The
singularity of that encounter revealed, in the argument of this book, the
loose ends that lend themselves to the process of strategic invalidation.
conclusion 265
Gcalekas mission, at its most basic level, allows us to problematise
the archive by leading us towards an understanding of the techniques in
the making of regimes of truth. The aim here has been to read the archive
in relation to the formation of possible statements about the killing of
Hintsa. Rather than seeing the archive as a storehouse, I have considered
the enabling possibilities for thinking of the archive along lines proposed
by Foucaults Archeology of Knowledge. Foucault offers a conception of the
archive that prompts us to inquire into the challenge posed by anti-colonial
nationalist discourse when he argues:
Between language (langue) that defines the system of constructing
possible sentences, and the corpus that passively collects the
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words that are spoken, the archive defines a particular level: that
of a practice that causes a multiplicity of statements to emerge as
so many regular events, as so many things to be dealt with and
manipulated. It does not have the weight of tradition; and it does not
constitute the library of all libraries, outside time and place; nor is it
welcoming oblivion that opens up to all new speech the operational
field of its freedom; between the tradition and oblivion, it reveals
the rules of a practice that enables statements both to survive and to
undergo regular modification. It is the general system of the formation
and transformation of statements.14
conclusion 267
second phase, it is the signified itself which is repulsed, merged in
the referent; the referent enters into direct relation with the signifier,
and the discourse, meant only to express the real, believes it elides the
fundamental term of the imaginary structures, which is the signified.
Like any discourse with realistic claims, the discourse of history
thus believes it knows only a two-term semantic schema, referent and
signifier; the (illusory) merging of referent and signified defines, as
we know, sui-referential discourses.16
conclusion 269
Notes
15 I have in mind here the problematic that Derrida addresses. See J Derrida, Spectres
of Marx: the state of the debt, and the work of mourning, and the new international,
translated by P Kamuf (New York: Routledge, 1994).
16 L White, Telling more: lies, secrets and history, History and Theory 39:4
(December 2000), pp. 1122.
17 N Dirks, Colonialism and culture in N Dirks (ed.), Colonialism and culture (Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1992).
18 Dirks, Colonialism and culture. Dirkss argument is useful in considering the
problem in South African historiography, which approaches colonialism in purely
historicist terms in terms that merely recite configurations of the past as simply
an essential and necessary development. Historicist approaches lend themselves
too readily to emergent conditions of power so that it becomes possible to prove
transcendence. To avoid the pitfalls of historicism it may be necessary to not
merely proclaim the uniqueness of colonialism as a system of domination, as
Dirks does, but also to inquire into modes of operation and the difficulties entailed
in thinking our way out of its trappings. It is in this shift that I ask that we
consider the colonial archive as a specific mode of evidence that defines not merely
the qualities of domination but also the structure of recurrence. To effect such a
temporal reworking is to ask that we consider the colonial archive as fundamental
to the story of the transition from apartheid to postapartheid.
19 See A Sitze, Articulation, truth and reconciliation in South Africa: sovereignty,
testimony and protest writing (PhD thesis, University of Minnesota, 2003).
20 A Krog, Country of my skull (Johannesburg: Random House, 1998).
way the declarative stance taken by Ranger could be substituted with an enabling
critique. That such eminent scholars as T Ranger, S Marks and L White have written
about the controversies surrounding body parts and heads suggests that the matter
cannot simply be treated as a site of nationalist mobilisation. See Ranger, Chingaira
Makonis head: myth, history and colonial experience, Hans Wolff Memorial
Lecture, African Studies Program, Indiana University, 29 March 1988.
32 H Wolpe, Capitalism and cheap labour-power in South Africa: from segregation
to apartheid, Economy and Society 4 (1974), pp. 425456; H Wolpe, The theory of
internal colonialism in South Africa in I Oxhaal, T Barnett and D Booth (eds),
Beyond the sociology of development (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1975).
33 A postcolonial impulse is discernible in Marxist interventions that cautioned
against racial reductionism in analyses of apartheid. Harold Wolpe, a lawyer and
later sociologist by training and one of the foremost critics of apartheid in the
1960s and 1970s, cautioned against viewing apartheid as merely a continuation of
segregationism by arguing that its emergence could be tracked in the diminishing
significance of precapitalist relations through passage of the 1913 Land Act.
Racial ideology, Wolpe pointed out, must be seen as an ideology which sustains
and reproduces capitalist relations of production. The view was elaborated
in response to emerging perceptions, expressed in work by scholars such as
Martin Legassick, that after the Second World War segregation was continued
as apartheid or separate development. The attempt to generalise the effects of
apartheid, while useful in accounting for the transfer of violence from countryside
to town, did not allow, in Wolpes reckoning, for an investigation of the specificity
of native reserves in maintaining capitalist relations. The so-called native
agency are nostalgic because, instead of pursuing a line of reflection in which one
is seeking to specify a systematic production of the possibility of both power and
resistance, the defence of agency-cum-agent appears to retreat behind the theoretical
and political advances of the past half-century in quest of an entity who can make
decisions about political choices and be responsible for them. See J Mowitt,
Percussion: drumming, beating, striking (Durham: Duke University Press, 2003), p. 51.
