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Paperback Lamu: History, Society, and Family in an East African Port City Book

ISBN: 1558761071

ISBN13: 9781558761070

Lamu: History, Society, and Family in an East African Port City

This book depicts the history of Lamu, once an important East African port city, now known as an unspoiled tourist destination and scenic location for Hollywood movies.


For centuries, communities from India, Yemen, and Oman intermingled with coastal and central African groups. This unique situation provides the author with a vantage point to observe non-European multicultural interaction. Oral traditions are central to this study. Records from both the distant past and the more recent period give voice to the opinions of the WaAmu on many issues: Islam, slavery, material culture, and the wide-ranging effects of colo-nialism. We see how religious practices differed between slaves who were brought to the Lamu hinterland and island, the Muslim Shi'a (who were themselves divided), and the orthodox Sunni community and the Hadramis, who introduced elements of Sufism. When outsiders threatened, the diverse religious groups almost always united against the opposition.


The Portuguese and Turks put in an appearance, as did the French, Americans, and the Germans, who had imperial designs on the Lamu archi-pelago. But it was the British who triumphed in the late nineteenth century. The author describes internecine conflicts, the importance of Islam, and repeated efforts to thwart the British.


Romero weaves into her account fascinating aspects of Lamu's material culture, social structure, and family life among those who are called the Swahili.


Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$26.95
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Customer Reviews

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A pair of reviews for Lamu

"With this sensible book, Romero has prepared a careful study of modern Lamu that dissects fact from fantasy. The author provides new insights into the impact of slavery and the slave trade on the upper East African coast, on the introduction of British colonial rule and the British rivalries with German and French merchants and their diplomatic supporters, on health issues, on agricultural practices, and on religious and other ceremonial practices. Her discussion of the transition from Arab to Swahili to Anglo-Swahili to African Arab culture is important, and is a reflection of Lamu's crossroads position commercially and culturally. Romero's treatment of homosexuality and related sexual activities is, given Lamu's notoriety, rather abbreviated. This book is an example of microhistory, well practiced, and in no antiquarian mode." -Choice "provides a wealth of precious information...offers the reader documentary sources" --Journal of Islamic Studies 10, no. 2 (1999)
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