A Mask of Calm - Emotion and Founding The Kingdom of Bunyoro in The Sixteenth Century
A Mask of Calm - Emotion and Founding The Kingdom of Bunyoro in The Sixteenth Century
Century
Author(s): DAVID SCHOENBRUN
Source: Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 55, No. 3 (JULY 2013), pp. 634-664
Published by: Cambridge University Press
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Comparative Studies in Society and History 2013;55(3):634-664.
0010-4175/13 $15.00 © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 2013
doi: 10.1017/SOO10417513000273
Northwestern University
634
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A MASK OF CALM 635
political ritual. From Rukidi's time forward, kings like him would watch
silently as mediums worked. Whereas their ancestors had been healers and poli
ticians all at once, Rukidi and his heirs became politicians only.1
When Rukidi lived is uncertain, but traditions agree that his Biito dynasty
emerged in a world beset by famine, that he was a stranger in that world, and
that he developed a new arrangement of politics and ritual that changed the
balance of power in the region.2 "Three prolonged dry episodes" broke up
the otherwise moist and cool climate that prevailed during a highland east
African expression of the "Little Ice Age" (ca. 1270 to 1870). The second
began in the second half of the sixteenth century and lasted until the end of
the seventeenth.3 Rukidi's new dynasty probably took shape then, seeking to
close down a period in which the effectiveness of the public healing networks
that pursued collective well-being was called into question.4 But the climatic
oscillations that strained and sometimes broke local systems of agricultural
1 This synopsis draws on George Wilson, Arthur B. Fisher, and King Daudi Kasagama variants
published in Harry H. Johnston, The Uganda Protectorate, vol. 2 (London: Hutchinson, 1904),
594-600; Ruth Fisher, Twilight Tales of the Black Bagando: The Traditional History of Bunyoro
Kitara, a Former Ugandan Kingdom, 2d ed. (London: Frank Cass, 1970 [1911]), 111-27; Here
menzilda K. Karubanga, Bukya Nibwira [The sun rises but also sets] (Kampala: Eagle Press,
1949), 6-7; Petero Bikunya, Ky'Abakama ba Bunyoro [Of the kings of Bunyoro] (London:
Sheldon Press, 1927), 37-51; K. W., "Abakama ba Bunyoro-Kitara," Uganda Journal 4, 1
(1936): 65-74, here 65-67; and John Nyakatura, Abakama ba Bunyoro Kitara: Abatembuzi, Abac
wezi, Ababito (St. Justin, Quebec: W.-H. Gagne & Sons, 1947), 66-76. King Tito Gafabusa Winyi
IV used "K. W." as a pseudonym, writing in exile with his father, Kabaleega, in the Seychelles
Islands from 1899 to 1923.
2 Peter Robertshaw and David Taylor, "Climate Change and the Rise of Political Complexity in
Western Uganda," Journal of African History 41, 1 (2000): 1-28, here 19; Marshall Sahlins, "The
Stranger-King or, Elementary Forms of the Politics of Life," Indonesia and the Malay World 36
(2008): 177-99, here 178-85; Renee Louise Tantala, "The Early History of Kitara in Western
Uganda: Process Models of Religious and Political Change," PhD diss., University of Wisconsin
at Madison, 1989, 746-75; Jean-Pierre Chrétien, The Great Lakes of Africa: Two Thousand
Years of History, Scott Straus, trans. (Boston: Zone Books, 2003), 139-99.
3 Dirk Verschuren, Kathleen R. Laird, and Brian R. Cumming, "Rainfall and Drought in Equa
torial East Africa during the Past 1,100 Years," Nature 403 (2000): 410-34, here 410, 413; Peter
Robertshaw, David Taylor, Shane Doyle, and Robert Marchant, "Famine, Climate, and Crisis in
Western Uganda," in Richard W. Battarbee, Françoise Gasse, and Catherine E. Stickley, eds.,
Past Climate Variability through Europe and Africa (Dordrecht: Springer Verlag, 2004), 542^13,
545—46; John A. Matthews and Keith R. Briffa, "The 'Little Ice Age': Re-evaluation of an Evolving
Concept," Geografiska Annaler. Series A, Physical Geography 87, 1, special issue: "Climate
Change and Variability" (2005): 17-36, here 20-21.
4 Iris Berger, Religion and Resistance: East African Kingdoms in the Precolonial Period (Ter
vuren: Musée Royal de l'Afrique Centrale, 1981), 67-87; Tantala, "Early History," 303-32;
David Schoenbrun, A Green Place, A Good Place: Agrarian Change, Gender, and Social Identity
in the Great Lakes Region to the 15th Century (Portsmouth: Heinemann Publishers, 1998), 203-6;
Chrétien, Great Lakes, 101-3, 147^19; Jan Vansina, Antecedents to Modern Rwanda: TheNyiginya
Dynasty (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004), 45-46; Neil Kodesh, Beyond the Royal
Gaze: Clanship and Public Healing in Buganda (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press,
2010), 85, 98-130, 181.
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636 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
abundance did not possess "inherent causal logics" that produced the historical
outcome of a new Biito dynasty.5
Historians of radical social change involving widespread violence, like
Rukidi's new sovereignty, warn against letting crises over-determine out
comes.6 Although the precise nature of a crisis may be unclear, its aftermaths
remain fertile ground for studying the interplay of power politics and affective
life. Developing meanings for a crisis—making sense of it—helps initiate an
aftermath.7 The focus on aftermaths not only grounds the historical weight
of violence; the aftermath is often the only temporal setting in which violence
is represented. The sources available to scholars of violence may focus on
violent events, but they take shape in, and are fundamentally interested in creat
ing aftermaths for those violent events.8 These qualities of the aftermath as a
time of coming to terms with the moral implications of loss and survival
mean that narratives about the often-violent founding of new political forms
address emotional themes of suffering as well as the pursuit of legitimation.
