White man’s disease, black man’s peril?: Rinderpest and famine in the eastern Bechuanaland Protectorate at the end of the 19th century.
Abstract
During the late nineteenth century, a pandemic of Rinderpest exterminated
large numbers of cattle in Southern Africa. Although in the Bechuanaland
Protectorate the disease killed cattle only for two years between 1896 and
1897, its effects were to last until the very end of the century. The loss of
cattle disrupted subsistence production, disintegrated the social fabric and
caused famines. This paper examines the subsistence crisis caused by the loss of
cattle and the multiple coping mechanisms that people employed to negotiate
the ensuing famine. Despite being thrown into a state of desperation, the
paper argues, rural communities in the eastern Bechuanaland Protectorate
appropriated and reconstituted certain features of their cultural and social life
to negotiate the hardships and, when these failed, they invented new strategies
appropriate with specific situations.