36 A McClintock, The myth of progress: pitfalls of the term post-colonialism, Social
Text 31/32 (1992), pp. 8497; E Shohat, Notes on the postcolonial, Social Text
31/32 (1992), pp. 99113; A Dirlik, The postcolonial aura: third world criticism in
the age of global capitalism, Critical Inquiry (Winter 1992), pp. 328356.
37 A Ahmad, In theory: classes, nations, literatures (New York: Verso, 1992).
38 S Hall, When was the postcolonial? Thinking at the limit in I Chambers and
L Curti (eds), The post-colonial question: common skies, divided horizons (New York:
Routledge, 1996).
39 Hall, When was the postcolonial?, p. 250.
40 K Marx, On imperialism in India in R Tucker (ed.), The MarxEngels reader,
second edition (New York: WW Norton, 1978).
41 R Guha, History at the limit of world history (New York: Columbia University Press,
2002), p. 4.
42 G Prakash, The impossibility of subaltern history, Nepantla: Views from the South
1:2 (2000), pp. 287294.
43 GC Spivak, Can the subaltern speak? in C Nelson and L Grossberg (eds), Marxism
and the interpretation of culture (Champaign, IL.: University of Illinois Press, 1988).
44 D Chakrabarty, Habitations of modernity: essays in the wake of subaltern studies
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002), p. 8.
Press, 1987). See also, H Bhabha, Nation and narration (New York: Routledge,
1990).
49 Deleuze and Guattari, cited in Deleuze and Parnet, Dialogues II, p.38
50 M Foucault, The will to knowledge: the history of sexuality, Vol. 1 (London: Penguin,
1978), pp. 9297. In these pages we find the most profound rephrasing of the
repressive hypothesis. But I would argue that it be read alongside Gilles Deleuzes
arguments about potentiality in writing. See Deleuze and Parnet, Dialogues II, p.
50.
51 BS Cohn, The command of language and the language of command in R Guha
(ed.), Subaltern studies IV: writings on South Asian history and society (Delhi: Oxford
University Press, 1985); E Said, Orientalism (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978).
52 M Foucault, The order of things (London and New York: Routledge, 1989);
M Foucault, The archeology of knowledge and the discourse on language, translated by
AM Sheridan Smith (New York: Pantheon Books, 1972).
53 See E Said, Michel Foucault, 19261984 in J Arac (ed.), After Foucault: humanistic
knowledge, postmodern challenges (New Brunswick and London: Rutgers University
Press, 1988); also Foucault, Order of things.
54 M Foucault, Discipline and punish: the birth of the prison, translated by A Sheridan
(New York: Vintage Books, 1975).
55 E Said, Reflections on exile (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000),
pp. 210211 (my emphasis).
56 P Veynes Did the Greeks believe in their myths? An essay on the constitutive
imagination, translated by P Wissing (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1988) is
not inconsequential to this line of argument. In Veynes argument the constitutive
imagination is not a displacement of truth but its very condition.
and C Rassool and G Minkley, Orality, memory and social history in South Africa
in S Nuttall and C Coetzee (eds), Negotiating the past: the making of memory in
South Africa (Cape Town: Oxford University Press, 1998).
18 For an innovative use of this method see Hamilton, Terrific majesty. The concept
of mediation has been more thoroughly theorised by R Williams, Keywords: a
vocabulary of culture and society (London: Fontana, 1985) and Spivak, Can the
subaltern speak?. Spivak especially allows us to review what we take as the
function of representation by invoking two terms from Marx, Darstellung and
Vertretung. Luise Whites intervention points in this direction but is not theorised
to the same extent. See also Spivaks more recent weaving together of The Rani
of Sirmur GC Spivak, The Rani of Sirmur: an essay in reading the archives,
History and Theory 24:3 (1985), pp. 247272 and Can the subaltern speak?
which revisits the question of the female informant in feminist historiography.
This is not to deny the sophisticated historical critiques and critiques of history
that address the objective/bias binarism. See for example De Certeau, Writing of
history; Veyne, Did the Greeks believe?; D LaCapra, Rethinking intellectual history
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983). Suffice it to say that outside of this critical
tradition, the discipline of history retains its commitment to this facile and
unproductive binarism.
19 The phrase belongs to Clifford Geertz. I acknowledge its reductionism in
relation to Luise Whites specific intervention. Nevertheless, I am proposing
a transactional reading in which the possibilities and promise of an overall
intervention are temporarily suspended so as to contemplate the argument
being pursued in a different direction. In this respect, I also stress that Whites
interrupt the modes of production narrative. See for example B Bozzoli, Marxism,
feminism and South African studies, Journal of Southern African Studies 9:2
(April 1983), pp. 139171; S Geiger, Tanu women: gender and culture in the making of
Tanganyikan nationalism (Portsmouth: Heinemann, 1997).
21 G Cory, The rise of South Africa, Vol. 1 (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1921),
p. 395.
22 I elaborate on this point in Chapter 5. See also C Crais, The politics of evil (Cape
Town: Cambridge University Press, 2003); A Mager, Gender and the making of
a South African bantustan: a social history of the Ciskei, 19451959 (Portsmouth:
Heinemann, 1999).
23 F Hartogs The mirror of Herodotus (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988)
explores the relationship between observation and evidence at greater length.