Paul Connerton argues that by attending to a spirit of mourning in histori
cal narratives, like that about Rukidi, we sharpen our understandings that any
quest to legitimate a contemporary arrangement of power guides the production
of the narrative in the aftermath of trauma.9 People forget, choose silence or are
silenced, and orient their bodies in ways that generate a particular awareness of
a painful past and shape narratives about that past. For example, people sub
jected to enslavement, historians and literary critics have long told us, might
choose not to recall their degrading experiences, or they might find in their
memories of enslavement sources for respectability in a social context
unfriendly to a slave past.10 To be sure, slaves stmggled in ways that "subverted
and contested those ideologies" that judged them, but stories of those struggles
9 Paul Connerton, The Spirit of Mourning: History, Memory and the Body (Cambridge: Cam
bridge University Press, 2011), 3-30.
10 Paul Lovejoy, "Autobiography and Memory: Gustavus Vassa, alias Olaudah Equiano, the
African," Slavery and Abolition 27, 3 (2006): 317-47; Saidiya Hartman, Lose Your Mother: A
Journey along the Atlantic Slave Route (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007), 121-29;
and Glassman, War of Words, 20-22.
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A MASK OF CALM 637
contain voids, chosen or otherwise.11 Whatever else these voids hold, they hold
the soil of reinvention and self-fashioning as well as the weight of inequality
and power politics. In Rukidi's story, such orientations to aftermaths reveal
that violence upended sovereignty's claims to its legitimate use and produced
burdens of loss that exceeded the capacity of conventional ritual practice to
manage.
Legitimation and mourning shape historical narratives about reconfigur
ing sovereignty in the aftermaths of its violence because they deftly inflect
the problem of accountability.12 In the Nyoro histories we will shortly encoun
ter, struggles over accountability marked the newly pluralistic world in which
public healing faced a dismal bottom line that forced it to reckon with the arro
gant rule of a stranger-king. Rukidi's traditions draw offers of renewal from a
web of silence; silencing, forgetting, and remembering the radical change in
sovereignty that followed a pronounced famine. Saying little about that time
framed "public understanding ... of eternal themes of loss, mourning, sacrifice
and redemption," as the quiet between notes in a piece of music gives them
life.13 In these intervals, people found latitude to conduct the work of mourning
and redemption. In an aftermath of dislocation, people could "suspend or trun
cate open conflict over" its meanings, deflecting questions about accountability
with silence.14 Mourning and legitimation run through historical narratives,
initiating an aftermath to structural violence, and generating the major claim
of this essay: that loss and worry shape narratives of transformed sovereign
authority, reviving it in the aftermaths of structural violence. Mourning lends
emotional depth and counterpoint to matters of bureaucracy, economy,
gender, and so forth, in crafting satisfying accounts of transformation and
accountability in political life.
By far the most common approach to such dynastic traditions understands
them to charter an existing social order.15 Whether traditions credit that order
with the aura of antiquity or strengthen it by excluding social elements discor
dant with the new orchestrations of power, they are exercises in legitimation.
Stories about Rukidi simultaneously summoned the ennobling antiquity of
public healing and entertained discomforting resistance to his domination.
1 ' Dylan C. Penningroth, "The Claims of Slaves and Ex-Slaves to Family and Property: A Trans
atlantic Comparison," American Historical Review 112, 4 (2007): 1039—69, here 1047; Vincent
Brown, "Social Death and Political Life in the Study of Slavery," American Historical Review
114, 5 (2009): 1231-49, here 1232ff.
12 John Lonsdale, "Political Accountability in African History," in Patrick Chabal, ed., Political
Domination in Africa (1986), 126-30, 135.
13 Jay Winter, "Thinking about Silence," in Effat Ben Ze'ev, Ruth Ginio, and Jay Winter, eds.,
Shadows of War: A Social History of Silence in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni
versity Press, 2010), 4; Connerton, Spirit of Mourning, 64, 66-67.
14 Winter, "Thinking about Silence," 5.
15 Jan Vansina, Oral Tradition as History (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985),
103-5.
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638 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
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A MASK OF CALM 639
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64O DAVID SCHOENBRUN
24 Semakula Kiwanuka, A History of Buganda to 1900 (New York: Africana Publishing Corpor
ation, 1972), 17-22; Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 75-84; K. W., "Abakama ba Bunyoro-Kitara,"
Uganda Journal 3, 2 (1935): 149-55; 4, 1 (1936): 65-74; 5, 2 (1937): 70-84; Johnston,
Uganda Protectorate, vol. 2, 594-600.
25 Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 78; Beattie, Nyoro State, 73-75; Doyle, Crisis & Decline, 177-79.
26 John Hanning Speke, Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile (Edinburgh and
London: William Blackwood & Sons, 1863), 498-577; James Augustus Grant, A Walk across
Africa or Domestic Scenes from My Nile Journal (Edinburgh and London: William Blackwood
& Sons, 1864), 266-67; Samuel White Baker, The Albert N'yanza: Great Basin of the Nile and
Exploration of the Nile Sources, vol. 2 (London: Macmillan, 1866), 394-95; Gaetano Casati,
Ten Years in Equatorial Africa and the Return with Emin Pasha, vol. 2 (London: F. Wame,
1891), 47, 273; Georg August Schweinfurth, Friedrich Ratzel, Robert William Felkin, and
Gustav Hartlaub, Emin Pasha in Central Africa: Being a Collection of His Letters and Journals
(New York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1889), 84, 92; Wilhelm Junker, Travels in Africa during the
Years 1882-1886, A. FL Keane, trans. (London: Chapman and Flail, 1892), 531.
27 David Henige, The Chronology of Oral Tradition: Quest for a Chimera (Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1974), 114. Genealogies sequence "related" figures into Tembuzi, Cwezi, and Biito "dynas
ties." During the Biito period, the dynastic idea was projected onto the two older groups. See Iris
Berger and Carole Buchanan, "The Cwezi Cults and the History of Western Uganda," in Joseph T.
Gallagher, ed., East African Culture History (Syracuse: Maxwell School, 1976), 43-78; Tantala,
"Early History," 520-877; Schoenbrun, Green Place, 236-40; Chrétien, Great Lakes, 101-5.
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A MASK OF CALM 641
they take up.28 They were no more important to the taletellers and their audi
ences than were charting the limits of early Biito political power, addressing
uncertainties over new and old affective ritual, and sculpting a forgetting of
the recent past. In the immediate aftermath of imperial violence in Bunyoro,
these traditions began to appear in print, by African authors who held important
positions at the royal court, in the colonial civil service, or at the mission
station.29 Profoundly influenced by life in these settings, their syntheses
mixed oral and written material.
