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Enthnography and Administration: a Study of Anglo-Tiv ‘Working Misunderstanding’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

D. C. Dorward
Affiliation:
C.W.A.S., University of Birmingham

Extract

Colonial rule embodied as a concomitant aspect ideological justifications based on racial and cultural differences, acceptance of which by the governed led to the development of a symbiotic relationship between the cultures of paternalism and subservience, a symbiosis often involving numerous ‘working misunderstandings’ arising from the application of conceptual models which had proven meaningful under quite different circumstances. This article examines the conceptual models which influenced European perceptions of Tiv society, the consequent ‘working misunderstandings’ which underlay the symbiotic relationship between government and a society subject to its jurisdiction but which had its own particular traditions, and the changes which appear to have occurred in Tiv value systems, institutions, and traditions in response to new situations. It is hoped that it will be of general interest to social and political historians, as well as those concerned with methodological problems relating to the use of ethnographic data.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1974

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References

1 While assuming full responsibility, I wish to thank Professor J. Peterson, Dr R. Tangri, Dr Adrian Edwards, and Dr J. Kaufert for their comments and criticisms of an earlier draft of this paper presented in Feb. 1972 at the Institute of African Studies, Fourah Bay College, Sierra Leone.

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17 Lugard's handling of the Abinsi affair and the discrepancies in the various despatches form a complex story, beyond the scope of this paper.Dorward, D. C., ‘A Political and Social History of the Tiv People of Northern Nigeria, 1900–1939’ (London, Ph.D., 1971), 123–35.Google Scholar

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19 Those aspects of Tiv social organization, which Sahlins has argued facilitated Tiv military success against similarly fragmentary societies such as those of the Idoma and Udam peoples, were of little advantage when confronting a disciplined, better armed, and largely self-sufficient fighting force such as the West African Frontier Force. However Tiv tactics used against the W.A.F.F. and the political problems to a military solution may help to explain Tiv pre-colonial relations with such powerful neighbouring states as the Jukun kingdom of Wukari and Muri Emirate. Sahlins, M.D., “The Segmentary Lineage; An organization of predatory expansion”, American Anthropologist, LXIII (1961), 322–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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26 Based on a broad sample of Tiv ‘traditions’ recorded at various stages throughout the colonial era. The Kogi example was taken from Walter, Watt, Diary, 6–9 11. 1907, Rhodes House, Oxford.Google Scholar

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28 Political power through the control of meat was initially suggested to me by Dr Adrian Edwards, who has done extensive fieldwork among the Tiv, while the idea of access to women as a mechanism of Tiv political control was posited by Dr K. Hart of the University of Manchester. Large numbers of wives also provided a successful elder with the necessary labour force required to prepare cotton yam, which the elder then wove into strips for tugudu and other Tiv cloths. There was a considerable Tiv cloth trade with Hausa merchants, thereby generating an economic base for political power. The author is currently engaged in research on the problems of pre-colonial trade and currency among the Tiv.

29 Povedin to Commissioner Eastern Province, 11 04. 1911, C.O. 520/104/18566.Google Scholar

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37 Owing to the absence of chiefs, near anarchy was assumed to be the normal condition of life.

38 By ‘marginal men’ I mean those individuals who are marginally located in the social structure, those who ‘… have been imperfectly socialized into the dominant value system [of the indigenous culture] and therefore have no [or least] vested interest in maintaining it’. In other words, those who have the least to lose and potentially the most to gain by changes in the established order.Edwards, J. M. B., ‘Creativity: Social Aspects’, International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, David, L. Sills ed. (N. Y., 1968),Google Scholar in, 8. For a study applying the concepts of marginality see, Dickie-Clark, H. F., The Marginal Situation: A sociological study of a Coloured Group (London, 1966).Google Scholar

39 Based on a sample of twenty-six Assessment Reports compiled between 1982 and 1917.

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52 Though Abraham makes passing reference to Malinowski (pp. 27, 28), neither he nor Downes were decidedly influenced by any ‘school’ of anthropology. This is equally true of a more concise work on Dowries's image of Tiv religion which has been posthumously published. Downes, R. M., Tiv, Religion (Ibadan, 1971).Google Scholar

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55 Pembleton to Secretary, Northern Provinces, 27 04 1932, N.A.K., S.N.P. 17404.Google Scholar

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65 Martin Dent has referred to these differing conceptual images of chieftaincy in, Dent, M., ‘A Minority Party—The UMBC’, 466.Google Scholar

66 One of the accusations against those who agitated for a Tor Tiv was that they were ‘…seeking personal advancement’. Minutes of the Tiv Central Council, Feb. Feb., 1937 N.A.I., C.S.O. 28416.

