EXPLORES THE HISTORY OF BRITAIN'S COLONIAL ARMY IN WEST AFRICA,
ESPECIALLY THE EXPERIENCES OF ORDINARY SOLDIERS RECRUITED IN THE
REGION.
_West African Soldiers in Britain's Colonial Army _explores the
complex and constantly changing experience of West African soldiers
under British command in Nigeria, the Gold Coast (now Ghana), Sierra
Leone, and the Gambia. Since cost and tropical disease limited the
deployment of British metropolitan troops to the region, British
colonial rule in West Africa depended heavily on locally recruited
soldiers and their families. This force became Britain's largest
colonial army in Sub-Saharan Africa.
_West African Soldiers_ looks at the development of this colonial
military from the conquest era of the late nineteenth century to
decolonization in the 1950s. Rather than describing the many battles
fought by this army both regionally and overseas, and informed by the
concept of military culture, the book looks at the broad and
overlapping themes of identity, culture, daily life, and violence.
Chapter topics include the enslaved origins of the force, military
identities including the myth of martial races, religious life, visual
symbols like uniforms and insignia, health care related to tropical
and sexually transmitted diseases, the experience of army wives,
disciplinary flogging, mutiny, day-to-day violence committed by
troops, and the employment of former soldiers by the colonial state.
Based on archival research in five countries, the book derives
inspiration from previous work on ordinary African soldiers in the
British and German colonies of East Africa and in French West Africa.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781800104198
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter