A Teutonic ethnologist in the Windhoek district: rethinking the anthropology of Guenther Wagner

TitleA Teutonic ethnologist in the Windhoek district: rethinking the anthropology of Guenther Wagner
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication2002
AuthorsJ.B. Gewald
EditorD. LeBeau, and R.J. Gordon
Secondary TitleChallenges for anthropology in the 'African Renaissance' : a Southern African contribution
Pagination19 - 30
Date Published2002///
PublisherUniversity of Namibia Press
Place PublishedWindhoek
Publication Languageeng
KeywordsAfrica, anthropological research, biographies (form), colonialism, Germany, history, Namibia
Abstract

This chapter reviews the history of anthropology in Namibia, focusing on the work of Guenther Kurt F. Wagner, who was appointed as Assistant Government Anthropologist for South West Africa in 1949. Wagner's unpublished work, 'Ethnographic survey of the Windhoek district' (1951), shows that Windhoek was not occupied by antagonistic tribes in the 1950s. The study echoes Brigitte Lau's work on southern Namibia which, in contrast to the work of Heinrich Vedder, argues for an understanding of Namibian history which emphasizes cooperation instead of conflict. A new look at Wagner's work shows that in the urban area of Windhoek in the 1950s, there was more unity among the city's black inhabitants than an initial glance would seem to imply. Wagner's work is of particular relevance in Namibia today, where ethnic tension appears to be on the increase. An African Renaissance will be impossible if ethnic tensions do no decrease. Bibliogr., notes. [ASC Leiden abstract]

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/4836
Citation Key835