Autopsy is based on observational technologies but also privileges a form of
evidence and proof.
24 Such paradoxes are by no means unique. T Niranjana, Siting translation: history,
poststructuralism and the colonial context (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1992), p. 3, argues that translation, paradoxically, also provides a place in history
for the colonised.
25 Cape of Good Hope: Caffre War and Death of Hintsa, Blue Book 279 of 1836
(hereafter Cape of Good Hope): Dispatch from DUrban to Earl of Aberdeen
(19 June 1835), p. 15.
26 William Beinart has drawn attention to a similar tendency in his Political and
collective violence in southern African historiography, Journal of Southern African
Studies 18:3 (September 1992), pp. 455485. For Beinart colonial or white settler
(my emphasis).
31 Cape of Good Hope, DUrban to Secretary of State (19 June 1835), pp. 1516
(my emphasis).
32 H Smith, The autobiography of lieutenant-general, Sir Harry Smith (London: Murray
Publishers, 1901).
33 Cape of Good Hope, DUrban to Aberdeen (19 June 1835), p. 19.
34 Cape of Good Hope, DUrban to Aberdeen (19 June 1835), p. 19.
35 An expedition by British forces against the Ngwane in 1828 led colonial forces
across the Kei River to Mbolompo, south of the Mthatha River and the Mpondo
chieftaincy. It did not lead to annexation of land but rather to the capture of labour.
Those captured were taken to Fort Beaufort, according to Timothy Stapleton, and
sold to white farmers. The capture resulted in the killing of 400 Ngwane who had
hidden in a nearby forest and the capture of 100 women and children. Colonial
officials claimed that the expedition was undertaken in the interests of saving
the Ngwane from Hintsa and Vusani. Stapleton, however, suggests that it was an
attempt to procure labour. See Stapleton, Maqoma; see also Crais, Making of the
colonial order. Crais argues that the colonial state joined the Thembu, the Mpondo
and the Xhosa in the war against the Ngwane and that many of the survivors were
rendered destitute refugees or sources of servile labour.
36 DUrban made clear his intentions of reclaiming these lands which had been
occupied by various chiefs, describing them as beautiful and fertile.
37 Cape of Good Hope, DUrban to Aberdeen (19 June 1835), p. 20.
38 Cape of Good Hope, DUrban to Aberdeen (19 June 1835), p. 20.
T Bassett, From the best authorities: the mountains of Kong in the cartography of
West Africa, Journal of African History 32 (1991), pp. 367413.
45 M Heidegger, The question concerning technology, translated by W Lovitt (New
York: Harper Torchbooks, 1977).
46 JE Alexander, A narrative of a voyage of observation among the colonies of western
Africa. . .and a campaign in Kafirland, Vols 1 and 2 (London: Henry Colburn
Publishers, 1837).
47 S Ryan, Inscribing the emptiness: cartography, exploration and the construction
of Australia in C Tiffin and A Lawson (eds), De-scribing empire: post-colonialism
and textuality (New York: Routledge, 1994).
48 Winichakul, Siam mapped, p. 126.
49 R Elphick and H Giliomee, The shaping of South African society (Cape Town:
Maskew Miller Longman, 1979), p. 296.
50 M Legassick, The frontier tradition in South African historiography in S Marks
and A Atmore (eds), Economy and society in pre-industrial South Africa
(London: Longman, 1980).
51 J Comaroff, Images of empire, contests of conscience: models of colonial
domination in South Africa in F Cooper and AL Stoler (eds), Tensions of empire:
colonial cultures in a bourgeois world (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997).
52 For a discussion of these tensions of Empire see T Keegan, Colonial South Africa
and the origins of the racial order (Cape Town: David Philip, 1996).
53 J Naidoo, Tracking down historical myths (Johannesburg: AD Donker, 1989).
54 JG Pretorius, British humanitarians (Pretoria: State Archives, 1988), p. 179.
myself is the one whom we must believe. That rule applies as much to Greek
as it does to other Indo-European languages. The above is not always the case,
according to Benveniste, who cites Latin as an aberration. Important for our
purposes here is Hartogs claim that the juridical sense of histor is premised on
a definite connection between seeing and knowledge. This is similar to Hegels
sense of original history, discussed in his philosophy of history.
60 Evidence by Eno, MF1253, South African Library, Minutes of Proceedings of Court
of Inquiry, 23 May 1836, p. 61.
61 In the work of Terry Eagleton and Gayatri Spivak the idea of reading against
the grain assumes a different tactical implication. Spivak suggests that a
reading against the grain is enabled by moments of transgression in the text.
But transgression is not seen in terms of an invasion, la Luise White. Rather,
it is intrinsic to the very operation of the law. Transgression may interrupt or
bring a discourse to crisis, but we should guard against making too much of its
transcendental quality. GC Spivak, A critique of postcolonial reason: toward a history
of the vanishing present (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999).
I found Adam Sitzes formulation in his work on protest writing and the discourse
of transitology especially illuminating here. See A Sitze, The immune system
(East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, forthcoming).
62 R Guha, The prose of counter-insurgency in R Guha and GC Spivak, Subaltern
studies II (New York: Oxford University Press, 1983).
