Navigating Colonial Orders: Norwegian Entrepreneurship in Africa and Oceania
Penulis
: Kirsten Alsaker Kjerland and Bjørn Enge Bertelsen
Subyek
: Norway—Foreign economic relations—Africa, Norway—Foreign economic
relations—Oceania, Colonies—Africa—Economic conditions, Colonies—Oceania—Economic conditions, Entrepreneurship—Africa—
History, Africa—Foreign
economic relations—Norway, Oceania—Foreign economic relations—
Norway
Penerbit
: Berghahn Books
Ringkasan :A Norwegian in Africa – in the 1680s? What? Until a decade ago, such
questions as well as the exchange of odd stories of a similar sort were
the order of the lunchroom day between two Africanists at the University
of Bergen. These stories were defi nitely sidetracks for both, whose
respective PhD dissertations were concerned with Indian Ocean trade
and Sufi sm and the struggle for land in rural colonial Kenya. Curiosity
soon gave way, however, to academic obsession, and in October 2002 a
popular science anthology about Norwegians in Africa and Africans in
Norway was published, entitled Nordmenn i Afrika – afrikanere i Norge
(Kjerland and Bang 2002). This anthology focused mainly on Norwegians
in Africa, as well as a minor section presenting examples of some
unfortunate few Africans stranded in the cold north.
We all know the wonderful sound of a positive review – not to mention
the euphoria caused by several. To Anne K. Bang’s and my own
amazement, however, feedback primarily came in the form of numerous
calls, lett ers and emails from accidental readers who had family
connections with African histories, who possessed personal archives
and photo albums or who wanted to know more about particular people
or contexts mentioned in the anthology. In sum, all this led to our
conviction that the story of Norwegians in Africa was a thoroughly
underresearched area – a piñata calling out for a much more decisive
strike, if you will. With this in mind, serious research eff orts were soon
focused towards challenging some well-established myths, centred on
a handful of questions.
Why did a not insignifi cant number of Norwegians head towards
Africa at a time when the United States of America was the magnet
– a land of milk and honey that became the new home of some eight
hundred thousand Norwegians between the 1830s and the 1930s? Who
were those few who did not follow the mainstream? What were their
motives, where did they end up and what did they do? Few indeed; in
1911 the offi cial number of Norwegians in South Africa (where most went) was some sixteen hundred persons, mainly men. The majority
lived in Natal, in and near Durban, where the only Norwegian settlement
initiated by a South African government representative was
found. In the early 1880s some two hundred Norwegian men, women
and children arrived at the same time, on the same boat, in Port Shepstone.
They sett led nearby on forty equally sized plots (ca. one hundred
acres each) surrounded by Zulu grass huts. Thirty years later some were
still there, but at that moment most of the Norwegians (more than one
thousand people) lived in Durban itself. A city within the city included
a Norwegian church, a Norwegian cultural hall, a Norwegian school,
a Norwegian rowing club, a Norwegian choir and a newspaper in the
Norwegian language, not to mention the many Norwegian chandlers
deeply involved in shipping and trade. Given that the Norwegians in
this town had money in their pockets, Norwegian culinary specialities
of those days – pultost (a cheese made from soured milk fl avoured with
caraway seeds) and akevitt (aquavit) – were easily accessible (Saxe 1914;
Semmingsen 1950).
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