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ID191637
Title ProperPolitical Identity as Temporal Collapse
Other Title InformationEthiopian Federalism and Contested Ogaden Histories
LanguageENG
AuthorThompson, Daniel K
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since the 1980s, analyses of African political identities have emphasized identity manipulation as a governance tool. In the Somali Horn of Africa, however, politicians’ efforts to reinvent identities confront rigid understandings of genealogical clanship as a key component of identity and political mobilization. This article explores how government efforts to construct a new ‘Ethiopian–Somali’ identity within Ethiopia’s ethnic-federal system are entangled with attempts to reinterpret clan genealogies and histories. We focus on efforts to revise the history of clans within the broader Ogaden Somali clan group and trace the possibilities and limits of these revisions in relation to legacies of colonialism as well as popular understandings of Ogaden identity. Drawing on fieldwork and archival research, we show that political struggles over Somalis’ integration with Ethiopia orient around Somali clanship, but that clanship is not a mechanical tool of mobilization, as it is often portrayed. We suggest that genealogical relatedness does not equate to political loyalty, but genealogical discourse provides a framework by which various actors reinterpret contemporary events by collapsing history into the present to imbue clan, ethnic, and national identities with political significance.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Affairs Vol. 122, No.486; Jan 2023: p.119–145
Journal SourceAfrican Affairs Vol: 122 No 486
Key WordsPolitical Identity ;  Temporal Collapse ;  Ethiopian Federalism ;  Contested Ogaden Histories


 
 
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