13 A43, Godlonton Letters, No. 70, S Rowles to Godlonton (26 June 1851), William
Cullen Church of the Province Records, University of the Witwatersrand.
14 A1350, Caesar Andrews Papers, Smith to Andrews (January 1851), William Cullen
Church of the Province Records, University of the Witwatersrand.
15 A43, Ayliff to Godlonton (12 September 1850), William Cullen.
16 A43, No. 813, William Southey to Godlonton (4 January 1865), William Cullen;
A43, Holden Bowker to Godlonton (20 June 1860), William Cullen.
17 A43, William Southey to Godlonton (23 September 1865), William Cullen.
18 The concept of a secondary discourse has been elaborated upon in Guha, Prose of
counter-insurgency.
19 Cape of Good Hope Blue Book on Native Affairs (Cape Town: Saul Solomon, 1878),
p. 29.
20 A1350, The Diary of Caesar Andrews (1875), p. 2, William Cullen.
21 A1350, Diary of Caesar Andrews, p. 35.
22 A1350f and A1370f, Caesar Andrews Papers, William Cullen.
23 A1350, Diary of Caesar Andrews, p. 47.
24 Smith, Autobiography, p. 11.
25 Smith, Autobiography, p. 28.
26 Smith, Autobiography, p. 34.
27 Smith, Autobiography, p. 35.
28 Smith, Autobiography, p. 35.
29 JE Alexander, An expedition of discovery into the interior of Africa (London: Henry
Colburn Publishers, 1838), pp. vivii.
30 Alexander, Expedition of discovery, pp. 175176.
J Arrowsmith published a map called Eastern frontier of the colony of the Cape of
Good Hope, which was compiled from manuscript surveys and sketches supplied
by Michell. See D Schrire, The Cape of Good Hope, 17821842: from De la Rochette
to Arrowsmith (London: Map Collectors Circle, 1965), p. 7.
39 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, p. 158.
40 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, pp. 158159.
41 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, p. 158.
42 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, p. 171.
43 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, p. 172.
44 Alexander, Narrative of a voyage Vol. 2, p. 172.
45 D Livingstone, The geographical tradition (Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell, 1992).
46 Personal communication with Michael Stevenson (16 May 2001), Newlands,
Cape Town.
47 JJ Redgrave and E Bradlow, Fredrick IOns: artist (Cape Town: Maskew Miller
Longman, 1958).
48 M Cosser, Images of a changing frontier: worldview in eastern Cape art from
Bushman rock art to 1857 (MA thesis, Rhodes University, 1992), p. 53. See also A
Taylor, True picture of Hintsas death?, Cape Times (16 August 1996). Taylor argues
that IOns reconstructed the scene from eyewitness accounts. Claiming the painting
as one of IOnss finest landscape depictions, Taylor points out that the work depicts
the scene after Southeys second shot, with Hintsa pleading and his companion
slinking off across the river while soldiers fire from the cover of the rocks.
49 Cosser, Images of a changing frontier, p. 53.
inquired show me the Zulu Proust? See E Said, Humanism and democratic
criticism (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004), p. 27.
57 Said, Humanism and democratic criticism, p. 27.
58 K Marx, The German ideology in R Tucker (ed.), The MarxEngels reader, second
edition (New York: WW Norton, 1978).
59 Marx, cited in W Brown, Politics out of history (New Jersey: Princeton University
Press, 2001), p.78.
60 W Brown, Politics, p. 78.
61 I found Martin Jays elaboration of the decentring of the eye and the critique of the
primacy of vision in Taylor instructive, especially regarding where this genealogy
of ocularcentrism leads. Its pursuance, however, is not possible in the present
work. See M Jay, The disenchantment of the eye: surrealism and the crisis of
ocularcentrism in L Taylor (ed.), Visualising theory: selected essays from V.A.R.
(New York and London: Routledge, 1994).
62 See for example G Cory, The rise of South Africa, Vol. 3 (London: Longmans, Green
and Co., 1932), p. 323. In a footnote Cory notes: The author had an interview some
years ago with a very old Mr. Bowker who had a clear recollection of those times,
and whose bias, if he had any, was on the side of the colonists. He stated that, as
a trophy of that campaign, he had shown to him in High Street of Grahamstown,
two human ears wrapped in a piece of brown paper, which were said to have been
those of Hintsa.
63 The Great Place refers to the seat of the royal house. In Hintsas time the Great
Place was in Gcuwa. Sarhilis Great Place was in Hohita. Currently, the Great Place
is located in Nqadu near the town of Willowvale.
point of departure for this discussion. See C Saunders, The making of the South
African past (Cape Town: David Philip, 1988).
5 I am aware of Fredric Jamesons critique of Hayden Whites supposed figural
relativism that issues from the conceptual machinery in his tropological studies
of history. See F Jameson, The ideologies of theory: essays 19711986, Vol. 1,
Situations of theory (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988). I am
of course aiming at a more Foucauldian formulation of the problem in referring
to the notion of event. According to Foucault:
One can agree that structuralism formed the most systematic effort to
evacuate the concept of the event, not only from ethnology but from a whole
series of other sciences and in extreme case from history. . .But the important
thing is to avoid trying to do for the event what was previously done with the
concept of structure. Its not a matter of locating everything on one level, that
of the event, but of realizing that there are actually a whole order of levels of
different types of events differing in amplitude, chronological breadth, and
capacity to produce effects.
