Signs of Mission: Material Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
Author(s): Zoë Crossland
Source: Signs and Society, Vol. 1, No. 1 (Spring 2013), pp. 79-113
Published by: The University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk
University of Foreign Studies and Brandeis University
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/670168 .
Accessed: 23/09/2014 14:39
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
.
The University of Chicago Press and Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies and
Brandeis University are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Signs and Society.
http://www.jstor.org
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Signs of Mission: Material
Semeiosis and NineteenthCentury Tswana Architecture
Zoë Crossland, Columbia University
ABSTRACT
The missionary encounter between the London Missionary Society and Sotho-Tswana
communities of southern Africa has been explored by Jean and John Comaroff as work
that took place at the level of both signs and practices. In this article, I consider what a
Peircean semeiotic might offer to this narrative. I argue that it provides ways to disrupt the
sometimes binary relationship of signs and practices while also providing opportunities
for productive interdisciplinary conversations about the affective, material, and processual
nature of changes in belief and practice.
fforts to change belief are often tied to efforts at remaking place. A host
of studies of nineteenth-century missionary activity in Africa have shown
how this played out in many different parts of the continent ðe.g., Showers 1989; Jacobs 1996; Harries 1997; Ranger 1999; Leonardi 2003Þ. As missionaries attempted to introduce Christian beliefs, they also worked to create
new ways of dwelling that imported moral ideals from their home countries.
Efforts were made to change the houses that people lived in, to reconfigure the
structure of families, and to inculcate new modes of clothing and adornment
and of work and play. These accounts demonstrate that the beliefs brought
to Africa by nineteenth-century missionaries did not float free of the material
world. Instead, they were embedded in an entirely different habitus, which was
E
Many thanks to Brian Boyd, Kathryn Fewster, Patrick Harries, Tim Insoll, and Paul Lane for their useful
comments and suggestions concerning an earlier version of this article. Thanks too to Ben Alberti, John Barrett,
Alex Bauer, Paul Kockelman, François Richard, Lindsay Weiss, and the anonymous reviewers of this piece for
helpful feedback and literature suggestions on this iteration. Susan Keitumetse got me started thinking about this
case study, and I’m grateful to her for introducing me to the archaeology of Botswana.
Signs and Society, vol. 1, no. 1 (Spring 2013). © 2013 Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk University of
Foreign Studies. All rights reserved. 2326-4489/2013/0101-0004$10.00
79
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
80
•
Signs and Society
organized around very different landscapes and traditions.1 Attempts at conversion, therefore, met with resistance both in the discursively formulated responses of the people encountered and in the distribution and organization of
the temporal and spatial world.
In their groundbreaking studies of mission in southern Africa, Jean and
John Comaroff have shown how the work of changing belief was closely allied
to changing the form and manner of living in the world of those that missionaries aimed to convert. In a series of studies, they have explored the changes
in “signs and practices” that were entailed by the encounter between missionaries ðprimarily from the London Missionary SocietyÞ and communities now
commonly grouped together as “Tswana,” showing how the work of missionaries took place through the material world as much as through language
ðComaroff 1985; Comaroff and Comaroff 1986, 1991, 1992, 1997Þ. The Comaroffs’ focus is the “Southern Tswana” Setswana speakers living in presentday South Africa who are part of a broader Sotho-Tswana language community
also found in Botswana and Lesotho today. Their research explores the signs
and discourse of mission and the practical changes that were enacted on the
ground; it has been influential in calling attention to the exported habitus of
missionaries as much as their efforts to inculcate Christianity. In exploring the
effects of mission on Tswana communities in southern Africa, the Comaroffs
trace the ways that people reworked the ideas and practices brought by missionaries while being drawn irrevocably into the developing colonial economy
and the emergent political and social formations of modernity. These narratives of the encounter are deeply engaged with the material world of practices and things, and in foregrounding the material entailments of mission the
Comaroffs tread the territory of archaeologists as much as historians. In this
article, I revisit their and others’ work on nineteenth-century mission among
Tswana communities, offering an analysis based in a Peircean semeiotic to
think through the material-semiotic dimensions of the encounter.2 I am particularly interested in how a Peircean orientation opens up avenues to explore
the affective and material qualities of interpretation and to destabilize the analytic binary of signs and practices.
Proportional to its influence on southern African studies, the Comaroffs’
anthropological history has come under strong criticism. One line of critique
has been that their account credits too much initiative and agency to Euro1. I use habitus in Bourdieu’s sense ð1977Þ of the organizing principles and dispositions that govern and
enable action.
2. I follow Peirce’s spelling of semeiotic to differentiate his approach from other semiotic theories.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
81
peans at the expense of local people ðGulbrandsen 1993, 1996Þ and that they
present a generalized ethnographic picture of Tswana practices rather than
looking at the specifics of historical change ðLandau 1992Þ. They have also
been charged with writing a narrative that is overly polarized in terms of the
dialectic between Tswana and Europeans ðe.g., Landau 1995, xxii; Donham
2001; Elbourne 2003Þ. The word Tswana refers today to a collection of differentiated but closely related Bantu-speaking communities found in Botswana
and South Africa. At the time of the London Missionary Society ðLMSÞ mission, the term was not in common usage as a collective noun of identity but
rather developed as a product of the colonial encounter ðsee, e.g., Volz 2003Þ.
Although the Comaroffs are clear on this point, and make explicit that they
are interested in precisely how the dualisms of Tswana/European, black/white,
and heathen/Christian emerged from the encounter, it is possible that their reliance on missionary sources gives the impression of a more homogeneous
grouping than was the case ðLandau 1999; Feierman 2001Þ. This is despite emphasizing the transformative and dialectical nature of the “long conversation” between Tswana and Europeans, in which no one was left untouched. Jean and
John Comaroff have responded to many of these criticisms ðComaroff and Comaroff 1997; Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff 2001Þ, but in a series of works
of such scope and richness, there will always remain plenty of opportunities to
find things to discuss. This article is not meant as a continuation of these critiques but rather as a thought experiment: an effort to think through the material evidence of nineteenth-century changes in Tswana ways of life, by putting
a Peircean perspective into conversation with the Comaroffs’ work and that of
other historians and anthropologists of southern Africa.
The encounter is situated in the Comaroffs’ account as a heterogeneous affair, occurring “in multiple registers . . . in the spiralling flow and counterflow
of signs and objects, means and ends, that drew indigenous communities into
an expansive imperial economy” ðComaroff and Comaroff 1997, 5Þ. To write
this narrative, they describe the “saturated signs” of mission—books and gardens, coins and crosses, mirrors and clocks, all “ingeniously redeployed to bear
a host of new meanings” ðComaroff and Comaroff 1992, 5; Comaroff 1991Þ.
In thinking about the ways in which Christianity became caught up with local
beliefs and practices, the Comaroffs have foregrounded the “signifying practices” through which Tswana communities sought to engage with missionary
incursions, “to reestablish the coherence of their lived world and to render controllable its processes of reproduction” ðComaroff 1985, 5Þ. This approach was
developed as a way to complicate and reintegrate the long-standing analytic
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
82
•
Signs and Society
dualism of practice and consciousness, or agency and structure, which still
pervades much social analysis. Drawing together the practice theory of Bourdieu ð1977Þ, Sahlins’s structuralist-inflected concern with history ð1976, 1981Þ,
and Stuart Hall’s Gramscian-influenced work on ideology ð1977Þ, Jean Comaroff characterized this in 1985 as a problem of symbolic mediation, arguing that signs provide a site where material and semantic orders of determination meet and where the dialectical relationship between them may be explored
ð1985, 5Þ. Embedding signification in practice provides a way to consider “the
meaningful structure inherent in practice and the practical structure inherent
in meaning” ð6 n. 2Þ.
In many ways, the Comaroffs’ early dialectical account of how signs and
practices were folded into one another was a precursor of the current anthropological interest in materiality, which takes as its focus the mediations between people and the material world in an effort to complicate any easy divide
between signs and objects ðe.g., Graves-Brown 2000; Miller 2005; Knappett
and Malafouris 2008Þ. The Comaroffs’ narratives of colonial encounters in
southern Africa were among the first to fully explore the imbricated nature of
signs and practices. In doing this, their work has examined how attempts to
change belief worked at two levels, one of which attempted to “overwhelm . . .
with arguments of images and messages” and the other of which tried to “inculcate . . . the spatial, linguistic, ritual and political forms—of European culture” ðComaroff and Comaroff 1991, 311Þ. These different dimensions are emphasized through the reiterated pairings of “signs and practices” and “signs and
objects,” which both call attention to the mutual constitution of ideological content and hegemonic forms, while also frustratingly reinscribing the divide. It is
here that Peirce can perhaps provide a useful point of intervention, a way of further disrupting the foundational tension between the universe of representation
and the world of practice and things ðsee Preucel and Bauer 2001Þ. This is to take
“signifying practices” seriously but to turn to a Peircean semiotic theory to conceptualize them and to see what his approach might offer.3
Peirce’s sign relation attends to things as much as concepts, and archaeologists have found that it provides rich opportunities for exploring the ways in
which semeiotic processes operate through and within the world ðGardin 1992;
Bauer 2002; Preucel 2006Þ. As I explore below, Peirce’s triadic model of semeiosis offers at least two powerful ways of shifting the terrain of analysis. The
3. Interestingly, Peirce finds his way into Stuart Hall’s writings via Umberto Eco, and so it is perhaps less of
an intellectual stretch to draw on Peirce in the context of these debates than it might at first seem.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
83
tripartite nature of his sign relation provides an effective means to cut across
and destabilize the binary categories outlined above, and its processual and
unfolding vision of semeiosis provides routes to theorize performance—in
Robert Preucel’s words, to “embrace the dynamics of mediation” ð2006, 249Þ.
To undertake this task, I start by reviewing the rich literature on nineteenthcentury Christian mission among Tswana communities in southern Africa. Apart
from the work by the Comaroffs, a number of historical accounts have given
the production of place a primary focus in their analyses ðe.g., Grove 1989;
Landau 1995; Morton 2004; Gulbrandsen 2007Þ. These accounts can be juxtaposed with the careful archaeological work that has been carried out at key
mission sites among the northwestern Tswana in present-day Botswana ðBörjeson and Lane 1996; Reid et al. 1997; Lane 1999; Sekgarametso 2001Þ and in
South Africa ðHall 1997Þ, as well as ethnographic and ethnoarchaeological research into the use of space among Tswana communities ðFrescura 1981; Larsson and Larsson 1984; Schapera 1984; Fewster 2006Þ. The scholarship around
the missions to the Tswana provides an example of the ways in which historical,
archaeological, and ethnographic strands of research can work together productively to explore how changes in routine activities and practical understandings of place were semeiotically grounded. Here, I focus on the changes
in habitus that are visible architecturally, in order to think through the affective
and dynamic dimensions of material semeiosis. My discussion is partitioned
into three sections. After beginning with a sketch of Tswana dwelling practices
and the impact of mission on them, I turn to look at the question of the relationship between signs and practices in more detail. In this second section, I
lay out Peirce’s sign relation and explore its relevance for the missionary encounter. In the third part of the article, I draw on ethnographic, historical, and
archaeological accounts to consider the development and persistence of architectural forms during the latter half of the nineteenth century. I focus on two
Tswana polities, both in present-day Botswana, starting with the Ngwato ðruled
by Khama III from 1875 to 1923Þ and then turning to the Kwena polity, united
under Sechele I in the second half of the nineteenth century. In exploring the
semeiotics of architectural change, I consider what this offers for understanding the changing political processes and gender relations in the later nineteenth
century ðsee fig. 1 for a map of locations mentioned in this articleÞ.
Tswana Ways of Dwelling and Missionary Impact
Missionaries traveled widely in southern Africa and focused their efforts on the
densely settled conurbations, or metse, that were found across the region. These
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
84
•
Signs and Society
Figure 1. Map of southern Africa showing locations mentioned in the text. Presentday country boundaries and capital cities are shown in gray.
urban centers had a hierarchical political organization with a paramount chief,
or kgosi, at the head, providing an intuitive point of contact for Europeans
interested in inserting themselves into Tswana communities. Despite variation
within and between the different Tswana polities, missionaries predominantly
interpreted them in terms of the nucleated settlements they knew from Britain,
translating the concept of motse ðpl. metseÞ as ‘town’. What this obscured was
the way in which metse were inextricably wrapped up with the authority of
chieftainship. The kgosi’s central position was echoed in the idealized concentric layout of the settlement. At the heart of the motse lay the chief ’s ward,
composed of a roughly circular arrangement of house compounds with the
chiefly court ðkgotla, pl. dikgotlaÞ and the chief ’s cattle at its center. The kgotla
and the chief ’s ward were surrounded physically and conceptually by the other
wards of the settlement; these in turn were ringed by agricultural fields, then
pastureland, and finally the wild uncultivated land of the bush ðMaggs 1976,
277; Comaroff and Comaroff 1991, 128–30Þ.
Ethnographic research carried out in the twentieth century has been important for conceptualizing Tswana communities in the nineteenth century.
Isaac Schapera described Tswana wards in the early to mid-twentieth century
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
85
as the most basic unit in the administrative system. The number of wards in
a settlement depended on its size, with the smallest villages having only one
ðSchapera 1984, 46–47Þ. Each ward was broadly kin related and administered
by its own headman and his senior associates drawn from the male family
heads. All wards were organized along similar lines to the kgosi’s, with houses
in a circular arrangement around the open space of the kgotla ðSchapera 1935Þ.
Wards had their own agricultural lands and local political organization, but
the headman also answered to the central chief of the motse. This gave rise to
political and economic strains in the life of the motse that Christopher Morton has characterized as a tension between centripetal forces converging on
the central meeting place ðkgotlaÞ and centrifugal forces pulling people out to
the edges of settlement following their cattle and fields ð2004, 348Þ. Architectural forms reproduced the circular form of the ward, with circular-plan houses
clustered in compounds. Found in front of the house was a semipublic walled
courtyard ðlolwapa, pl. malapaÞ that acted as “the point of articulation between
the domestic unit and the encompassing structures of the polity” ðComaroff
1985, 58Þ. Behind the houses were more private yards ðsegotloÞ, associated with
women and where household grain was stored. The central meeting space of
the kgotla was associated with men and with their cattle, which were corralled
there when not at the cattle posts outside the town. In the nineteenth century,
women were not included in political meetings at the kgotla, but they did have
a role in religious activities there ðKinsman 1983, 50–51Þ. They also oversaw the
cultivation, threshing, and storage of crops. When not at their fields, women’s
productive activities revolved around the house and its courtyard; they were
also responsible for house building. Although in some cases men erected the
exterior wooden roof supports and door, women always built the walls of the
house, using a mixture of clay and dung, sometimes with stone foundations
ðHall 1998, 247; Sekgarametso 2001, 30–31; Comaroff et al. 2007, 75–81Þ.
Gary Okihiro ð2000Þ has criticized the use of twentieth-century ethnography to reconstruct nineteenth-century Tswana ways of life, arguing that it
masks historical change and fails to take account of the variation in Tswana
experiences. For example, he emphasizes the role of immigrants in the formation of the Kwena polity in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century,
also suggesting that women’s association with grain cultivation was established
during this period ð86–89Þ. Equally, Paul Landau has detailed changes in the
consumption of sorghum beer over the eighteenth and nineteenth century that
were tied to transformations in politics and gender relations ð1995, 83–95Þ. Missionary accounts describe how during the nineteenth century women’s produce
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
86
•
Signs and Society
was drawn upon by men to maintain their political position, both in the form
of beer and through agricultural surplus, which was used with cattle to build
and maintain alliances and pay bridewealth ðGaitskill 1990; Comaroff and Comaroff 1991, 135–38Þ. This shifted with the introduction of Christianity. Landau shows how the kgosi of the Ngwato polity, Khama III, banned the consumption of sorghum beer as a way of controlling political meetings that could
pose a challenge to his rule.
Landau is critical of the “diagrammatic vision of tradition” that is often
presented for nineteenth-century social and spatial organization ð1995, xxiÞ,
and similar criticisms have been made by archaeologists of attempts to use
twentieth-century ethnography as a model to understand the deep past of the
region. The layout of towns and villages in southern Africa has been remarkably consistent over time, and archaeologist Thomas Huffman argues for the
material persistence of a “Central Cattle Pattern” as evidence of an accompanying worldview that goes back as far as a millennium ðHuffman 1982, 1986,
2001Þ. While this model has been a powerful tool for interpreting past southern African settlements ðpapers in Hall et al. 1984; Pistorious 1992; Huffman
2007Þ, it has also come under sustained criticism for its static and homogeneous view of past communities, which leaves little room to understand how
the model itself emerged and changed over time ðsee, e.g., Hall 1984, 1986;
Lane 1994–95, 2004; Maggs 1994-95; Beach 1998; Landau 2010, 45–47Þ. More
recently, research on the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries has integrated historical texts, oral histories, and archaeology, in order to look more carefully
at local dynamics and the particular constellations of any particular area and
period ðSwanepoel et al. 2008; Delius and Marks 2012Þ. Work carried out at
the abandoned Tlokwa capital of Marothodi has, for example, drawn upon
oral histories, archaeology, and historical texts to write a history of the town
that is embedded in its particular local context ðAnderson 2009; Boeyens and
Hall 2009Þ. Archaeologists are more alive to the nuances of history ðReid and
Lane 2004; Behrens and Swanepoel 2008Þ, and historians have argued forcefully for the importance of material evidence in the composition of historical
narratives ðMorton 2004Þ. The work of John and Jean Comaroff has been vitally important in shifting the ground of historical studies to open up the possibility of more discussion among ethnographers, archaeologists, and historians.
