'Let us swim in the pool of love': love letters and discourses of community composition in twentieth-century Tanzania

'Let us swim in the pool of love': love letters and discourses of community composition in twentieth-century Tanzania

Author: 
Prichard, Andreana
Publisher: 
Cambridge University Press
Date published: 
2013
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of African History
Source: 
Journal of African History, Vol. 54, No. 1, 2013, pp. 103-122
Abstract: 

This article uses a series of love letters exchanged between an African Anglican priest and a teacher-in-training before their marriage to investigate the relationship between the fashioning of the individual self, marriage, and community at the dawn of Tanganyika's independence. When seen through marriage's historical position as an institution central to community composition, these letters illustrate how the family – and the intimate process of building families – could become an alternate site of national imagination. These two young lovers understood their marriage as an explicitly political act of community composition, and cast themselves as characters in the drama of national imagination. In negotiating their twentieth-century marriage, Rose and Gideon became political innovators, selecting, producing, and testing the content and boundaries of the nation.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Prichard, Andreana. 'Let us swim in the pool of love': love letters and discourses of community composition in twentieth-century Tanzania . : Cambridge University Press , 2013. Journal of African History, Vol. 54, No. 1, 2013, pp. 103-122 - Available at: https://library.au.int/let-us-swim-pool-love-love-letters-and-discourses-community-composition-twentieth-century-tanzania-4