Later, in a specific reference to history, he points out that ones point of reference
should not be the great model of language (langue) and signs, but to that of war
and battle. . .History which bears and determines us has the form of a war rather
than that of language. See M Foucault, Power/Knowledge selected interviews
19721977 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1980), p. 114. See also P Rabinow and
H Dreyfus, Michel Foucault: beyond structuralism and hermeneutics (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1983).
13 See for example S Boniface Davies, Raising the dead: the Xhosa cattle-killing and
the Mhlakaza-Goliat delusion, Journal of Southern African Studies 33:11 (March
2007), pp. 1941.
14 See M Legassick, The state, racism and the rise of capitalism in nineteenth-
century Cape Colony, South African Historical Journal 28 (1993), pp. 329368.
15 For further discussion of the centrality and consequence of the number in the
colonial imagination see A Appadurai, Number in colonial imagination in
C Breckenridge and P van der Veer (eds), Orientalism and the postcolonial predicament
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993); M Poovey, A history of the
modern fact (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998).
16 LG47, Chronological List of Losses Reported, 9.7.1835. State Archives, Cape Town.
17 LG46, General List of Losses Sustained by Eastern Frontier Inhabitants in the Kaffir
War, 183435, State Archives, Cape Town. James Edward Alexander put the cattle
losses on the Southey farm at 800. See Alexander, Excursions in western Africa,
p. 410. A record of losses was also featured in the documentation of the
commission of inquiry, with the Southey name featuring prominently.
18 LG46, General List of Losses.
19 T Richards, The imperial archive (New York: Verso, 1993), p. 4.
20 A Wilmot, The life and times of Sir Richard Southey (Cape Town: Maskew Miller,
1904), p. 23.
21 Colonel Collins, Journal of a tour to the north eastern boundary, the Orange River
and the Storm Mountains, 1809 in D Moodie (ed.), The record; a series of official
papers relative to the condition and treatment of the native tribes of South Africa, Part V
18081819 (Cape Town: Balkema, 1960), p. 42 (my emphasis).
the Cape of Good Hope, 18341835 (Grahamstown: Meurant and Godlonton, 1836).
30 A Lester, Otherness and the frontiers of empire: the eastern Cape colony,
1806c.1850, Journal of Historical Geography 24 (1998), pp. 219.
31 Appadurai, Number in colonial imagination.
32 J Philips, Researches in South Africa (London: James Duncan, 1828).
33 The New World Dictionary (second edition) describes degree as any of the
successive steps or stages in a process or series. Its usage here is consistent with
that of Marx rather than that of De Kiewiet, the difference being that the former
concentrates on the implications of historical development whereas the latter
treats degree in the more restrictive sense to mean relative intensity. K Marx, The
Grundrisse in R Tucker (ed.), The MarxEngels reader, second edition (New York:
WW Norton, 1978).
34 See J Ayliff, The history of the Abambo (Butterworth: Gazette, 1912), p. 26.
35 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 6.
36 Godlonton, Irruption, pp. 113114.
37 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 122.
38 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 149.
39 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 150. Of course, the narrative played down specific
incidents of colonial violence and neglected to tell us what several other accounts
claimed, namely that Hintsas residence was torched.
40 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 154.
41 Godlonton, Irruption, p. 141.
century Natal (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1986), p. 5. Marks notes that in
South Africa segregation serves not simply as the institutional and ideological
buttress of the white monopoly of power at a time of rapid social change; it is the
central mechanism for the reproduction of cheap and coercible migrant labour.
5 Marks, Ambiguities, pp. 7273. For a good example of this ambiguity of African
intellectuals see B Peterson, Monarchs, missionaries and African intellectuals:
African theatre and the unmaking of colonial marginality (Johannesburg: Wits
University Press, 2000).
6 Marks, Ambiguities, p. 56.
7 T Ranger, Nationalist historiography, patriotic history and the history of the
nation: the struggle over the past in Zimbabwe, Journal of Southern African
Studies 30:2 (June 2004), pp. 215234. (The Zimbabwe African National Union
Patriotic Front (Zanu PF), formed after a merger of Zanu and Zapu in 1988, is
currently (2 April 2008) the ruling party in Zimbabwe.)
8 C Rassool, The individual, auto/biography and South African history (PhD thesis,
University of the Western Cape, 2004).
9 See for example L de Kock, Sitting for the civilisation test: the making(s) of a civil
imaginary in colonial South Africa, Poetics Today 22:2 (Summer 2001), pp. 396397.
10 Adam Ashforth has described the emergence of the native question in official
discourse. A Ashforth, The politics of official discourse in twentieth century South
Africa (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990).
11 See P Rich, Hope and despair: English-speaking intellectuals and South African
politics, 18961976 (London: Routledge, 1983), p. 48.
18 A Odendaal, Vukani Bantu! Black protest politics in South Africa to 1912 (Cape
Town: David Philip, 1984).
19 Soga, South-eastern Bantu; SEK Mqhayi, Ityala Lamawele (Alice: Lovedale Press,
1931); SEK Mqhayi, UmHlekazi uHintsa (Alice: Lovedale Press, 1937).
