Butterflies & Barbarians by Patrick Harries
ISBN: 9781868144488
Publisher: Wits University Press, 2007
Paperback, 260 pages
Patrick Harries’s Butterflies and Barbarians fills an important gap … by detailing Swiss missionaries’ part in creating European knowledge about south-eastern Africa in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
—Elizabeth Green Musselman, Journal of Southern African Studies
Swiss missionaries played an important role in explaining Africa to the literate (European) world in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. This book emphasises how these European intellectuals, brought to deep rural areas of south-eastern Africa by their vocation, formulated and ordered knowledge about the continent.
Patrick Harries examines how local people absorbed imported ideas into their own body of knowledge. Through a process of interchange and compromise, Africans adapted foreign ways of seeing and doing things, and rapidly made them their own. This is a history of new ideas and practices that shook African societies before and during the early years of colonialism. It is equally a history of ordinary people and their ability to adapt and subvert these ideas.