It is challenging to sift durable sequences of terse, verbal imagery—
including representations or invocations of emotion—from the narrative
elements shaped by issues of great moment in the twentieth century.30 To do
so one must keep in mind formal and performative aspects of these traditions.
Formal movements of figures express symbolic messages. According to histor
ian Renee Tantala, movements on a vertical axis, between the surface of the
earth, where people lived, and underground, where spirits resided, reflected
the labor and politics of mediumship.31 The Cwezi figures, from the time
before the Biito, often moved in this fashion, between the two worlds. But
figures in the traditions about the establishment of the Biito dynasty moved
horizontally, on the surface of the earth. They moved where audiences lived.
The contrast between the two kinds of spatial movement evoked a profound
change in the emotional communities composed by the Biito. They promoted
a new scale of political alliance, rather than older public healing networks, as
the best way to initiate the aftermaths of famine's social collapse.
Secondly, specialists (bahanuuzi, "counselors," and bafumu, "diviner
doctors") with knowledge of dynastic, lineage, and family histories performed
stories about dynastic events, accompanied by music and dance. They worked
at homesteads, shrines, or chiefly enclosures, or at the Biito court.32 Many of
28 Bethwell Alan Ogot, "The Great Lakes Region," in Djibril Tamsir Niane, ed., UNESCO
General History ofAfrica IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century (Portsmouth: Heine
mann Publishers, 1984), 507-8; Renee Tantala, "Verbal and Visual Imagery in Kitara (Western
Uganda): Interpreting the Story of 'Isimbwa and Nyinamwiru,'" in Robert W. Harms, eds.,
Paths toward the Past: African Historical Essays in Honor of Jan Vansina (Atlanta: African
Studies Association Press, 1994), 224-26, 239, fh. 24.
29 Ruth Fisher, On the Borders of Pigmy Land (New York: Fleming H. RevellCo., 1905), 27-29,
59-65; Fisher, Twilight Tales, xli; Godfrey N. Uzoigwe, "Introduction," John W. Nyakatura,
Anatomy of an African Kingdom: A History of Bunyoro-Kitara, Teopista Muganwa, trans.
(New York: Nok Publishers, 1973), xv-xix; Carole Buchanan, "Of Kings and Traditions: The
Case of Bunyoro-Kitara," International Journal of African Historical Studies 7, 3 (1974): 516—
27, here 523; Iris Berger, "Deities, Dynasties, and Oral Traditions," in Joseph Miller, ed., The
African Past Speaks (Folkestone, Kent: Archon Publishers, 1980), 71; Tantala, "Early History,"
192-98.
30 Ibid., 187-223.
31 Ibid., 363-95, 434-35.
32 Robert William Felkin, "Notes on the Wanyoro Tribe of Central Africa," Proceedings of the
Royal Society of Edinburgh 19 (1891-1892): 136-92, here 151; John Roscoe, The Bakitara or
Banyoro (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1923), 130; Karubanga, Bukya Nibwira, 16;
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642 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
the episodes analyzed in this essay were reenacted at the outset of a reign, when
a new king had to "sleep two nights to the east of the Nile, and then march into
the country along the road which his ancestors are said to have taken."33
Perhaps for this reason, the published versions are broadly similar regarding
people's names, the names of the places they visited, the things they wore or
carried and their hair styles, as well as the basic sequence of events said to
have occurred—the "core images" of traditions.34 The core images reflect
moral and aesthetic inclinations that "contributed to continuity in transmission"
because their dense imagery elicited audiences' memories of or knowledge
about those places, figures, and their work.35 The sequences of events served
as memory codes for the performers and prompted audience members to
choose, depending on their past experiences, the "historical memory" proffered
them by the performers as if it were their own memory.36 These memory codes
were "techniques for connecting the verbal imagery of traditions with the visual
imagery of life experience."37 The cognitive and emotional medium for that
connection was the body.
The drama of speech comes through in vernacular versions that convey the
back and forth of conversation. Bikunya, Karubanga, and Nyakatura represent
the rhythms of formal conversational exchanges with stock phrasings such as
so and so "asked, saying..." or "replied, saying...." The metrical patterns
created in this manner mark these passages as mnemonics, designed to facilitate
memory work. They were rhythmic compliments to the movements of the
mouth, hands, arms, legs, and feet, in the acts of speaking, singing, and
dancing that constituted a performance and implicated an audience.38 Images
entail the eye, but in making and watching the performance of a tradition it
is the body's movements that evoke and sustain the image. Movement and visu
alization sustain one another in transmitting messages in traditions because
they create the opportunity to engage those messages as somehow congruent
with one's own experiences. Scholars have combed these core visual images
—but not the openings to emotion revealed in their content through the conver
sational rhythms of particular episodes—to show the ways in which "tellers of
Karugire, Kingdom ofNkore, 7; Tantala, "Early History," 145-82; Neil Kodesh, "History from the
Healer's Shrine: Genre, Historical Imagination, and Early Ganda History," Comparative Studies in
Society and History 49, 3 (2007): 527-52, here 530.
33 Felkin, "Notes on the Wanyoro," 160.
34 Dynastic traditions gloss founding periods with symbolically rich information; see Vansina,
Oral Tradition, 23-24, 166-72; Miller, African Past, 17-18.
35 Tantala, "Early History," 137^45, 179-82; Tantala, "Verbal and Visual Imagery," 228-32,
236.
36 Connerton, Spirit of Mourning, 143; Tantala, "Verbal and Visual Imagery," 232.
37 Tantala, "Verbal and Visual Imagery," 224; Connerton, Spirit of Mourning, 104-22.
38 Connerton, Spirit of Mourning, 114; see also John H. M. Beattie, "Spirit Mediumship as
Theatre," Royal Anthropological Institute News 20 (1977): 1-6.
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A MASK OF CALM 643
39 Tantala, "Early History," 44-48,179-82; Tantala, "Verbal and Visual Imagery," 223; Kodesh,
Beyond the Royal Gaze, 105-21.
40 Jan Vansina, Oral Tradition, 94-110, 114-25; Kodesh, Beyond the Royal Gaze, 24-26.
41 Connerton, Spirit of Mourning, 114-15; Harold Scheub, "African Oral Tradition and Litera
ture," African Studies Review 28, 2/3 (1985): 1-72, here 14-15; Tantala, "Verbal and Visual
Imagery," 224-26.