20 J Peires, Lovedale Press: literature for the Bantu revisited, English in Africa 7
(1980), pp. 7783.
21 Peires, Lovedale Press.
22 Peires, Rise of the right-hand house, p. 118.
23 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 141.
24 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 155.
25 See Keegan, Colonial South Africa.
26 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, pp. 178179.
27 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 169.
28 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 179.
29 See Webster, Unmasking the Fingo.
30 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, pp. 178179.
31 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 180.
32 This is a statistic that incidentally also appears in the work of Godlonton and
represents a clever subversion of his general assumptions on Mfengu slavery.
Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 95
33 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 172.
34 Soga, South-eastern Bantu, p. 178.
Bantu was essentially patriarchal and that among the military tribes of the east
coast (the Xhosa and Zulu polities) the government tended towards despotism.
By the time village organisation is discussed, Molema turns to the trope of
collectivity and social and economic equality. For Molema, the mark of difference
is not to be sought in social organisation but in the spirit that informed the social
structure. The fiber running through the feeling of brotherhood, says Molema,
invoking the productivity of spirit, was consanguinity each member of the tribe
believing himself related by blood and descent to another member. In drawing out
the force of contrast, Molema writes:
T he combinations and contrasts of capitalism and pauperism, competition
and despair, sinecures and sweated labour, gorgeousness and squalor were
impossible under the Bantu policy. Individualism, as understood in the
Western world, could not thrive. Collectivism was the civic law, communism
and a true form of socialism the dominating principle and ruling spirit.
(See Molema, Bantu, past and present, p. 115.)
Even the more conservative Pixley ka Seme, one of the founders of the modern
South African Native Congress, urged the movements supporters as early as
1911 that, The demon of racialism, the aberrations of the XhosaFingo feud, the
animosity that exists between the Basuto and every other African must be buried
and forgotten. . .We are one people see A215.78, African Lodestar: Official Organ
of the ANC Youth League (Transvaal), (December 1951), Dr SM Molema Papers,
South African Library, Cape Town.
By rewriting the history of the nineteenth century in a manner that helped
to interpret the predicament of the twentieth century, and by ascribing motives
66 Anstey, South Africans in black and white, Sunday Times Lifestyle (27 August 2000).
67 See E Edwards, Performing science: still photography and the Torres Strait
expedition in A Herle and S Rouse (eds), Cambridge and the Torres Strait
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998).
68 Derridas discussion of Levi-Strauss is crucial here. See J Derrida, Of grammatology,
translated by GC Spivak (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998).
69 B Humphreys, The Duggan Cronin Bantu Gallery, Kimberley Lantern x1:2
(December 1961), pp. 7475.
70 Unique memorial, Cape Times (3 September 1954).
71 C Harris, Pictorial monument to a vanishing culture, The Diamond News and
the S.A. Watchmaker and Jeweller (November 1951), p. 20. How Harris could have
discerned happiness in the expressionless sitters of the posed portraits produced
by Duggan Cronin is of course difficult to ascertain.
72 J de Jager, The portrait exhibition, Pretoria News (28 April 1987).
73 Humphreys, Duggan Cronin Bantu Gallery, p. 76.
74 Edwards, Performing science, p. 117.
75 Edwards, Performing science, p. 120.
76 J Opland, Xhosa oral poetry: aspects of a black South African tradition (Johannesburg:
Ravan Press, 1983), p. 256. (The translation is drawn from Opland. Thanks to
Siyabonga Ndebe for checking the translation against the original version.)
77 Mqhayi, UmHlekazi uHintsa.
78 Opland, Xhosa oral poetry.
79 A215.78, SM Molema Papers, RV Selope Thema Out of Darkness, South African
Library, Cape Town.
Menchu, Kaplan calls for a self-reflexive practice of cultural politics that critiques the
limits of modernity. Critical to Kaplans reformulation of the limits of transnational
feminism is the argument of postcoloniality which holds that borderlands that flow
from the texts of writers such as Gloria Anzaldua remind us of the need for analysis
of discourses of difference as proposed by Lata Mani and Chandra Mohanty. The
resultant aporia is incidentally also where we might set to work on breaking free of
the moulds of power. See Haraway, Simians, cyborgs, and women; C Kaplan, The
politics of location as transnational feminist critical practice in I Grewal and
C Kaplan (eds), Scattered hegemonies: postmodernity and transnational feminist
practices (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1994). See also R Menon and
K Bhasin, Borders and boundaries: women in Indias partition (New Jersey: Rutgers
University Press, 1998); E Burgos-Debray (ed.), I, Rigoberto Menchu: an Indian
woman in Guatemala, translated by A Wright (New York: Verso, 1984).
8 AO Jackson, The ethnic composition of the Ciskei and Transkei in Ethnological
Publications, No. 53 (Pretoria: Department of Bantu Administration and
Development, 1975), p. 2. For an example of the incororation of the eastern
Cape frontier into Afrikaner nationalist narration see L Witz, Apartheids festival
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2003).
9 Peires, Rise of the right-hand house. Peires contests the explanatory value of
fission and proposes a more probable sense of segmentation in its place.
