47 results on '"Osborn, Emily Lynn"'
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2. Acknowledgments
3. Introduction: African Intermediaries and the “Bargain' of Collaboration
4. Interpreting Colonial Power in French Guinea: The Boubou Penda–Ernest Noirot Affair of 1905
5. “Collecting Customary Law': Educated Africans, Ethnographic Writings, and Colonial Justice in French West Africa
6. Cover
7. Contents
8. Title Page, Copyright
9. The Maturing Phase of Colonial Rule, ca. 1920–1960
10. The Formative Period of Colonial Rule, ca. 1800–1920
11. Interpretation and Interpolation: Shepstone as Native Interpreter
12. Petitioners, “Bush Lawyers,' and Letter Writers: Court Access in British-Occupied Lomé, 1914–1920
13. An Interpreter Will Arise: Resurrecting Jan Tzatzoe’s Diplomatic and Evangelical Contributions as a Cultural Intermediary on South Africa’s Eastern Cape Frontier, 1816–1818
14. Negotiating Legal Authority in French West Africa: The Colonial Administration and African Assessors, 1903–1918
15. Contributors
16. Interpreters Self-Interpreted: The Autobiographies of Two Colonial Clerks
17. Cultural Commuters: African Employees in Late Colonial Tanzania
18. The District Clerk and the “Man-Leopard Murders': Mediating Law and Authority in Colonial Nigeria
19. African Court Elders in Nyanza Province, Kenya, ca. 1930–1960: From “Traditional' to “Modern'
20. Power and Influence of African Court Clerks and Translators in Colonial Kenya: The Case of Khwisero Native (African) Court, 1946–1956
21. Afterword
22. African Participation in Colonial Rule: The Role of Clerks, Interpreters, and Other Intermediaries
23. Bibliography
24. Appendix: Personnel Files and the Role of Qadis and Interpreters in the Colonial Administration of Saint-Louis, Senegal, 1857–1911
25. Other Works in the Series
26. Index
27. Cover
28. Contents
29. Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
30. Illustrations
31. Introduction: Households, Gender, and Politics in West African History
32. 2: Growth: Warfare and Exile, Commerce and Expansion, 1750–1850
33. Acknowledgments
34. Part I
35. 1: Origins: The Founding of Baté, 1650–1750
36. Part II
37. 3: Conflict: Warfare and Captivity, 1850–81
38. 4: Occupation: Samori Touré and Baté, 1881–91
39. 5: Conquest: Warfare, Marriage, and French Statecraft
40. 6: Colonization: Households and the French Occupation
41. Appendix II
42. Conclusion: Making States in the Milo River Valley, 1650–1910
43. 7: Separate Spheres? Colonialism in Practice
44. Appendix I
45. Bibliography
46. Notes
47. Index
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