42 Felkin, "Notes on the Wanyoro," 169; Elizabeth Hopkins, "The Nyabingi Cult of Southwes
tern Uganda," in Robert I. Rotberg, ed., Rebellion in Black Africa (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1971), 61-62.
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644 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
43 Max Weber, Economy and Society: An Outline of Interpretive Sociology (Berkeley: Univer
sity of California Press, 1978), 904.
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A MASK OF CALM 645
ANTECEDENTS
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646 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
period. But they were the first to reconfigure political life by drawing promi
nent public healers inside a new capital to serve the interests of a king who
was not a public healer. Enormous scholarly attention has been paid to this
"moment" in the region's history, when the outlines of a political domination
free from the threats to its stability posed by ritual or judicial failure seem to
have first emerged. Christopher Wrigley argues that increased scales of econ
omic life meant that community norms of face-to-face contact in which little
kings managed ritual, economic, and legal affairs for villagers gave way to
kings, unseen by many, whom the many nonetheless imagined as their
own.50 These larger kingdoms were composed of multiple clans. Kodesh
refines Wrigley's model by thinking more expansively about those clans,
renaming them "networks of knowledge" and, in the process, revealing that
membership in a political community need not be restricted by the face-to-face
requirements of participation in ritual. Kodesh focuses on the health concerns,
economic aspirations, and conflict that drew people to form clans, which helps
us see clans as shifting alliances of dispersed healers, traders, and warriors, and
ordinary farmers and herders.51 He reformulates the struggles between clans
and kings over authority and the control of wealth.
Scholars tend to find the origins of dynastic rule in kings struggling with
clans in order to rule over larger territories.52 In Rwanda, Jan Vansina argues
that the ritual entanglements trapping kings in the life of the court came after
kings had grown into powerful raiders. Vansina finds that noble lineages in
eighteenth-century Rwanda saw in ritual a means to tie down their monarchs
at court and restrict their ability to maneuver politically away from the
center.53 Each of these approaches to monarchy explains something valuable
about a particular case. But they do not account for contexts of collapse, and
the burdens of loss they entailed, in chartering kingship. In Bunyoro, that
charter mourned catastrophic loss, deflected the accountability of those
whose actions allowed them to survive, and legitimated a transformed kingship
promising renewed prosperity, by figuring its founding king in motion from
calm strength through vulnerable negotiations over alliance and onward to
the calm strength fostered by the new arrangements these scholars have
worked to explain.
The emotional cycle presented in these traditions created public moments
for people to weigh past violence, before setting some burdens down and
recasting others as valued traces of the past. Domination, like nationhood,
50 Christopher Wrigley, Kingship and State: The Buganda Dynasty (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1996), 84-89, 166-68.
51 Kodesh, Beyond the Royal Gaze, 96-97.
52 David Newbury, Kings and Clans: Ijwi Island and the Lake Kivu Rift, 1780-1840 (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1991 ); Chrétien, Great Lakes, 88-94; Henri Médard, Le royaume du
Buganda au XIXe siècle (Paris: Karthala, 2007), 428-31; Doyle, Crisis & Decline, 15-16.
Vansina, Antecedents, 45—46, 90-95.
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A MASK OF CALM 647
required its subjects to share things in common, especially things they had for
gotten.54 But getting the past wrong together was difficult. Traditions about
Rukidi cast the losses people suffered in the violent collapse of the mid
sixteenth century in silence and banality. In effect, they offered audiences a
choice between forgetting about or reflecting on whatever losses they had
borne. In the context of colonial rule, and the particular indignities of imperial
defeat suffered in Bunyoro, this approach to loss that traditions about Rukidi
took left much business unfinished.55 The divide between public healing and
political power became a durable engine of later expansions and contractions
of political scale. That divide came into existence during Rukidi's time and
the "moment" of its creation involved both mourning and legitimation that
may be tracked in variants of tradition.
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648 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
'7>
i
Map 1 Rivers, Places, and Regions mentioned in the text. The Hills: 1) Kasunga, 2) Mubende, 3)
Masaka, 4) Kanyadwoli, 5) Epyemi or Haburu. The Lost Counties are, from west to east, Mwenge,
Buyaga, Bugangazi, Rugonjo, Buruli, Bugerere. Map by Laurel Childress.
59 Wilson variant, in Johnston, Uganda Protectorate, vol. 2, 596. For connections with Ganda
tradition, see Kodesh, Beyond the Royal Gaze, 109-11.
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A MASK OF CALM 649
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65O DAVID SCHOENBRUN
the river required of "the Babiito": "a baby, money, beads, and a cow."65
Bikunya recounts a parable about a child lost to its clan as part of the dedicated
offering required for Rukidi to cross the second of the two large bodies of
water.66 Each of these accounts uses sacrifice to replay the obligation to
make offerings to territorial spirits resident in particular features of the land
scape, such as fords. Sacrifices activated the loyalties, hierarchies, and prosper
ity of Biito networks. The episode raised questions for the audience about the
future promised by the newcomers' sacrificial violence.
The child to be sacrificed was chosen by a diviner-doctor named Nyakoka,
not Rukidi.67 "The Biito" responded collectively with a compensatory logic
that evoked the justice of a legal decision in a tort. In Nyakatura's version,
responsibility for the child's sacrifice blends idioms of fertility and natality:
"It happened, however, that as the beads were being thrown into the lake as
part of the sacrifice, Nyarwa's baby, who was starting to walk, swallowed
one of them."68 "The Biito" decided to kill the child of Rukidi's elder
brother, Nyarwa, in order to recover this bead, intended for the water spirit,
which the child had inadvertently swallowed.69 Their decision alienated
Nyarwa, and asserted that the value of exchange and adornment, embodied
in beads, exceeded the value of children, brotherhood, and motherhood.