As missionaries arrived into the dynamic and changing landscape of southern Africa, they were perturbed by Tswana ways and forms of dwelling. Although individual missionaries made some adjustments to the radically different milieu of the mission field ðas shown, e.g., by Hovland 2007Þ, Jean and
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
87
John Comaroff have argued that a common feature of the missionary encounter in southern Africa was the rejection of the landscapes and landscape practices
that missionaries encountered as sinful and immoral ðComaroff and Comaroff
1997, 279–86; see also Grove 1989Þ. Efforts were made by missionaries to reorganize dwelling practices along lines that echoed or transformed those that
they knew from home ðComaroff and Comaroff 1991, 205; 1997, 288–96Þ. The
need to relocate converts into Christian space was common to missionary efforts throughout southern Africa and to missionaries of different denominations. Although early travelers commented on the tidy, well-swept forecourts
of Tswana houses and were not overly critical in their descriptions ðComaroff
and Comaroff 1997, 279–80; Anderson 2009, 5–21Þ, a distinction quickly emerged
in the discourse of missionaries between heathen “huts” and Christian “homes”
ðReid et al. 1997, 385–86Þ. The work of the missionary was seen to extend into
reworking the very space that people inhabited: “how arduous is the work set
before native women in changing that heathen kraal into a Christian home,”
wrote an Anglican correspondent in the Bloemfontein Mission Quarterly Paper
for October 1875, echoing the sentiments of LMS and Methodist missionaries
ðquoted in Labode 1993, 126Þ. One of the ways in which the Comaroffs argue
that this was expressed was in attempts by missionaries to encourage people to
live in rectangular-plan houses. Square buildings embodied British values of privacy and the divided and gendered taskscape of the domestic home.
It was not just houses that had to be made rectilinear in a bid to order what
often appeared to missionaries as chaotic and immoral. Jean and John Comaroff show that this concern extended to field boundaries, roads, and markings across the wider landscape. The seasonal movement of women from village to fields and the quotidian movement of men inward toward the court and
kraals at the center of settlement, where political decisions were made and exercised, expressed the important symbolic connection between center and periphery in Tswana communities. This movement was described by missionaries as “most unnatural” ðComaroff and Comaroff 1991, 137Þ. Focusing on
built form, they aspired to replace and rework local architectural forms and
practices of inhabitation, seeing “the concentric arcs of Tswana circular settlements . . . as material impediments to ‘healthy individualistic competition’”
ðComaroff and Comaroff 1986, 13Þ. These disordered spatial arrangements
were associated by missionaries with filth, disease, and sloth; local houses and
villages became viewed as dirty and unhealthy places to live ðComaroff and
Comaroff 1992, 279–80Þ. This response seems to have grown in tandem with
later nineteenth-century notions of progress, which located Christian civili-
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
88
•
Signs and Society
zation as the idealized end point of an evolutionary trajectory of social and
political development. As missionary presence grew over the nineteenth century, changes in habitus were inculcated through the creation of mission stations, houses, and boarding schools that taught young people the appropriate
domestic tasks necessary to create a Christian home ðLabode 1993Þ. In establishing “homes,” missionaries hoped also to establish familiar and morally ordered gendered behavior ðGaitskill 1990; cf. Skeie 1999Þ.
Clearly, missionaries did not operate in isolation from other European actors, and, as Okihiro emphasizes ð2000Þ, Tswana towns were neither homogeneous nor insulated from other southern African communities. In the earlier
nineteenth century, Tswana settlements were affected by social unrest and
political upheavals that troubled the entire region. This period, known as the
difaqane ðor mfecaneÞ, saw increased violence and raiding, as well as the displacement and movement of people across the region ðOmer-Cooper 1966;
Cobbing 1988; Hamilton 1995; Etherington 2001Þ. For the purposes of this article, however, I focus narrowly on the effect of the European and missionary
encounter on Tswana townscapes, attending particularly to the conjunctures of
the second half of the nineteenth century, rather than tracing the changing relationships to emerging structures of colonial governance ðsee, e.g., Porter 2004;
papers in Chima and Njoku 2007Þ or to the wider social and political landscape of southern Africa. My focus is also mostly on Tswana architectural
changes rather than on those of the missionaries. However, although I do not
explore these issues here, I do want to note that there were a variety of different orientations toward place among missionaries, as there were with other European incomers ðe.g., Pratt 1985; Morton 2004, 360Þ. These differences were
important in how the various missions were established and developed. Indeed,
it should be remembered that not all missionaries were European and that native evangelists played an important part in the spread of Christianity ðHodgson
1982; Elbourne 2003, 19–20; see also Peel 1995Þ. Within the community of Europeans, missionary interpretations of place depended as much on individual
positioning within relations of gender, class, and nationality as on personality
and political agenda ðBeidelman 1974Þ. All of these were expressed and altered
in interaction with the people and places they encountered ðe.g., Crossland
2006; Hovland 2007Þ.4 Along these lines, John D. Y. Peel cautions against overplaying the degree to which Christian belief and nineteenth-century capitalism were aligned ðPeel 2000, 5–6; see also Elbourne 2002Þ. With these caveats in
4. See, too, Robert Moffat’s particular form of “environmental evangelism” as outlined by Grove ð1989Þ.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
89
place, I return now to the question of signs and practices in Tswana encounters
with mission.
Material Signs
Coming back to Peirce’s semeiotic, I begin here by outlining his sign relation,
before moving on to consider what it can offer to understanding Tswana reworkings of place at the end of the nineteenth century. Peirce’s sign relation is
complicated, awkward to grasp, and nowhere published in full and complete
form.5 His “labyrinthine reasoning and runaway terminology” ðWatts 2008,
187Þ has perhaps contributed to the relative unpopularity of a Peircean approach in anthropology, at least in comparison to the semiology of Saussure
and his descendants. Peirce was insistent that his sign relation was irreducibly
triadic, composed of sign, object, and interpretant. He paid careful attention
to the relationships among these three elements, detailing, for example, three
modalities through which a sign can relate to its corresponding referent, or
“object.” These are through similarity ðiconÞ, relation ðindexÞ, and convention
ðsymbolÞ, discussed in more detail below. This dimension of Peirce’s analysis
is perhaps the best known aspect of his semeiotic. It has been drawn upon by
a number of archaeologists to think about the constitution of past material
signs ðGraves-Brown 1995; Knappett 2002; Jones 2007; Liebmann 2008Þ. Here
I am more concerned with the material aspects of the third dimension of
Peirce’s sign relation, the interpretant ðsee, too, Bauer 2002; Lele 2006; Watts
2008Þ. The interpretant may be understood as another more developed sign, a
tendency toward habit, or, ultimately, a habit change that emerges from and
interprets the sign-object relation. For Peirce, semeiosis only takes place when
an interpretant acknowledges or is elicited by the relationship between sign
and object.
The possibilities offered by the interpretant open up ways to address some of
the critical commentary on the Comaroffs’ work. Sherry Ortner, for example,
has suggested that their focus on African agency concentrates on questions of
power at the expense of intentionality. She asks after the projects, purposes,
and desires of different Tswana individuals and groups as located within a
framework of Tswana terms rather than one imported by missionaries ðOrtner
2001Þ. Similarly, Akhil Gupta asks, “under what conditions of colonial syncretism and transgression does the encounter not produce starkly binary identities, or even binary ascriptions of identity?” ð2001, 45Þ. What space is there, in
5. One summary can be found in Justus Buchler’s collection of Peirce’s writings ðPeirce 1955, 98–119Þ.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
90
•
Signs and Society
other words, for finding projects and concerns that were relevant to Tswana
people but perhaps invisible to or downplayed by missionaries? In what ways
might Tswana projects have cut across the categories of “Tswana” and “European”? Paul Landau pursues this issue in his authoritative account of mission among the Ngwato polity under Khama III and subsequent rulers ð1995Þ.
He explores how Khama imagined a new form of polity, a form of “ecclesiastic
statehood,” from the ideas and practices imported by missionaries. In doing
this, Landau traces how the Christian Word, or thuto, was inserted into the
space of the kgotla, physically and conceptually, in the process allowing new
possibilities for men and women to rework political power and claim new
forms of authority. Like the Comaroffs, Landau also considers how thuto was
incorporated into Ngwato ways of life “consumed in teas and soaps, and enacted in other behaviors” ðxviiÞ. Gupta suggests that it is here that one might
find the voices of the colonized, not in sentences and words but “in styles of
dress, practices of agriculture etc.” He wonders how we might incorporate these
“voices” through “senses other than the auditory” ð2001, 45Þ. Here, I explore
how a Peircean alternative not only extends the scope of semiosis to bring
words and things within its compass ðsee also Preucel and Bauer 2001; Cipolla
2008; Watts 2008Þ but also shifts the terrain of interpretation, providing space
to investigate archaeological and architectural traces as forms of interpretation
alongside feelings, practices, and words.
