Samudzi Defense: Capturing German South West Africa: Racial Production, Land Claims, and Belonging in the Afterlife of the Herero and Nama Genocide

Date
Location
4/26/21 11:00am

 

Capturing German South West Africa: Racial Production, Land Claims, and Belonging in the Afterlife of the Herero and Nama Genocide


Zoe Samudzi
 

The referenced media source is missing and needs to be re-embedded.
This dissertation seeks to describe how German imperial statecraft, as driven by Lebensraum, was shaped by an anti-Black conception of biologized citizenship. Further, the genocidal Herero Wars (1904-08) in German South West Africa (present-day Namibia) materialized biomedical and political structures that endure in the present. I argue this using three case studies tethering present materialities to colonial-era biomedicine. The first is the collection and ongoing incarceration of Herero and Nama skulls in western archives. The second is a transnational analysis of anthropologist Eugen Fischer's racialist "Bastard studies" to clarify the genocide continuity thesis via eugenic research in the colony being folded into the metropole. And the last is a connection of contemporary fixations on the genomic sequencing of the San people to genomic sovereignty, the nationalizations of genetic ancestry, and indigeneity.

 

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