In order to compensate his brother's loss, Rukidi threw a woman's child
into the Nile. Dispossessed of her child, the woman cursed them. Her loss,
and Rukidi's resolve, embodied the arrogance of royal power and the arbitrari
ness of justice. Her curse refused silence in the aftermath of a sovereign's vio
lence, and evoked the curses routinely made by mediums in the throes of
possession. She said: "Lost people you have killed your child, so you kill
mine, therefore wherever you go now to settle down you will kill one
another."70 She glossed the moral burdens of sovereign violence by recalling
that its arrogant use of force generated fertility and natality only for the men
65 Nyakatura, Abakama, 70; Nyakatura, Anatomy of an African Kingdom, 53; Joseph Nicolet,
"Essai historique de l'ancien royaume du K i tara de l'Uganda," Annali del Pontificio Museo Missio
nario Etnológico 34-36 (1970-1972): 165-225, here 197, repeats this episode in almost every
detail.
66 Bikunya, Ky 'Abakama, 40.
67 Fisher, Twilight Tales, 113; Nyakatura, Anatomy of an African Kingdom, 52-53.
68 Nyakatura, Anatomy of an African Kingdom, 53; Nyakatura, Abakama, 70.
69 Bikunya, Ky Abakama, 39; Nyakatura, Abakama, 70, presents the sacrifice of Nyarwa's child
as a variation on the story of Gipir, his brother Labongo, and a bead swallowed by a child, widely
known across south Sudan, northern Uganda, and Western Kenya. The tale explores the risks of
breaching obligations to share, especially during conflict, by explaining Rukidi's break from his
brother, Nyarwa, a dynastic rival. Nyakatura's use of the tale shows he wrote for a diverse audience.
See R. Godfrey Lienhardt, "Getting Your Own Back: Themes in Nilotic Myth," in John H. M.
Beattie and R. Godfrey Lienhardt, eds., Studies in Social Anthropology (Oxford: The Clarendon
Press, 1975): 213-37, especially 218-19, 221-29; Christopher Wrigley, "The Problem of the
Luo," History in Africa 8 (1981): 219-46, here 224-26.
70 My translation. Only Nyakatura gives the curse in Nyoro: "Nyabura inywe mwisire owanyu,
ngunu mwaita n'owange, nukwo muti na ha murukugya, nukwo murakaikaraga nimwitangana";
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A MASK OF CALM 651
closest to it, and only by taking fertility and natality from women. We need not
credit her sentences with having survived intact across the centuries in order to
appreciate that her child's death raised the specter of vengeance as an effect of
domination. Her curse questioned the ability of domination to still the turbu
lence of vengeance, but it did not erode Rukidi's resolve to proceed. Cursing
the future king, the mother spoke as a public healer, a social critic of the arro
gant violence of the new arrangement under construction.
Nyakatura completed his history of Nyoro kings late in the 1930s, as the
struggle continued for the return to Bunyoro of the counties lost to Buganda in
the 1890s. He may have chosen to flesh out the mother-medium's threatening
prediction, in part, because it would resonate with a wide audience of ordinary
people by invoking a long-standing but fragile commitment to contentious pol
itical debate. We are told that the diviner, Nyakoka, answered the paralyzing
effect that her curse had on Rukidi's entourage. The drama of power politics
between two competing networks is clear. The medium mother's local
network was being swallowed by Nyakoka's more expansive network, led
by Rukidi. She did not mourn her loss by keeping quiet.
Nyakatura's choice of words reveals as much about the emotives he used
to manage a liminal moment in Bunyoro's political struggle to regain the Lost
Counties, as it does about Rukidi's effort to dominate generated by the reper
cussions of killing a child. Nyakatura glosses Nyarwa's emotional state with
a phrase: "akabihirwa muno" (he was given very many bad things). The
passive construction underscored Nyarwa's weakness, and perhaps resonated
with literate Nyoro audiences powerless to reverse the circumstances of Imper
ial defeat. Nyakatura has the mother-medium use emotives he glossed in Nyoro
with the phrase "akaija narama bingi muno" (and she came and swore out very
many things). The stunned silence into which Rukidi's Biito followers fell after
her curse is described in Nyoro as "bagwamu akahuno" (they fell into
silence).71 Nyakoka, the diviner-doctor, then delivered a brief speech designed
to shake them loose from the spell of the mother's sentence. He exhorted them
not to have certain emotions: "Tibatina, kandi tibatuntura, kandi tibahuniriza,"
or "Don't fear, don't worry, don't be struck utterly dumb by this."72 The
healer's emotives, not the elder brother's, evoked affective dimensions of
power to close down a moment of crisis.
Nyakatura used a simple verb root, -rama, to describe the mother
medium's emotional state. The oldest English glosses we have for the term
mean "to cry out for mercy, plead; speak magic words, say an incantation;
Abakama, 70. See also Nicolet, "Essai historique," 197; Nyakatura, Anatomy of an African
Kingdom, 53; Nyakatura, Abakama, 70-71; and Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 40.
7 All quotes from Nyakatura, Abakama, 70.
72 Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 39; Nyakatura, Abakama, 71, gives "tibahunirra."
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652 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
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A MASK OF CALM 653
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654 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
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A MASK OF CALM 655
Once across the rivers, Mpuga Rukidi, a few diviners, and their entourage t
veled widely. Nyakoka is the only healer all the earliest variants mention.
Mpuga Rukidi and his networks moved across Bunyoro to Wamar
"capital," at Masaka Hill in Bwera, their itinerary marked core zones
future Biito domination. An itinerary does not appear in every source and
where a source does recount it the details sometimes differ. But all sources
that describe the journey mention the locations discussed below. The itinerary
collapsed into the course of one life a journey that no doubt took several gen
erations to accomplish, perhaps the better part of the century after 1550. Yet,
that Rukidi received two additional names tells us, as it did audiences in the
past, that he lived more than one life. With his established northerly networks,
Mpuga Rukidi began what the vernacular sources call his journey of "overcom
ing." Overcoming (obusinge in Nyoro) existing nodes of power preceded the
challenge of incorporating (kulema) these fragments and establishing the new
domination or "milking" (obukama) of and by the Biito in Bunyoro.
Tradition describes the "overcoming" as a series of attempts to separate
older leaders into three categories. Leaders reluctant to accept domination
refused to relinquish the regalia under their control. Leaders interested in
setting the terms of their subordination, in order to be part of the new order
(kulema), paid tribute to Mpuga Rukidi. Leaders who accepted Mpuga
Rukidi's domination handed over their regalia. As a result, the state of domina
tion was graded by degrees. Sorting out the independent people from the tribu
tary people from the full supporters delimited Mpuga Rukidi's sovereign
standing. Tradition underscores the stressful character of this work, revealing
limits in the new domination. Rukidi's emotional vulnerability is given promi
nence in the traditions, perhaps to pay respect to older networks by putting the
contingencies of his domination on display.