Missionary concern with the organization of the house provides an excellent
example of how a Peircean orientation can redirect the focus of analytical
attention. First, we can consider the sign of the house as it appears in experience and may be recognized as conforming to expectation. Second, when it
differs from expectation, the house thrusts itself into consciousness, forcing
an energetic physical response. In so doing, it acts on those dwelling within it
and challenges habitual practices and beliefs. Third, the house works semeiotically on inhabitants through the sign relations that are formed and reproduced within the context of these affective and energetic responses. These divisions are not arbitrary but are grounded in Peirce’s identification of three
“modes of being” that he argued comprise all experience ðPeirce 1868aÞ. These
may be described as “feeling” ðfirstÞ, “relation” or “reaction” ðsecondÞ, and “habit”
or “mediation” ðthirdÞ. Whether or not one accepts Peirce’s metaphysical claim
for the reality of his categories, they provide a useful point of entry for considering the effects of mission among the Tswana. Peirce’s conception of experience
foregrounds the prejudices and expectations that are brought to any understanding of the world. These have their basis in established habits that are de-
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
91
veloped recursively in relation to the experienced world. Peirce suggests that
any element of the world is first given to experience prereflexively as “feeling.”6
His discussion of the dynamic ability of the material world to change and alter
representations ð“relation”/“reaction”Þ anticipates much of the recent interest in
materiality ðas Watts ½2008 has exploredÞ. Finally, his discussion of “habit” or
“mediation” has some similarities with Bourdieu’s conception of habitus that I
will explore below. Space precludes any detailed elaboration of Peirce’s categories here, but it should be noted that the categories are refracted in Peirce’s description of the sign relation.7 They provide a useful way to think through the
different aspects of semeiosis, in particular, the question of how the sign-object
relation invites particular affective, energetic, and habitual responses and how
the material instantiation of signs and objects may be manipulated to precisely
this end.
Given the emphasis in the literature on missionary efforts to rework place,
I start here by using mission architecture as an example to sketch out Peirce’s
sign relation, before turning to look in more detail at ways of dwelling among
Tswana communities of the nineteenth century. The remains of David Livingstone’s house at Mobatsa ðwhere he was based before moving to live with
the KwenaÞ reveal the internal divisions of space that were so important to
British missionaries in defining interior space and structuring dwelling practices ðComaroff and Comaroff 1992, 280–81; 1997, 288–92Þ. The rectilinear
and divided space of the ruined house shows how private, hidden places were
created and maintained within the house. Neither bedroom nor library could
be entered from the exterior ðthe house at Mobatsa is sketched by Livingstone
and reproduced in Schapera 1959, 105Þ. The Comaroffs suggest that missionaries worked along two axes to rework space: they made efforts to create an
exemplary model for dwelling practices and also “sought, by their own deeds,
actively to intrude their designs onto the local terrain and into local habits
and habitations” ðComaroff and Comaroff 1997, 288Þ. In Peircean terms, these
actions can be understood as signs with different relationships to a similar object, one iconic and the other indexical. Mission stations attempted to reproduce the spatial patterning of British towns and villages, with enclosures and
gardens and separate places of burial. In this sense, they were in an iconic
6. In his emphasis on the prereflexive but not precultural nature of “feeling,” Peirce’s phenomenology
ðor “phanaeroscopy,” to use his preferred termÞ has some commonalities with Merleau-Ponty’s, although it differs
in that it is not grounded in the experiences of the human subject.
7. This is not only the case for the sign-object relationship that I outline below; his categories also
inform his description of the sign as its stands alone and his discussion of interpretants.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
92
•
Signs and Society
relationship with remembered houses and villages back home and, as the Comaroffs have shown, provided a model for living.
Michael Taussig ð1993Þ has explored how such a model gains its potency
from the original that it copies, taking on some of the force and power of its
progenitor. However, this was a model that could only be fully appreciated by
those who could identify the iconic relation and already had some familiarity
with the idealized British original. The morality that was inscribed in the house
was clear to the British missionaries, and it was especially clear at moments
when it was transgressed through inappropriate actions. Richard Parmentier
has shown that the patterned social relations that are inscribed through performances in place are not simply iconic descriptions of a cultural ideal ðas
Landau critiquesÞ but that the instantiation itself is meaningful. He argues
that such spatial models act as “instruments of limited self-representation”
ðParmentier 1987, 125–27Þ. If the model was evident to the missionaries, it
was opaque to the people who encountered it in southern Africa, at least at
first. Such a model needed to be experienced to be properly understood. Within
the cluster of iconic sign relations that the house offered, indexical signs were
needed to indicate how the space should be negotiated. Such sign relations were
distributed throughout the house and the performances that took place within
it, for example, the proffering of a chair or a teacup to drink—not only might
these objects be gestured toward, indicating the proper place to sit or to sup, but
the affordances of the objects themselves acted as indexical signs of the appropriate way to sit or to grasp a cup and drink ðcf. Knappett 2004; Kockelman
2005, 2006Þ. A closed doorway that blocked entrance to the private and sequestered parts of the building can also be understood as an indexical sign
whose object was to restrict the movement of people. Such indexical signs
establish a connection with their objects, asserting some kind of real or existing relationship. They are also located in a particular place and time, making
indexical challenges to Tswana dwelling practices more restricted in scope and
effects. People had to actually experience the interventions of missionaries on a
case-by-case basis to understand their indexical power to demonstrate new
ways of dwelling.
Peirce also outlined a third mode, of symbolic relation, in which the object
of a sign is defined through habitual association. A biblical verse above the
mantelpiece relied on conventions of language and writing in order for its object to be understood. Different forms of dress for men and women were established conventionally and through training and upbringing. Symbolic relations rely on familiarity with historically and culturally specific traditions of
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
93
practice to be understood, and, as Parmentier has explored, they are oriented
toward the future “in that this semiotic relation is essentially a processual
regularity” ð1985, 840Þ. Symbolic relations resonate with expectation and anticipation, while also being unreadable to those who are not familiar with the
conventions under which they are specified. As these examples indicate, the
three modes through which the sign specifies its object rarely operate in isolation. Both iconic and indexical sign relations have conventional dimensions, for
example, and it is the way in which these conventions are assumed or unrecognized that gives iconic and indexical signs their apparent force, on the one hand,
and room to be misunderstood, on the other. Indeed, the semiotic richness of
the house as a model for living comes from the dense interplay of shifting sign
relations. The recognition by missionaries of the powerful semeiotic effects of
the house as both a model and a demonstration may be seen in their efforts to
bring Tswana individuals into mission spaces as a step toward their conversion.
The field of interpretation that grows out of the sign-object relation was
explored by Peirce in terms of a new, more developed sign that he called the
“interpretant.” Peirce was quite clear that the interpretant is not restricted to
cognitive entities.8 Altering Peirce’s terminology slightly, the interpretant may
be glossed as an unexamined affect or feeling ðan “affective interpretant”Þ, a material or physical response ðan “energetic interpretant”Þ, or a cognition or habitual disposition ða “habitual interpretant”Þ.9 Peirce viewed the tendency to
habit as the most developed form of interpretant, itself embedded within affective and energetic responses ðPeirce 1868b, 1868cÞ. While Peirce’s notion
of habit has much in common with Bourdieu’s description of habitus, it subsumes Bourdieu’s concept, in that habit for Peirce is not tied to the realm of the
human. Instead, it refers to a tendency toward generality and mediation that
may be found within the world as a whole. In this sense, the inclination of hu8. “For the proper significate outcome of a sign, I propose the name, the interpretant of the sign. The
example of the imperative command shows that it need not be of a mental mode of being” ðPeirce CP 5.473,
ca. 1906; see n. 10 for explanation of this notationÞ.
9. Peirce developed a number of different terms for his triad of interpretants. The two most well known
are emotional/energetic/logical and immediate/dynamic/final. There is debate in the scholarship on Peirce
whether these should be understood as terminological differences or whether they define different interpretant
modes. If the latter is the case, then the question arises of the relationship between the different sets ðFitzgerald
1966; Short 1981, 2007; Liszka 1990Þ. While acknowledging T. L. Short’s view that the emotional, energetic,
and logical interpretants may inflect the immediate, dynamic, and final interpretants, for the purposes of this
article, and because of a reluctance to load down the reader with too much terminology, I focus on the first set alone.
These are located within Peirce’s phenomenological categories of feeling ðfirstÞ, relation ðsecondÞ, and habit
ðthirdÞ. I use “affective interpretant” in preference to “emotional interpretant,” in order to acknowledge emotion as
a species of logical or final interpretant. I use “habitual interpretant” in preference to “logical interpretant,” in
order to emphasize the interplay with Bourdieu’s conception of habitus and to avoid the narrow rationalist
sense that the term logical conveys outside Peircean scholarship. I do not develop the idea of the ultimate
logical interpretant explicitly but fold it into the habitual interpretant, again, for the purposes of this article.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
94
•
Signs and Society
mans to establish habits of thought and action is simply one form of habit
among many. Human semeiosis differs from other forms of biosemeiosis, as
E. Valentine Daniel has pointed out, in that the human predilection for habits
also includes the special habit of habit change, of reflecting on one’s dispositions and of altering them ðDaniel 1996, 190–99Þ. Peirce’s conception of
habit, therefore, incorporates a more dynamic sense of an unfolding process
than Bourdieu’s habitus, which can seem somewhat stable and resistant to
change without the intervention of outside influence, as Jean Comaroff has discussed ð1985, 5Þ. Equally, it allows for some exploration of how reflexive, “discursive” activities might operate within “practical” consciousness, as I explore
below.