10 Peires, House of Phalo, p. 172.
11 See also Mager, Gender, pp. 113, 122, n.93. To ensure a tribal separation between
the Xhosa of the Transkei and Ciskei, it was desirable that Sandile be elevated
to the status of paramount of all the Xhosa outside the Transkei. Fortunately,
Lantern in 1961, which suggested a place of great silence, the museum today
is more likely to be associated with the dynamics of a contact zone. J Clifford,
Museums and contact zones in Routes: travel and translation in the late twentieth
century (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1997). Elaborating on
the notion of contact zone, Clifford draws on Mary Louise Pratts[ref?] idea of
a contact zone which she defines as the space of colonial encounters, the space
where peoples geographically and historically separated come into contact with
each other and establish ongoing relations, usually involving conditions of
coercion, radical inequality and intractable conflict, see ML Platt, Imperial eyes:
studies in travel writing and transculturation (New York: Routledge, 1992).
For Clifford the advantage of Pratts conceptualisation is twofold. Firstly, it works
at displacing the term frontier, which is grounded in a European expansionist
process. Secondly, the term is important in that it provokes ongoing stories of
struggle. Of course, this is a strategy that marks ethnography after the critique
of its colonising legacy.
4 Introductory panel, Contact and conflict: the eastern Cape 17801910, Albany
Museum, Grahamstown.
5 The point about the dead end that the killing of Hintsa represents was emphasised
by Gerard Corsane in the museums magazine The Phoenix.
6 G Corsane, The assassination of Hintsa? in The Phoenix: Magazine of the Albany
Museum 8:1 (1995), p. 19.
7 R Collingwood, The limits of historical knowledge in Essays in the philosophy of
history (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1965), p. 99.
59 This is particularly the case in Guhas notion in Dominance without hegemony that
the work of Indian historiography was to expropriate the expropriators. It is also
the sentiment contained in the eloquent opening lines of the text in which Guha
claims: There was one Indian battle that the British never won. It was a battle for
appropriation of the Indian past. See Guha, Dominance without hegemony, pp. 1, 99.
60 D Bourchard (ed.), Language, counter-memory, practice: selected essays and interviews
by Michel Foucault (London and Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977), p. 35.
61 Bourchard, Language, p. 35.
62 Foucault, Archeology of knowledge, p. 216.
6 Mowitt, Text.
7 De Certeau, Writing of history, p. 35 (my emphasis).
8 Marx, The Grundrisse, p. 242 (my emphasis).
9 R Guha, A conquest foretold, Social Text 54, 16:1 (1998), pp. 8599.
10 Carolyn Hamiltons discussion of the James Stuart Archive as establishing a living
source of tradition has explored the conditions under which one idea of precolonial
Zulu society emerged. Focused on the production as opposed to the invention
of history, Hamilton outlines the emergence of an archive by emphasising the
processes of mediation and representation. The shortcoming here, of course,
is that this approach perhaps unwittingly replays the schism at the heart of the
discipline of history, thereby sheltering the discipline from self-criticism. See
Hamilton, Terrific majesty.
11 J Rabasa, Dialogue as conquest: mapping spaces for counter-discourse in
AJ Mohammed and D Lloyd (eds), The nature and context of minority discourse
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1990).
12 Q Ismail, Discipline and colony: The English patient and the crows nest of
postcoloniality, Postcolonial Studies 2:3 (1999), pp. 425426.
13 I use the term archive in the same sense that Foucault does. The archive, in
this formulation, is viewed as the formation, transformation and dispersal
of statements. See especially Foucaults Archeology of knowledge, p. 130, for an
elaboration of this conception of the archive.
14 Foucault, Archeology of knowledge, p. 130. See also Said, Problem of textuality,
pp. 709710. Said writes:
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Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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George Southeys Diary (12 May 1835), University of Cape Town, Centre for African
Studies.
Transcript of Stretch, Cory Library, Rhodes University, Grahamstown.
