Felix Eboue and the Chiefs: Perceptions of Power in Early Oubangui-Chari

Felix Eboue and the Chiefs: Perceptions of Power in Early Oubangui-Chari

Author: 
Weinstein, Brian
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Date published: 
1970
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of African History
Source: 
Journal of African History, Vol.11,No.1,1970,pp107-126
Abstract: 

Discussions about ‘direct’ administration and ‘indirect’ administration, with regard to French and British colonial policies, are less important than the question of who—local leaders or colonial administrators—had power over the lives of Africans. Monthly reports written by heads of subdivisions, the smallest French administrative units in a colony like Oubangui-Chari, are the most important written source of information for the day-to-day events of an area. They are also a source for the point of view of the administrator, often quite different from the point of view of chiefs and villagers. The European often sees himself as the central figure and colonial administrative problems as the central issues for everyone. African memories of the same period indicate that the European may have been considered less important by African peasants than their chief, whether the chief had a legitimate traditional basis or not, and that administrative issues were considered less important than certain local problems unknown to the European. This study of Félix Eboué and Raymond Sokambi, an administrator and a chief in Oubangui-Chari, shows that an attempt to examine perceptions of power—one basis for power—is a way to understand relations between the colonial administration and African society.

Language: 

CITATION: Weinstein, Brian. Felix Eboue and the Chiefs: Perceptions of Power in Early Oubangui-Chari . : Cambridge University Press , 1970. Journal of African History, Vol.11,No.1,1970,pp107-126 - Available at: https://library.au.int/felix-eboue-and-chiefs-perceptions-power-early-oubangui-chari-3