The unexamined feeling of recognition ðor affective interpretantÞ of a space
and of the practices that are ordered within it depends on a habitual and embodied sense that emerges from past experience. This practical understanding of how to “go on” that Pierre Bourdieu ð1977, 1990Þ and Anthony Giddens
ð1984Þ have explored is usually unchallenged and unreflexive until it is disrupted or something calls attention to it. Bourdieu has outlined how the organizing principles and dispositions that comprise habitus are learned through
a lifetime’s experience and are produced from particular material conditions
of existence ð1977, 72Þ. These dispositions are drawn upon creatively in order
to act effectively, as people adjust to the semeiotic worlds they encounter. The
embodied understandings of place that missionaries brought with them derived from a universe of undisputed and implicit principles ð19Þ that seemed
intuitively right, proper, and therefore moral. The house that David Livingstone grew up in, in Blantyre, Scotland, would have been experienced by him
and accepted unreflexively for the most part. The missionary encounter, therefore, has the potential to dislocate both missionaries and the people they proselytize, as they discover new ways of living and acting within the world that do
not conform with those they know. Peirce suggests that is only when some
unexpected element of experience surprises us into acting or doing something
differently that we actively notice elements of the world ðe.g., CP 1.358–405,
ca. 1890Þ: for example, a curved wall where a corner might be expected, a body
buried in the yard outside a house instead of in a graveyard.10 Here the “brute
fact” of existence is brought into relation with the experiencing body and forces
itself on it, eliciting unanticipated responses. Peirce said of this, “We are contin10. Within Peircean scholarship it is conventional to refer to the eight volumes of Peirce’s Collected
Papers as CP followed by the volume number and paragraph number ðe.g., CP 2.244Þ. The full reference to the
volumes is under Peirce ð1931–58Þ.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
95
ually bumping up against hard fact. We expected one thing, or passively took it
for granted, and had the image of it in our minds, but experience forces that
idea into the background, and compels us to think quite differently” ðCP 1.324,
1903Þ. The knowledge of how to act, learned and drawn upon from childhood
onward, is necessarily challenged through the encounter with foreign people
and landscapes, but it is also adjusted continually in the course of day-to-day
encounters with the dynamic habits of the material world, including those of
other people.
As missionaries brought local people into relation with the architecture of
the house, embodied energetic interpretants were elicited, which while reinscribing practices of movement and timekeeping for British occupants, also
encouraged the formation of new habits of dwelling in those who visited. In
this, the indexical and relational qualities of the house—the way in which a wall
or a door encouraged or prevented movement for different people and at different times of day—were perhaps more powerfully felt than any iconic model
of an invisible ideal. Equally, symbolic and linguistic signs would be more
difficult to grasp without knowing the conventions under which they were
formed, but in any modality the shock of the unexpected could bring these
new sign relations into discursive awareness and encourage reflection and debate, or perhaps laughter and ridicule. Conflict could arise when the divergent
habitus of missionary and potential convert created from different ways of
living within the world “cause one group to experience as natural or reasonable
practices or aspirations which another group finds unthinkable or scandalous”
ðBourdieu 1977, 78Þ. Practices could also be misrecognized with consequences
for the success of the mission. David Chidester outlines the risk of translating
Christian concepts into Setswana equivalents, observing how Tswana “comparativists” recognized a relation of similarity between reading the Bible and their
work of divination, a move that was unacceptable to missionaries.11 Chidester
describes how in instances where Africans “found no equivalence between the
religion of the mission and local tradition” missionary claims could provoke
shocked laughter and advice to refrain from repeating such statements (Chidester 1996, 195). Missionary reactions to living and building practices could also
elicit laughter. Denbow and Thebe quote LMS missionary Robert Moffat’s advice to women preparing to thatch a newly built house. “They ought to get their
husbands to do that part of the work,” he suggested, observing that “this set
them all into a roar of laughter” ð2006, 95Þ. Here “facts” that did not fit with
11. Thanks to Lindsay Weiss for bringing this example to my attention.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
96
•
Signs and Society
expectations were dismissed or held aside rather than seriously evaluated. The
missionary encounter was characterized by attempts to make sense of these
semeiotic shocks. We see these attempts in letters and journals sent home by
missionaries, but where might we look for similar attempts among local people? How might a Peircean perspective provide ways to explore how both representation and practice were enrolled in ongoing and reflexively monitored
habitual semeiotic processes?
Tswana Projects
Despite the upheavals caused by the introduction of Christianity and colonialism, there were remarkable continuities in local forms and practices of
dwelling. As John Comaroff has observed, both politically and architecturally
Tswana communities have been “remarkably persistent in the face of dramatic
external change” ðappendix to Schapera 1984, 71; see also Comaroff and Comaroff 1991, 203–4Þ. This continuity constitutes another strand in the history
of hybrid forms that emerged from the encounter. The tenacity of local architectural techniques, and the persistence of the preexisting spatial layout of
Tswana villages and towns, points to the stability of local ways of dwelling, but
it also suggests some ways in which changes unfolded. This was not the missionaries’ hoped-for inculcation of Christian beliefs and practices and the habitus that went along with it. Instead, Christian beliefs and practices were incorporated in a variety of ways into local ways of dwelling, depending on the
particular circumstances of the encounter.
The LMS mission at Phalatswe ðOld PalapyeÞ, occupied from 1889 to 1902,
shows how Christian belief and practices were incorporated architecturally
at the Ngwato capital of chief Khama III. Khama converted to Christianity
and, after his baptism, rejected many of the practices of his people such as
the rainmaking ritual and the consumption of alcohol ðParsons 1998, 46–47Þ.
Despite Khama III’s apparently full conversion, Paul Landau argues that he
took great care to control the influence of the LMS mission ðLandau 1995, 34Þ,
drawing on Christianity and literacy in order to extend his authority into regions that previously had been relatively independent ðxxviiÞ. In this way, the
structure and organization of the churches controlled by Khama were incorporated into political strategies of authentication and authority. As Reid et al.
point out ð1997, 386Þ, the missionaries themselves and the buildings they constructed and furnished were a material resource to be drawn upon in the reinvigoration and continuing effectiveness of chiefly authority. Khama claimed
transformation in building for himself and co-opted it at the heart of the
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
97
motse. He directed the construction of new churches, often personally sponsoring and opening them himself ðLandau 1995, 179Þ. His architectural investment
in the center of the town meant that the motse took on a more stable and permanent material presence. One effect of this was to make it more difficult for
settlements to be relocated when deemed necessary, as outlined by Christopher
Morton ð2004Þ. Morton explains that the growing need for fresh grazing land
enticed the population away and placed pressure on Khama to move to a new
site. Despite his investment in place, the chief risked losing his support if he
failed to comply ð353–54Þ. The fractal-like form of the town and its political
organization provided opportunities for wards to detach themselves and relocate
under the control of their headman or in alliance with another. This made the
risk of the town fragmenting a very real possibility to be negotiated by the kgosi.
The decision to move the settlement from Shoshong to Phalatswe was financially
draining for both Khama and the missionaries, as the stone church had to be
taken down and moved over eighty miles to the new town. Cattle, sheep, and
grain were sold in order to move the church, demonstrating how it had become
a focal point for displays of surplus wealth and the maintenance of political ties
and allegiance ðLandau 1995, 179; Morton 2004, 351Þ. The subsequent movement of the motse from Phalatswe to Serowe took place despite great disruption
to the mission and the colonial administration. Serowe proved to be the final
move, however. In this, the recalcitrant materiality of its stone buildings contributed to the motse’s sedimentation in place as much as the demands of missionaries and colonial authorities.
Morton observes that this tension between “competing material and social
forces” is important to understanding the pressures on Khama and the way
that settlement change played out ð2004, 353Þ. Morton’s careful attention to
these different dimensions shows clearly how Europeans mischaracterized
Tswana towns as sedentary settlements, as well as demonstrating the importance of attending to the material dimensions of nineteenth-century Tswana
politics. However, in placing the material resistance of the town on one side of
the equation and the social pressure to maintain supporters on the other, this
analysis plays down the imbricated nature of these different forces. Below, I
consider how a semeiotic approach might destabilize these categories of the
social and the material and in the process capture something of what Bruno
Latour ðe.g., 1993, 1999, 2005Þ has framed as the creation of hybrid networks
composed of heterogeneous elements.