67 Casalegglo, E. N., Die Land Sal Sy Vrug Gee (Cape Town, 1965), 182.Google Scholar

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74 MacBride, , Tiv Tribal Administration Progress Report, 6 05 1941, N.A.K., S.N.P. A.R.7sol;I.N.T./T/40.Google Scholar

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77 Based on conversation with Beck, D. M. H., 7 05 1969. Pembleton, Minute, n.d., N.A.K., S.N.P. A.R/I.N.T./T/40.Google Scholar

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79 The best-known example is Akiga's Story, though most of the original flavour has been lost in translation and Dr East, by rearranging extracts, imposed his own historical interpretation. Akiga, , Ahiga': Story, passim. An unexpurguted translation of Akiga's original Tiv manuscript has recently been completed, under the auspices of the Institute of African Studies, Ibadan, and it is to be hoped that a publisher will soon be found.Google Scholar

80 Tiv society was not without internal conflicts, clashes between interest groups within Tiv society contributing to the dynamics of cultural change. There were sporadic signs of such tension during the 1940s, e.g. Tor Msor in 1944 ‘… initiated by disgruntled elements [who], failing to secure office under the District Head, sought to demonstrate their power of organization and leadership by imposing a parallel structure.…’, Kumendur in 1945, and Garyo in 1948, However, the government, after its experience with Haakaa and Nyambua, was quick to suppress such movements, the ‘ringleaders’ being tried in the Native Courts, thereby strengthening or reinforcing the authority of the patriarchs, and such movements rarely attracted more than a parochial following. Adamu, H. R., ‘Atem Tyough; The Tiv Revolt of 1960–1966’, Pan-Africanist, I (1971), 21.Google ScholarMacBride, , Annual Report for Benue Province, 1948, N.A.K., S.N.P. 45595.Google Scholar

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83 The two classics on chief less societies are African Political Systems and Tribes Without Rulers, which contain chapters on the Nuer and Tiv, respectively. Fortes, M. and Evans-Pritchard, E.E., eds., African Political Systems (London, 1940).Google ScholarMiddleton, J. and Tait, D., eds., Tribes Without Rulers (London, 1958).Google Scholar

84 Apthorpe, J., ‘The Introduction of Bureaucracy into African Politics’, Journal of African Administration, XII (1960), 130.Google ScholarGluckman, M., Politics. Law and Ritual in Tribal Society (Oxford, 1965), 191213.Google Scholar For a survey of the analytical ambiguities of political anthropology see, Easton, D., ‘Political Anthropology’, Biennial Review of Anthropology (1959), 210–47.Google Scholar

85 Dent, M., ‘A Minority Party—The UMBC’, op. cit.Google Scholar

86 Dent, M., ‘Tarka and the Tiv; A Perspective on Nigerian Federation’, Nigeria, Melson, R. and Wolpe, H., eds. (Michigan, 1971), 451452.Google Scholar Tarka's repeated electoral successes have been depicted as a break with the tradition of rotation of office or ‘eat and give to your brother’, an example of the pervasive power of models. Ibid. 450.

87 Dent, M., ‘The Military and Politics; A Study of the Relations between the Army and the Political Process in Nigeria’,Google ScholarIbid. 388, 399.

88 The myth of Takaruku's skull was related to me by Dr Adrian Edwards, who recorded it while in Tivland during the civil war and who has generously given me access to his notes.

89 Goody, J. and Watt, I., ‘The Consequences of Literacy’, 30.Google Scholar

90 MacBride, , Tiv Tribal Administration Progress Report, 6 05 1941, N.A.K., S.N.P. A.R./I.N.T./T/40).Google Scholar