85 Literally "Black-White Father of the Drum," and "Black-White Firstborn of Twin Boys"; The
black and white pattern on a cow's hide, called mpuuga in the Nyoro and Nkore languages, linked
Rukidi to spirit possession color symbolism, fertility, and prosperity, and to cattle. Today, mpuuga
refers to a cow that is dark all over except for the udder, which is white; Mark Infield with Patrick
Rubagyema and Charles Muchunguzi, The Names of Ankole Cows (Kampala: Fountain Publishers,
2003), 44; Davis, Lunyoro, 97.
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656 D AV I D SC H O EN B RUN
When they arrived in Mubende (see map), Mpuga Rukidi's people inter
viewed leading figures there, and negotiated the moral terms on which their
ruined networks would fold their sovereignty into his. They negotiated over
historical knowledge held by the influential women mediums, Iremera and
Bunono, who managed the Cwezi figure Wamara's mined shrine, and by
Kasoira, the leader of another mined public healing network. Mpuga Rukidi
then used an intermediary, Kabahita, to negotiate with Mubimba, in Bugangazi
county, for the drums, spears, crowns, and other regalia that the departing
Cwezi had entmsted to him. Bargaining over the past led Mpuga Rukidi to a
coherent body of regalia, which he used to incorporate (kulema) his followers
by distributing it to them during the installation ceremonies marking his king
ship (obukama).86 Emotives and emotional regimes were important in this
process. He silenced talk of the pain and humiliation of loss that connected
his entourage to what had happened. He displayed his anxieties about past
leaders returning. And, he accepted a bare history from the public healers
whose sparse details respectfully allowed some scope for mourning.
Mpuga's interview of Kasoira exemplifies this. Fisher reported an
exchange between Mpuga Rukidi and Kasoira designed to alleviate Mpuga's
fear of a plot against him. Asked by Mpuga where the kings of the country
have gone, Kasoira says that they abdicated, which implied that rebellion
had driven them away.87 But Kasoira also says that Nyakoka "saw other
reasons" for the former kings' flight. Mpuga Rukidi warned Kasoira not to
make Nyakoka remember that past.88
Mentioning Nyakoka reminded audiences of his roles earlier in the
region's history, during the time just before Mpuga Rukidi. In an episode refer
ring to the last days of the Cwezi, Wamara had requested that the visiting
Nyakoka locate the entrails of his sacrificed calf. Nyakoka found them in the
animal's skull and hooves, and interpreted their odd location as presaging the
Cwezi's imminent departure. When Kasoira mentioned Nyakoka, it reminded
Mpuga that the contingencies of ritual—such as those that had required
Wamara to sacrifice his calf—could fray relations between diviner and king
because interpreting the meaning of such a sacrifice opened up the sovereign's
rule to public criticism. Incendiary tensions lay in histories of relations between
ritual and politics.
Mpuga Rukidi responded to Kasoira's pointed reminder of these complex
ities by inviting him to compose a new narrative, without Nyakoka's testimony,
that explained Wamara's departure. Mpuga Rukidi promised Kasoira a reward
for a story that left his entourage untouched by the failures of the past. He
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A MASK OF CALM 657
wanted tobacco, so Mpuga Rukidi filled a pipe, lit it, and gave it to him.89 By
preparing Kasoira's pipe and handing it to him to smoke, Mpuga Rukidi
behaved like a subordinate. Imposing silence about the past exacted a high
price in standing. But, Mpuga Rukidi's subordination also paid respect to
public healing networks that persisted through the devastating famine. By
assuming a position of deference, he evoked a complex mixture of mourning
and legitimation in the aftermath of collapse. The new sovereign's subordina
tion to older forms was a condition for mourning the indignities of their failure,
and deflected their accountability. But, it was also a clear attempt by Mpuga
Rukidi to legitimate his unfolding domination by joining it to past forms like
Kasoira's public healing.
Mpuga Rukidi promised Kasoira still richer rewards in return for a story of
the Cwezi departure to his liking. Declining them, Kasoira's final version
pushed a timeless moral imagination. He told Mpuga Rukidi that Kantu, "the
spirit of evil," had led the Cwezi astray.90 This bland history of failure freed
Kasoira and Mpuga Rukidi from the burdens of rebellion that naming names
might have invited. As a result, Mpuga Rukidi turned from narrating the past
to narrating the future. He pushed Kasoira to foretell the return of the
Cwezi.91 Fearful of the future, Kasoira's banal history of kings losing the
respect of their subjects only heightened Mpuga Rukidi's anxieties.92
In the moment of uncertainty about a possible Cwezi return, Nyakoka
suggested to Rukidi that he approach alternative sources. They visited the
mediums Bunono and Iremera who managed Wamara's shrine. Mpuga
Rukidi's prying questions made the women nervous—"each looked to the
other to reply." "You tell him," they said to each other.93 Pained silences antici
pated Bunono's halting answers ("at last Bunono jerked out") in which she
repeated what Kasoira had said. She said that "Kantu and contempt" had
sent the old leaders away and she promised that the Cwezi would not return
for a long time.94 The women's ritual knowledge of proper court etiquette,
rather than their explanations of the consequences of misrule, and their prom
ises not to bring back Cwezi spirits through possession, eventually induced the
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658 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
reluctant Mpuga Rukidi to "beat the drum" and rule.95 In many versions,
Bunono suggests that a visit to the Siita, "guardians of the drums," will
produce the drum Mpuga Rukidi needs to strike in order to complete his acces
sion.96 All three figures—Bunono, Iremera, and Kasoira—were keys to "over
coming" because they possessed ritual knowledge, the regalia of rule, and
intelligence about its ruined networks.97 But their terse responses to Mpuga
Rukidi's interrogations suggested they preferred their independence. The pat
terned call and response of the encounters, and their silence before responding,
opened a space for audiences to reflect on the weight of the losses their inde
pendence sought to recover.98
Mpuga Rukidi's interviews had not yet produced substantive results. The
narrative he could construct about the past was suitably vague, and allowed
each of his constituencies to find themselves represented without shame and
with respect for their suffering in the famine. But Mpuga Rukidi desired
some hard facts to legitimate his domination in local terms. As Kasoira and
Bunono had told him, these hard facts were the drums held by representatives
of the Siita clan network. To find them, Mpuga Rukidi sent his messenger
Kabahita to a hill called Mujungu, where the messenger met one Mulimba,
or Mubimba.99 Kabahita cut to the chase, saying that he had been sent to
Mujungu to collect the drums left in the care of Mubimba by the departing
Cwezi.
