General editor’s introduction
Introduction – Joseph Hodge and Gerald Hödl
PART I: Meanings of development in twentieth-century
colonialism
1. From dead end to new lease of life: development in South-Eastern
Tanganyika from the late 1930s to the 1950s – Juhani Koponen
2. Developing ‘Portuguese Africa’ in late colonialism: confronting
discourses – Cláudia Castelo
3. A history of maendeleo: the concept of ‘development’ in
Tanganyika’s late colonial public sphere – Emma Hunter
PART II: Economic and rural development
4. The ‘private’face of African development planning during the
Second World War – Billy Frank
5. Ecological concepts of development? The case of colonial Zambia
– Sven Speek
6. Developing rural Africa: rural development discourse in colonial
Zimbabwe, 1944–79 – E.Kushinga Makombe
7. The tractor as a tool of development? The mythologies and
legacies of mechanised tropical agriculture in French Africa,
1944–56 – Céline Pessis
PART III: Social development and welfare
8. From precondition to goal of development: health and medicine in
the planning and politics of British Tanganyika – Walter
Bruchhausen
9. ‘Keystone of progress’ and mise en valeur d’ensemble: British
and French colonial discourses on education for development in the
interwar period – Walter Schicho
10. Development and education in British colonial Nigeria, 1940–55
– Uyilawa Usuanlele
11. Motherhood, morality, and social order: gender and development
discourse and practice in late colonial Africa – Barbara Bush
PART IV: Discourse-analytical and literary perspectives on colonial
development
12. The world the Portuguese developed: racial politics,
Luso-tropicalism, and development discourse in late Portuguese
colonialism – Caio Simões de Araújoand Iolanda Vasile
13. Notions of ‘développement’ in French colonial discourses:
changes in discursive practices and their social implications –
Françoise Dufour
14. Developing Africa in the colonial imagination: European and
African narrative writing of the interwar period – Martina Kopf
Epilogue: taking stock, looking ahead – Joseph Hodge
Bibliography
Index
Joseph M. Hodge is an Associate Professor in the Department of
History at West Virginia University
Gerald Hdl is an Independent Scholar
Martina Kopf is a Lecturer in African Studies and Development
Studies at the University of Vienna
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