The sensuous model that the town presented was a complicated set of sign
relations with many dimensions. As people continued to live and work in the
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
98
•
Signs and Society
wards around Khama’s central ward, the activities of daily life worked as habitual interpretants that acknowledged his innovatory and creative chiefly
power. These practices recognized Khama’s primary role at the center, which
he made visible both indexically and iconically through his innovations in
building. However, there was a tension between the indexical sign of Khama’s
power ðthrough his investment in placeÞ and the iconic sign of his position
ðthrough his location in the center of his peopleÞ. The pressure on Khama to
move the town and the difficulties that this posed show how indexical signs can
be awkward to manipulate because of the ways in which they are associated with
or linked to their objects. In affirming the power and importance of the center
through building elaboration, Khama also allowed himself less semeiotic agency
over where and when such an indexical sign could be deployed ðsee Kockelman
2007, 380Þ.
However, if indexically grounded signs allow less control over where and
how they are deployed, then the ability to manipulate them despite these constraints itself becomes an indexical sign of power and control. Although the
investment in place made through the building of churches and European
buildings meant that the movement of towns became more difficult, it also
meant that the maintenance of the habit of moving the town, despite the material difficulties of doing so, acted as a powerful interpretant of Khama’s spiritual force and political authority. Large hilltop towns and abandoned stone
ruins of older settlements were a striking feature of the southern African landscape, dating back to the seventeenth century ðHuffman 1986; Hall 1995Þ,
suggesting that the tension between investment in place and the need to relocate had a long history. The relatively frequent movement of metse in the precolonial period reinvigorated the spiritual authority and efficacy of the chief,
in the process reconceptualizing and remaking the landscape around the new
town and locus of power ðLane 2004, 289Þ. The successful move and the
reinscription of the model of the town in a new location co-opted the whole
people into the sign relations specified by the chief, in a communal energetic
interpretant of his place and of Christianity at the center of the town and of
social life. Equally, if a ward were to detach itself to establish a new settlement
elsewhere, this would be a demonstration ðan energetic interpretantÞ of the
kgosi’s diminished power and an attempt to establish a pattern of habitual interpretants around a new center. Here the quasi-fractal nature of Tswana townscapes beautifully illustrates Peirce’s conception of semeiosis, which is itself
often described as fractal-like ðe.g., Brent 1998, 333Þ. As each interpretant buds
off from the previous sign-object relationship, it in turn becomes the starting
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
99
point for a potential new sign relation to form. Thus, the detaching of a ward
and the constitution of a new town may be seen not only in terms of signifying
practices but as itself a semeiotic process that incorporates people and architecture in one dense but evolving semeiotic cluster or bundle ðcf. Keane 2005Þ.
In interpreting Khama’s position through the movement of the entire settlement, the people and town re-created an established habitual interpretant
and anticipated the future continuation of these relations. Khama did not allow
Europeans to build freely at his capital and carefully controlled the construction of missionary buildings, churches, and other European-sponsored structures ðReid et al. 1997, 385Þ. His son Sekgoma also prohibited the adoption of
European-style housing among his people ð385Þ, showing that the potential to
transform the ways in which houses were built was not equally available to all
members of the population and depended to a large degree on the precedent
set by the kgosi. Paul Lane ð1999, 162Þ observes that, consistent with this concern to restrict new forms of dwelling, there is little archaeological evidence of
change in house construction at Phalatswe ðalthough house traces are not well
preserved at this siteÞ. This suggests that there were few opportunities for
innovations in house form by the population at Phalatswe ðReid et al. 1997,
381Þ. At least at first, the missionaries had less success in changing the ways in
which people built their houses among Khama’s people, despite his commitment to their desired form of Christianity. Khama seems to have wanted to fold
Christianity into his central position as king of the new “ecclesiastic state” that
Landau has delineated. The material claiming by Khama of European forms of
dwelling affirmed the continuing relevance of the motse and its wards and
houses as a sensuous model of social relations.
With the move to Serowe, however, Khama seems to have changed his semeiotic strategy toward the European mission. At this point the mission buildings were spatially marginalized and located well away from the chief ’s ward.
Even the “native” church was set apart from the town at a distance of some kilometers ðReid et al. 1997, 383Þ. By this date, circumstances had changed and
the political autonomy of the Ngwato was under attack; the habitual interpretants that were emerging from both mission and colonial interventions could
no longer be managed and appropriated so easily by Khama. The attempt to
displace the signs of mission outside the town was in itself a sign of his weakened semeiotic control of the encounter and his effort to reclaim the central
and sacred ground of the motse for himself and his people.12
12. Simon Hall describes a similar move in the founding of Mabotse ð1997Þ.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
100
•
Signs and Society
The actions of Khama III and his people at Phalatswe can be contrasted with
the ways in which European building techniques were drawn upon at the
Kwena towns of Kolobeng and Ntsweng, in present-day Botswana. In 1847,
apparently encouraged by David Livingstone, kgosi Sechele I decided to move
his capital from Chonwane to Kolobeng ðoccupied from 1847 to 1852Þ. The
mission station moved at the same time. Despite this, it was not incorporated
into the new motse. Instead, the mission buildings were kept separate and distinct, with church, mission house, and graveyard located outside the Kwena
settlement ðLane 1999, 156Þ. This maintained the spatial and moral order of
the motse, while allowing Livingstone to lay out his station according to spatial
principles that he recognized as appropriate and morally correct. Yet, while
maintaining the spatial separation between town and mission at Kolobeng,
Sechele I also drew on the use of space promoted by the missionaries in building a rectangular house for himself. At a later capital, Ntsweng ðoccupied from
1865 to 1937Þ, the mission station was sited even further away, about two
miles outside the settlement, while Sechele’s new house retained the new rectangular building form and was furnished with expensive European goods
“dominated by a large crystal chandelier” ðVolz 2001, 20Þ. This strategy allowed
the kgosi more room to seize the semeiotic terms on which European features
were incorporated into the motse. An example is provided by the construction
on Sechele’s initiative of a chapel close to his compound when he moved his
capital to Ntsweng, even before a missionary had been installed at the town
ðLane 1999, 158Þ.
Sechele incorporated Christian belief and practices selectively and strategically, integrating Christianity with Tswana practices ðGulbrandsen 1993;
Volz 2001Þ. Indeed, Sechele’s idiosyncratic version of Christianity led to his
later alienation from the LMS. Despite this, Stephen Volz ð2001, 2–3Þ argues
cogently that Sechele’s conversion was genuine and heartfelt, “motivated by
spiritual and moral concerns.” Volz suggests that to place too much emphasis
on Sechele’s political motivations is to miss other, perhaps less utilitarian, possibilities and to elide the ways in which Christianity may have worked against
his interests as ruler. Certainly, to consider Sechele’s politics narrowly as a
means to the end of sustaining rule seems an impoverished way to think about
what took place. However, insofar as politics could not be divorced from a
broader field of cultural practice, then it perhaps serves as an opening to understand some of what went on. We can see how Sechele worked to control
the terms on which European semiotic forms and processes were incorporated
into Tswana ways of dwelling. Like Khama, his incorporation of European ar-
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
101
chitectural forms in the heart of the capital acted as a sign of his ability to take
advantage of the semeiotic shocks that had been delivered by the missionaries
and others. In this way the challenges posed to local habitus were themselves
seized and reworked to reconstruct and affirm his political and spiritual influence.
John and Jean Comaroff argue that Tswana forms of personhood at the
time of the colonial encounter can be understood in terms of an ongoing process of becoming. Personhood was made and known through relationships
and through practical activities in which the work of building and making was
valorized ðJohn Comaroff and Jean Comaroff 2001, 268–73Þ. Tswana understood the self to be “ranged over sociophysical space-time occupied by the sum
total of its relations, presences, enterprises—anything that acted on its traces
might affect it for good or ill” ð275Þ. This can be considered in relation to
changes in domestic space. Archaeological research at Ntsweng has shown
that despite changes in the residences of the elite, the majority of the population maintained an attachment to the circular-plan houses and compounds
that were the basic building block of Tswana villages ðReid et al. 1997, 376–79Þ.
As at Phalatswe, the organization of the town affirmed the relationships between people and remade them daily. However, in contrast to Phalatswe, the
archaeological evidence shows that some modifications were made to the usual
house form at Ntsweng, with the incorporation of linear elements into the
walls of yards outside houses and the inclusion of some straight-wall construction in house walls themselves, producing semicircular rather than circular houses. Just as the sensuous model of the town worked as an interpretant
of chiefly authority, so the houses themselves may be understood as interpretants ðand hence signsÞ. Paul Kockelman’s work on semiotic agency ð2007Þ
suggests a consideration of how in building a house people interpreted a
whole set of relationships—whether between the mud and the particular purchase and function that it offered or of particular gender relations and relations of hierarchy and subjugation. To change and experiment with house
form was to push and test the relationships within which people were situated and to create new material interpretants of these changing relations.