His words fell on deaf ears. Mubimba, the caretaker of the drums, was
depressed and withdrawn. He refused hospitality to the visitor—a serious
rebuff. His wife had just given birth but a famine over the land meant
neither mother nor child had food to eat. Kabahita returned to Mpuga
Rukidi, told him of the famine afflicting Mujungu, and Mpuga Rukidi sent
food to relieve the suffering. Mubimba's depression lifted and he relinquished
Nyalebe, the smaller of the two drums that Mpuga Rukidi desired. He brought
the larger one, Kajumba, to Masaka Hill, Wamara's shrine in Bwera (see map).
Fisher says Kajumba "rolled itself' to Mpuga Rukidi.100
In this episode, the Siita clan withheld a portion of their loyalties from
Mpuga Rukidi. Mubimba's depression reflected a diminished capacity of his
clan to feed children and support women's achievement of motherhood in a
time of famine. Mpuga Rukidi's gift of food showed that he was up to the
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A MASK OF CALM 659
task. But something made the Siita refrain from fully relinquishing the indepen
dence represented by the drums that the last generation of Cwezi figures had
left in their care. Mubimba brought Nyalebe, the lesser of the two tokens of
that power, to Mpuga Rukidi and showed his happiness to do so. The larger
dram he simply returned to its original home at Wamara's shrine. Mpuga
Rukidi accepted the compromise because it brought an important material
result: the historical weight of a drum of rule.
The labor of "overcoming" produced the forgetting at the heart of the
vague testimony of older public healers. Many chose to remain silent regarding
loss and culpability. When Kasoira tried to link Rukidi's entourage to the dis
asters of the past by raising Nyakoka's name, he was silenced. Chosen or
imposed, these silences allowed the concreteness of regalia to receive new
life in Mpuga Rukidi's capital. Regalia and a new capital initiated an aftermath
to the catastrophic violence of before.
Mpuga Rukidi is said to have "covered with earth until it stood out like an
anthill" the "royal Bachwezi fireplace" that stood in front of his palace and,
thereafter, stood in front of every Biito king's palace.101 Mounds and public
healing had long been joined in the wider region.102 Termite hills grow to
over 4 meters high, conducting movement from below ground, where spirits
reside, to above ground, where people live. The white ants or termites that
inhabit the earthen passages can move under and on top of the ground.
When they grow wings, toward the end of the agricultural year, they move
above the ground. Termites eat the earth with which they make their orderly
hill-cities, lending it medicinal qualities widely known in Africa and elsewhere.
Persons suffering from iron deficiency, like pregnant women and post
parturient mothers, often eat this earth to give them strength.103 The hills and
their denizens index the work of mediums in bringing spirits and people
together through possession. When Mpuga Rukidi converted the cold hearth
of the ruined Cwezi into an anthill, he metonymically joined his future to
their past in an idiom of public healing. Unlike the mounds at prominent
Cwezi shrines, this one stood within the new palace precincts, under the watch
ful eye of kings who were not healers.104
101 Nyakatura, Abakama, 75; K. W., "Abakama," (1936), 65; K. W., "The Procedure in Acces
sion to the Throne of a Nominated King in the Kingdom of Bunyoro-Kitara," Uganda Journal 4,4
(1937): 289-99, here 292; Tantala, "Early History," 434-35.
102 Douglas Johnson, "Fixed Shrines and Spiritual Centers in the Upper Nile," Azania 25 (1990):
41-56.
103 P. Wenzel Geissler, "The Significance of Earth-Eating: Social and Cultural Aspects of Geo
phagy among Luo Children." Africa 70,4 (2000): 653-82, here 655—57. Thanks to Gillian Feeley
Harnik for these citations and to Derek Peterson for the "orderly" gloss.
104 Cyprian Lwekula, "The Story of Mount MubendeCooper trans., in "Historical Remains at
Mubende," Uganda Protectorate Secretariat Minute Paper 603/09, cited in Berger and Buchanan,
"Cwezi Cults," 54; Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 52.
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660 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
105
106
Kodesh, Beyond the Royal Gaze, 125-26.
107
Nyakatura, Anatomy of an African Kingdom, 56-57; Bikunya, Ky'Abakama, 51-57.
Kathryn BaiTett-Gaines, "Katwe Salt in the African Great Ladees Regional Economy, 17
1950s," PhD diss., Stanford University, 2001, 52-61.
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A MASK OF CALM 661
to the rich salt gardens of Kibiro (see map), well within the sphere ofNyak
the healer's clan network, where the salt they produced moved through t
center of Bunyoro. The southern axis, well within the sphere of Iremera's
Bunono's clan networks, drew into Bunyoro's exchange networks cattle fr
Nkore and salt from Katwe, 200 kilometers south of Kibiro.108 Nyoro peo
saw Rukidi as a stranger, but they knew he was a well-connected one.
The journey from overcoming, through ordering, to ruling, transforme
Mpuga Rukidi from an outsider who resembled a public healer to a n
kind of sovereign through an agglutinative process. In front of his publi
and by their participation in his installation, he ceased being Isingom
Mpuga Rukidi, or Mpuga Labongo Rukidi, and became Winyi Mpuga Okali.
The common term is telling. Mpuga's two-toned identity kept the relatio
with public healing alive for debate. It also marked him as a strange perso
As the figure Winyi Mpuga Okali, he refused Nyakoka's request to sh
power, and instead offered the doctor the lands of Isaza, the last of t
ancient Tembuzi figures, present in a time before the Cwezi. Howeve
Nyakoka wanted a dual kingship and rejected that offer. In the end, Nyako
"was given" Bugahya by Winyi the king.109 The bargaining assume
formal distinction between diviners and kings in the new kingdom. But,
also implied a royal vision of a new future in which kings ruled diviner-doctor
Court traditions argued to audiences that Biito kings, beginning with Wi
Mpuga Okali, replaced the unstable compound of public healing and politic
leadership with the prerogatives of sovereign power to act. By subordinatin
diviners, they ended a time of crisis. As king in his capital, Winyi's mask
affect revived domination in a ruined land.
