Madagascar: Conflicts Of Authority In The Great IslandThe world's fourth largest island, with a unique biological and physical endowment, Madagascar is home to an extraordinary insular civilization that has struggled for more than a century against external domination. In this sensitive introduction to the Indian Ocean's "great island," Philip Allen shows how family affinities and community loyalties at the foundation of Madagascar's culture have influenced Malagasy nationalism and forged island-wide traditions. These same principles have nonetheless engendered social cleavages and resistance to economic and political change. In chapters on modern Madagascar, Allen analyzes the inability of a series of regimes to maintain authority among a people deeply bound to rituals of communication with their spiritual environment. He demonstrates how the first Malagasy Republic became stigmatized by its lingering identification with French colonialism and how the nationalist revolution in 1972 soon hardened into autocratic radicalism. Allen explores the complex challenges facing Madagascar's resurgent democratic forces - including a need to conserve the island's irreplaceable biodiversity and to facilitate authentic participation in public affairs, without offending ancestral customs and local precedents. Finally, he discusses efforts to end Madagascar's economic and political dependence and to improve living conditions for its tragically impoverished population. |
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Page 64
For a time this Lumpenproletariat linked up with the literate bourgeois elites who
had always detested colonial and postcolonial authority . Together they made the
revolution of 1972 , and each expected to inherit its fruits . But only an elite ...
For a time this Lumpenproletariat linked up with the literate bourgeois elites who
had always detested colonial and postcolonial authority . Together they made the
revolution of 1972 , and each expected to inherit its fruits . But only an elite ...
Page 125
At independence in 1960 , educated Merina still dominated the impressive
Malagasy elite available to perform the work of the ... Like other migrant elites in
the least - privileged parts of the Third World , they are also sometimes subjected
to ...
At independence in 1960 , educated Merina still dominated the impressive
Malagasy elite available to perform the work of the ... Like other migrant elites in
the least - privileged parts of the Third World , they are also sometimes subjected
to ...
Page 189
75 PSD elites in the remote rural areas reserved local surpluses for their own
purposes , resisting forms of accumulation that threatened the stability of the
society they governed . In Hugon ' s terms , they tended to control , not to manage
, rice ...
75 PSD elites in the remote rural areas reserved local surpluses for their own
purposes , resisting forms of accumulation that threatened the stability of the
society they governed . In Hugon ' s terms , they tended to control , not to manage
, rice ...
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Contents
From Paternalism to Revolution | 31 |
Revolution as Myth | 79 |
Society in Modern Madagascar | 121 |
Copyright | |
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