The alterations made to the design of the house indicate an incorporation
of rectilinear space into local architecture that appears to have taken place very
much on local terms, rather than the transformation of the space of the house
along European lines that missionaries hoped for ðcf. Hall 1997Þ. The introduction of straightened walls in Kwena houses and yards at Ntsweng suggests
an experimental and reflexive demeanor among those who were building. The
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
102
•
Signs and Society
changes in house construction indicate that some people ðperhaps particularly
womenÞ were actively exploring the potential that rectilinear space offered
and, in doing so, imagining different possibilities for the future. Local people
may have been trying on new habits promoted by missionaries, but only insofar as they worked within a broader field of recognition growing from preexisting practices. As Landau has observed, the innovations introduced by missionaries and others had to resonate for them to be picked up and reproduced
locally ð1995, xxvÞ. It is clear that, with these changes to domestic space, the embodied sense of how to move within and around the house and compound was
maintained, and the shock of the new was incorporated into existing habitus.
Peirce argued that thought ðand hence belief Þ takes place in and through
signs, and these signs are inescapably embedded in the world of experience:
thought is not a purely internal mental process ðe.g., Peirce 1868bÞ. From this
perspective, the self ðto use a term admittedly freighted with individualist and
rationalist associationsÞ may be viewed as a shared and ongoing semeiotic process that emerges as a set of habitual relationships with the experienced world
ðPeirce 1868cÞ. As Milton Singer explained, for Peirce the self is distributed,
social, and public, its locus “found in the sign processes themselves” ð1984,
56–57Þ rather than in any purely mental construct. These ongoing sign relationships shared in, confirmed, and reinscribed practical habits through which
people ordered and made sense of the world. In this view, the house is as much
a part of the self as any other more usually recognized bodily extensions such
as clothing or jewelry ðcf. Csikszentmihalyi and Rochberg-Halton 1981, 15–16Þ.
In building their houses in wards that remade and pointed to the center, people affirmed the position of the kgosi, both in the work of building and in the
homesteads they created. The appearance of linear elements within the walls
of houses and yards suggests a form of recognition of Sechele’s innovations
as meaningful for people locally. This is interesting in that it contrasts with
the apparent failure of Christianity to spread among his people. Stephen Volz
notes that, in ten years’ work among the Tswana, Sechele was the only convert
made by David Livingstone ðVolz 2001, 1Þ and that many of Sechele’s headmen were made uncomfortable by his European-style house and furnishings
ð40Þ. Yet some elements seem to have been picked up by the broader population.
At Mabotse, in the former Transvaal, South Africa, Simon Hall has examined similar changes during 1872–80 ð1997Þ. He argues that the incorporation
of linear elements into the space of the village drew just as much on preexisting
local valuations of these elements as it did on European introductions ð214Þ.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
103
Hall suggests that these changes be understood in terms of the increasing appropriation and control of women’s labor by Tswana men. He observes that
the incorporation of straight-line walls tended to be used in the creation of rectangular or subrectangular semipublic enclosures used by men. Houses, in contrast, constructed by and associated with women, remained circular, although,
as at Ntsweng, the walls around house yards at Mabotse became more angular. Hall argues that these shifts seem to have followed a trend toward increasing gender hierarchy and the circumscription of choices and possibilities for
women within Tswana communities. This can be seen particularly in shifts in
agricultural practice during the same period. Margaret Kinsman emphasizes
the “web of mutual dependence” that was woven “between husband and wife”
ð1983, 42Þ through their respective roles in food production and distribution.
A woman gained access to the agricultural land that she tended through her
father or husband, and although she could be given cattle upon marriage, the
animals were subject to control by her husband ð42–43Þ. The introduction of
the plow by Methodist missionaries to the Southern Tswana had dramatic
effects on women’s control over their productive activities. Jean and John Comaroff observe that contact with the highly valued cattle that were used with
the plow was restricted for women and that, as a result, their role in planting
and distributing grain was diminished ð1986, 13Þ. Instead women were left to
care for and harvest the crops—work that was arduous but of lesser cultural
value. Whereas previously, using hoes to till the fields on the edges of the
settlement, women had a good deal of control over their labor and the food
they produced, men moved into the sphere of plow cultivation and took more
control of the distribution of crops ðOkihiro 2000, 91–98Þ. The same transition
from hoe to plow agriculture took place at Shoshong between the 1850s and
the 1880s ðFosbrooke 1971, 182–84Þ and in Khama’s kingdom. Paul Landau
notes that around Phalatswe women’s work was increased at harvest time as
the result of the plow because larger areas could be brought into production
ð1995, 74, 104Þ.
These renegotiations in the relations of production are consistent with
Hall’s argument that at Mabotse the kgosi and the male elite were working to
maintain gender distinctions, while consolidating and extending their authority and power. Such changes were made on terms that were recognizable and
meaningful to locals, but innovations brought by missionaries were also assessed for their effect on local practice. In the context of the longer-term shifts
in male power outlined by Hall, these changes in agriculture may be seen not
simply as the unexpected consequences of the encounter. Rather, they suggest
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
104
•
Signs and Society
ways in which gender relations were being reworked, while appearing to
maintain habits of practice and association in the face of new farming techniques. Along these lines, Paul Lane suggests that there is a visible shift of
emphasis in architectural organization at many sites in the region from the
eighteenth century, with an intensified concern with boundedness and control of access to settlement and houses ðLane 1998, 194Þ. He argues that the
historic period sees an increased differentiation of domestic space, transforming the house and its yards into “a contested domain in which men and
women negotiated for position” ð200Þ. The construction of angular yards outside houses at Mabotse seems to be part of these longer-term negotiations
taking place over space and over the different domains of men and women.
The reordering of the domestic space of women at Ntsweng took place at
the same time that the matrilocal arrangement of grain storage was under
threat. However, in contrast to Hall’s interpretation of changes to the yards of
houses at Mabotse, which he suggests is a reworking of women’s space under
pressure from male relatives, I read the traces at Ntsweng a little differently.
Here not only the semipublic and negotiated space of the yard but also the
houses themselves were subject to changes. If a woman’s sense of self and of
her relationships with her extended family was embedded and remade through
the space of the house and the associated yard, then the appearance of linear
elements can also be understood as an effort by women to make sense of the
semeiotic shocks that were assaulting them from all sides. This was an affective and energetic trying on of new architectural elements but within the
familiar space of the house, a search to establish recognizable and sustainable
habits of practice in the context of dramatic changes to women’s social and
productive roles. In this context, the experimentation with linear elements within
the walls of yards and houses at Ntsweng seems to assert an iconic linkage between homesteads and the central position of the chief. Looking at the archaeological remains today, they evoke a feeling of connection and integration within
the town, which one can infer was also felt by those building and decorating
the walls of the house and yard. The reconfiguring of space suggests one way in
which women worked creatively to assert control over their sphere of influence
and to maintain their sense of self within rapidly changing conditions and massive disruptions to their traditional activities and status.
Conclusion
In this review of some of the literature on mission among Setswana-speaking
people, I have sought to explore what Peirce can offer to thinking about the
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
105
relationship between practice and representation. Sometimes it is hard to see
how to integrate archaeological accounts that focus on a material palimpsest
of routinized practices, and documentary accounts that more precisely delineate representational changes in belief wrought by missionaries. The work of
Jean and John Comaroff has provided powerful insights into the ways in which
changes in belief are embedded in efforts to change living practices, opening up
possibilities for productive interdisciplinary exchange. The integration of archaeological evidence with historical documentation provides great potential
for future anthropological research, if we can find ways to bring the different
orders of evidence into conversation ðReid and Lane 2004, 18–19Þ. A Peircean
semeiotic approach provides an avenue for productive interdisciplinary rapprochement. In its redistribution of semeiosis across the boundaries of “mind”
and “material,” it creates alternate ways to bring representation and material
traces into the same analytical frame. In the context of nineteenth-century
Africa, where the signs through which the encounter between Europeans and
Tswana peoples was negotiated were constantly under review, Peirce’s complicated model of semeiosis captures some of the complex and shifting nature
of changes in belief and practice.