At first, as Mpuga Rukidi, his emotives explored the potentialities of do
ination from a position of political weakness: a stranger in a strange land.
networks of support were largely outsiders to Nyoro history. That weakn
exposed Mpuga Rukidi's inner state to the manipulation by many of those
with whom he sought to build alliances. Several among them—Bunono and
Iremera, at Wamara's shrine, and Mubimba—used it to refuse Mpuga Ruk
offers of alliance. Winyi's limited success was clear. Not all polities—represen
by their figureheads in the traditions—joined his new sovereignty.110 Some, li
the mother-medium, refused the serenity of his countenance. They retained
right to see through, to critique, to remember, to curse. The realities of th
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662 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
independence lay behind the new king's emotionless mask. The amazing th
that even though these dynastic traditions were compiled in a time of dire l
the sovereignty of Winyi's descendants, they highlight that fact.
Mpuga Rukidi's emotional vulnerabilities revised a history of
unstable compound, and revealed the limits to his overcoming its existing
cies and composing a following in support of a new sovereignty. Once t
parties to these histories had agreed on what to forget—a process of ch
and imposed silence in which the losses of a recent, catastrophic past w
mourned—then audiences could assess the degrees of support that Winy
any other new king) had won from his following, and they could see h
having tried to displace (not replace) public healers. That is when the emo
less gaze of rule descended again over the anxious countenance of W
Mpuga Rukidi, inviting audiences to be confident that his domination w
restart social reproduction.
His face again closed, Winyi I built a capital that was not a shrine.111 T
act opened a period, beyond the scope of this essay, of mobile surveillan
intelligence gathering, and local renegotiation of the terms of incorporatio
Capitals and royals moved over the countryside together. Shrine centers s
put while networks of public healers traveled. Those movements drew we
power over the land, their centers never coinciding. The disjunctive patte
reflected shifting tensions between the evanescent social criticism of p
healing and the stabilities that statecraft claimed to produce through the
lence of domination. Those patterns were shot through with burdens of l
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A MASK OF CALM 663
analysis that privileges a quest for legitimation. But the stories ' frank foregrounding
of the risks and affective strains of sovereign renewal, between moments of confi
dent reserve, stand out. In the aftermaths of violent collapse, the forthright
expression of the affective dimensions of their contingent, transformative renewals
shows that legitimate force exacts an emotional cost that redistributes political ener
gies across seemingly distinct categories of authority. Despite claims that sovereign
violence pushes politics away from other forms of authority,113 the specifics of that
relationship are historically contingent, in part, on managing the spirit of mourning.
A mixture of silence, forgetting, and decorum displayed by the Nyoro figures
guided, sometimes arrogantly, a process of renewal that divided politics from
other forms of authority in order to restart social life.
This essay has argued that violent collapse generated a pervasive uncer
tainty in which some people developed and promoted a new mode of political
domination. Alliances crafted by leaders who were not healers entered a state
craft that had hitherto worked through networks of people who were both pol
itical leaders and public healers. The new domination generated a new body of
historical knowledge that turned on affective appeals and new ritual forms to
foster selective forgetting of the indignities and failures brought by famine,
in the spirit of mourning. Surprisingly, the tasks of legitimation that such
stories should be expected to accomplish, in the course of reviving sovereignty,
do not impose silences around Rukidi's outsider standing, his fluctuating affec
tive self control, or the limited quality of his domination. Indeed, Rukidi's
standing as the founder of a new dynasty of kings is legitimated in these
stories by a frank presentation of the costs of violence—structural, sacrificial,
and military—bome by ordinary people. Indignity and failure, keeping quiet
and being stifled, expressed by variations in narrative content and emphasis,
impose on these stories a rhythm about a new domination. After Rukidi, the
country of Bunyoro sustained a dual imaginary of mobile royal capitals and
fixed public healing shrines. After Rukidi, historical memory contained
(marked off from other elements of the past) a variety of unfinished business
between public healing networks and royal nodes of authority.
A spirit of mourning, as much as a spirit of legitimation, shaped what people
did with catastrophe when they began to address it in historical narrative or affec
tive ritual, or both. What was recalled and what was left out about the past
depended in large measure on how the societies whose stories took shape in
that aftermath tried to improvise solutions to conundrums of sovereign violence.
113 James Sheehan, "The Problem of Sovereignty in European History," American Historical
Review 111, 1 (2006): 1-15, here 2; Weber, Economy and Society, 904ff.
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664 DAVID SCHOENBRUN
Abstract: Rich vernacular traditions about the aftermaths of the social trauma of a
major famine, sometime in sixteenth-century eastern Africa, narrate the founding
of a new dynasty in Bunyoro, one of the region's oldest monarchies. Scholars
often understand such traditions about the founding of new dynasties as charter
ing the new political order. Whether traditions credit that order with the aura of
antiquity or strengthen it by excluding social elements discordant with the new
orchestrations of power, they are exercises in legitimation. When scholars recog
nize that such traditions were set in the aftermath of widespread violence, a spirit
of mourning emerges in them. Spirits of mourning, joined to those of legitima
tion, shape traditions about the founding of a new dynasty by deftly inflecting
the problem of accountability. In Bunyoro, traditions about its founder depict
him as a barbarian cultural neophyte, of fluctuating emotional stability, improvis
ing a new political order. These unflattering, realistic representations of the
founding dynast's affective comportment were designed to appeal to emotional
repertoires in the different life experiences of audience members, enlisting their
participation in the project of reviving sovereignty in the aftermaths of traumatic
violence. Mourning and legitimation run through historical narratives initiating
an aftermath to structural violence, and reveal that loss and worry shape narratives
of transformed sovereign authority, and revive it in the aftermaths of structural
violence. Mourning lends emotional depth and counterpoint to matters of
bureaucracy, economy, gender, and so forth, in crafting satisfying accounts of
transformation and accountability in political life. That emotional depth, in
turn, helps explain the durability of traditions.
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