329
killing of 1213, 33, 178, 241242 Comaroff, John 54
as a means of control and reproduction Commission of Inquiry 67, 28, 3233, 4041,
105108 5557, 58, 60, 7278, 125126, 134,
trade in (see trade) 235236
censorship 169170 compensation, for losses (see under settlers)
census 112, 199200, 211 Cory, George 28, 91, 128139, 158159, 192, 221
Chakrabarty, Dipesh 21, 225226, 228, 237, Cosser, Marijke 9091
248, 249, 253 counter-insurgency
change 22 and insurgency 201, 216
Ciskei 145, 157, 197199 prose of 33, 196, 201, 205, 207217
(see also homelands; Transkei) Crais, Clifton 33, 106108, 192193, 199201,
class 1517, 102, 145, 192, 246, 257 214215
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Elliot, Major 203, 207, 214215 Glenelg, Lord 56, 7273, 115117, 134
ethnography 111116, 165, 178180, 198200, globalisation 1718, 195, 257259, 269
228, 250 Gluckman, Max 143144
evidence 9, 10, 27, 32, 35, 38, 42, 5457, 61, Godlonton, Robert 28, 116124, 125126,
94, 103, 117118, 126, 133, 145, 177, 205, 134139, 151, 153, 156, 171
216217, 221, 225, 227, 230, 236237, Gosani 131132
249250, 265 government, colonial
(see also texts; truth and lies) resistance to (see resistance)
modes of 7, 914, 22, 2730, 3163, 94, sources of information 3738, 4246, 55,
103, 126127, 137, 189, 194195, 217, 138139, 213
220222, 250, 255, 259260, 262 (see also evidence)
exhibitions, museum 29, 6970, 176, Gqunukhwebe 52
221226, 241, 248 grain, reading against and along 41, 63, 103,
(see also museums) 278, 283
colonial history exhibition at the Albany Guattari, Felix 2324
museum (see under museums) Guha, Ranajit 19, 29, 63, 196, 201, 216217,
246249, 256
F
feminist criticism 216217, 279, 287, H
298299n7 Hall, Stuart 17
Fingo (Fingoe) (see Mfengu) Halse, Henry James 230232, 235
Foucault, Michel 2425, 192, 249250, 266267 Hammond-Tooke, WD 145147, 148, 157, 198199
frontier 5051, 5354, 66, 114116, 149, 192, Hegel, Georg 1819
221, 240, 250 Hermanus 136139, 221
Index 331
Hintsa 129138, 151, 154155, 158160, 181184, history (see also historicism; historiography)
206208, 215, 229242, 267 from below 19
colonial and settler attitudes towards discipline of 78, 163
4041, 4647, 6566, 7375, 84, discourse of 11, 13
118121 event of 10, 13, 30, 263269
colonial demand for cattle and horses historiography (see historiography)
(see under cattle) history after apartheid 1315, 18, 219251, 265
Commission of Inquiry into death of (see nationalist (see history, nationalist)
Commission of Inquiry) oral 3940
imprisonment of 34, 49, 78, 136 patriotic (see under history, nationalist)
inspiration for nationalists 237240 precolonial (see history, precolonial)
killing of 4, 6, 12, 4849, 5557, 58, racial 138139
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righthand house 35, 145148, 198, 200 152153, 155156, 174175, 204, 206,
House of Phalo 33, 97, 105 208, 215
humanitarians, liberal 101102, 125126, 132, landscape 27, 6877, 79, 8393, 174175, 181
138, 232, 236 Legassick, Martin 15, 54, 192, 273275n33
hut tax (see taxes) Lester, Alan 102
letters (see under texts)
I lies (see truth and lies)
identity 7071, 102 Lindinxuwa 129132
India 18 lines of flight 2324
indirect rule 163, 203204, 209216, 245 London Missionary Society 112, 117118
industrialisation 144, 146, 172, 175177, 180181 Lovedale Press 29, 147, 169170
information, colonial sources of (see under
government, colonial) M
invalidation, strategic 27, 29, 103, 146, 149, 154156, MacMillan, WH 143144
169, 188189, 194, 230, 254, 262, 265 Mager, Anne 199
IOns, Frederick 70, 8993 magistrates 130, 170, 200217
(see also Death of Hintsa (Frederick IOns)) maps (see under texts)
Ismail, Qadri 259, 263 Maqoma 34, 36, 51, 56, 61, 135, 136, 150,
Ityala Lamawele 146, 153, 158, 161171, 184, 188 154155, 159, 162
marginalisation (see marginality)
J marginality 27, 51, 59, 62, 165, 220, 228, 230,
Jackson, Arthur O 197198 257259, 268, 274
Jordan, AC 162, 164, 168, 183, 188 Marks, Shula 14
Julie, Windfogel 5859 Marxism (see Marxist scholarship)
Index 333
Marxist scholarship 15, 2021, 24, 126, 174175, N
273275n33 narration and narratives 4, 813, 20, 23, 27,
Marx, Karl 18, 103 3436, 39, 42, 72, 75, 77, 88, 9293,
Mbebe 209210 99, 124126, 138, 146, 157158, 166,
McClintock, Anne 1617 172, 185189, 237, 239, 244, 254, 259,
Mda, Mda 105 264268
Mda, Zakes 1213 Narrative of a Voyage 52, 77, 8182
mfecane 152 Narrative of the irruption of the Kafir hordes 116
Mfengu 49, 8384, 120124, 151154, 159, 162, nationalism, Afrikaner 175, 186187
181183, 202204 nationalism, anti-colonial 10, 16, 2021, 29,
portrayal as slaves (see slavery) 49, 141146, 156, 160, 166167, 172, 181,
Michell, Charles Cornwallis 5152, 69, 82, 186188, 193, 194, 216217, 225226,
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Index 335
segregation 103, 143147, 157, 171, 174, 177, 181, structures, imaginary 1011, 13, 27, 29, 6870,
194195, 268 81, 125128, 136, 138, 156157, 162,
(see also apartheid) 167, 169, 196, 201, 204, 217, 221222,
serfdom 105, 122, 152153 254255, 265, 267268
(see also slavery) subaltern 1823, 5758, 6263, 68, 9394,
settlers 6668, 7277, 117118, 119, 123125, 97, 108, 128, 136139, 192193, 195,
230, 233 201, 220, 226, 228230, 243250,
claimed losses for compensation 73, 253258, 263, 265, 268269
108110, 120 subalternity 19, 24, 108, 192195,
history (see history, settler) 248250, 253255
Shepstone, Theophilus 115 subaltern studies 1923, 228, 249,
Shohat, Ella 1617 255258
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Index 337
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