Peirce’s semeiotic draws no a priori distinction between habits of mind and
of practice, prompting the question of whether it is only through language that
semeiosis can take place reflexively. Looking at the experimental reconfiguring
of houses at Ntsweng, Pierce’s semeiotic provides a way to cut across distinctions between ðfor exampleÞ practical and discursive consciousness ðGiddens
1984Þ, allowing us to imagine a “discursive” consciousness at the level of practice. The example of apprenticeship suggests how this might work. In learning
to build a house, the learning process is reflexive and recursive, and while language certainly intervenes, much of the semeiotic process is affective and energetic, leading to an embodied sense of how to shape and mold the house
form that cannot be completely articulated in language but which is certainly
reflexively monitored and understood. Practical experimentation with materials and forms of practice provides an example of how new habits might be
tried on for size and then either rejected or incorporated into the world of
habitus. This creates ways to think about stability that are reducible neither to
an unchanging mental map of the world that persists over hundreds of years
nor to the resistance of the material world. Instead, Peirce allows us to articulate this continuity in terms of a semeiotic project to maintain the relational
sense of self, a sense that is embedded in place and in language—“in thought,”
as Peirce might say.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
106
•
Signs and Society
In the case of the missions to the Tswana, the archaeological evidence often
seems to have the effect of highlighting continuity in living practices, while
historical accounts based on mission documentation emphasize the dislocating rupture prompted by the changes and social upheavals during and after the
encounter ðLane 2001, 158Þ. I hope to have shown here how a semeiotic approach can point to how architectural changes were caught up in local projects,
particularly the negotiation of changing gender relations, cutting across the
interests of missionaries and their narratives of the encounter. Kathryn Fewster
notes that the picture of Tswana communities that emerges from twentiethcentury ethnographies is one of “a people who are constantly reinventing their
identities out of a mixture of ideas: those offered by the increasing influence
of Westernism in the country, and the rapidly fragmenting ‘traditional’ rules of
their parents and grandparents” ð2006, 70Þ. This experimental and dynamic
reinvention is one with a long history. Archaeological fieldwork shows that the
nineteenth-century Tswana metse described by missionaries had emerged from
a landscape of more dispersed settlement sometime in the early eighteenth century ðHuffman 1986; Hall 1995; see also Parsons 1995Þ. Attention to this history provides a context for understanding how changes played out later in the
nineteenth century ðcf. Kinsman 1983, 40Þ. As Jeffrey Fleisher ð2004Þ has argued
for the site of Kilwa Kisiwani on the southern coast of present-day Tanzania, by
looking to the deeper past another perspective is given on the local politics and
regional history at the time when Europeans arrived. In this way a better sense
of local projects and intentionality can be worked out.
Many authors have demonstrated how in a range of African societies the
organization of architecture and village and the practices carried out around
them create a model of the social group, including differentiated relations of
gender and political status ðe.g., Bohannan 1958; Huffman 1986; Moore 1986;
Donham 1999Þ. The dispositions that comprise habitus, and that people draw
on creatively in order to act effectively within the world, are learned through a
lifetime’s experience within these material and social conditions, as Bourdieu
explored. Shifting to a Peircean perspective, we can make slightly different
claim: beliefs—whether religious beliefs about God or practical beliefs about
gender, status, or anything else—are established sign relationships that are constituted from crosscutting constellations of landscapes, people, things, feelings,
actions, and cognitions. As Peirce put it, “The feeling of believing is a more or
less sure indication of there being established in our nature some habit” that
will guide action ð1877, 5Þ. The semeiotic concept of habit thus inhabits the
same territory as the Comaroffs’ discussion of signifying practice, but it pro-
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
107
vides a different lens for thinking about historical change that brings practice
fully into the realm of semeiosis. It is through these habitual sign relations that
the model of the world is constituted, challenged, and can change and grow. In
attending closely to the visible material dimensions of these relationships, it is
possible to start to explore changing perceptions of self and other, landscape and
domestic space, in ways that complement accounts based on written texts and oral
histories.
References
Anderson, Mark S. 2009. Marothodi: The Historical Archaeology of an African Capital.
Woodford: Atikkan Media.
Bauer, Alexander A. 2002. “Is What You See All You Get? Recognizing Meaning in Archaeology.” Journal of Social Archaeology 2 ð1Þ: 37–52.
Beach, David N. 1998. “Cognitive Archaeology and Imaginary History and Great Zimbabwe.” Current Anthropology 39:47–72.
Behrens, Joanna, and Natalie Swanepoel. 2008. “Historical Archaeologies of Southern Africa:
Precedents and Prospects.” In Swanepoel, Esterhuysen, and Bonner 2008, 23–40.
Beidelman, Thomas O. 1974. “Social Theory and the Study of Christian Missions in Africa.”
Africa 44:235–49.
Boeyens, Jan, and Simon Hall. 2009. “Tlokwa Oral Traditions and the Interface between
History and Archaeology at Marothodi.” South African Historical Journal 61 ð3Þ: 457–81.
Bohannan, Laura. 1958. “Political Aspects of Tiv Social Organization.” In Tribes without
Rulers, ed. John Middleton and D. Tait, 33–66. London: Routledge.
Börjeson, Lowe, and Paul J. Lane. 1996. “Preliminary Archaeological Investigations at Phalatswe ðOld PalapyeÞ, Central District, Botswana: The 1995 Season.” Nyame Akuma 45
ðJuneÞ: 2–10.
Bourdieu, Pierre. 1977. Outline of a Theory of Practice. Trans. Richard Nice. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
———. 1990. The Logic of Practice. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
Brent, Joseph. 1998. Charles Sanders Peirce: A Life. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Chidester, David. 1996. Savage Systems: Colonialism and Comparative Religion in Southern
Africa. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.
Chima, J. Korieh, and Raphael C. Njoku, eds. 2007. Missions, States and European Expansion
in Africa. New York: Routledge.
Cipolla, Craig N. 2008. “Signs of Identity, Signs of Memory.” Archaeological Dialogues 15 ð2Þ:
196–215.
Cobbing, Julian. 1988. “The Mfecane as Alibi: Thoughts on Dithakong and Mbolompo.”
Journal of African History 29 ð3Þ: 487–519.
Comaroff, Jean. 1985. Body of Power, Spirit of Resistance: The Culture and History of a
South African People. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
———. 1991. “Missionaries and Mechanical Clocks: An Essay on Religion and History in
South Africa.” Journal of Religion 71 ð1Þ: 1–17.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
108
•
Signs and Society
Comaroff, Jean, and John L. Comaroff. 1986. “Christianity and Colonialism in South Africa.”
American Ethnologist 13 (1): 1–22.
———. 1991. Of Revelation and Revolution, vol. 1, Christianity, Colonialism and Consciousness in South Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
———. 1992. Ethnography and the Historical Imagination. Boulder, CO: Westview.
———. 1997. Of Revelation and Revolution, vol. 2, The Dialectics of Modernity on a South
African Frontier. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
———. 2001. “Revelations upon Revelation: After Shocks, Afterthoughts.” Interventions:
International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 3 ð1Þ: 100–126.
Comaroff, John L., and Jean Comaroff. 2001. “On Personhood: An Anthropological Perspective.” Social Identities 7 ð2Þ: 267–83.
Comaroff, John L., Jean Comaroff, and Deborah James, eds. 2007. Picturing a Colonial Past:
The African Photographs of Isaac Schapera. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Crossland, Zoë. 2006. “Landscape and Mission in Madagascar and Wales in the Early Nineteenth Century: ‘Sowing the Seeds of Knowledge.’ ” Landscapes 7:93–121.
Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly, and Eugene Rochberg-Halton. 1981. The Meaning of Things:
Domestic Symbols and the Self. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Daniel, E. Valentine. 1996. Charred Lullabies: Chapters in an Anthropography of Violence.
Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Delius, Peter, and Shula Marks. 2012. “Rethinking South Africa’s Past: Essays on History and
Archaeology.” Journal of Southern African Studies 38 ð2Þ: 247–55.
Denbow, James, and Phenyo C. Thebe. 2006. Culture and Customs of Botswana. Westport,
CT: Greenwood.
Donham, Donald L. 1999. Marxist Modern: An Ethnographic History of the Ethiopian Revolution. Berkeley: University of California Press.
———. 2001. “Thinking Temporally or Modernizing Anthropology.” American Anthropologist 103 ð1Þ: 134–49.
Elbourne, Elizabeth. 2002. Blood Ground: Colonialism, Missions and the Contest for Christianity in the Cape Colony and Britain, 1799–1853. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University
Press.
———. 2003. “Word Made Flesh: Christianity, Modernity and Cultural Colonialism in the
Work of Jean and John Comaroff.” American Historical Review 108 ð2Þ: 435–59.
Etherington, Norman. 2001. The Great Treks: The Transformation of Southern Africa,
1815–1854. New York: Longman.
Feierman, Steven. 2001. “The Comaroffs and the Practice of Historical Ethnography.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 3 ð1Þ: 24–30.
Fewster, Kathryn J. 2006. “The Potential of Analogy in Post Processual Archaeologies: A Case
Study from Basimane Ward, Serowe, Botswana.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological
Institute 12 ð1Þ: 61–87.
Fitzgerald, John. 1966. Peirce’s Theory of Signs as a Foundation for Pragmatism. The Hague:
Mouton.
Fleisher, Jeffrey. 2004. “Behind the Sultan of Kilwa’s ‘Rebellious Conduct’: Local Perspectives
on an International East African Town.” In Reid and Lane 2004, 91–123.
Fosbrooke, Henry A. 1971. “Land and Population.” Botswana Notes and Records 3:172–87.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
109
Frescura, Franco. 1981. Rural Shelter in Southern Africa: A Survey of the Architecture, House
Forms and Constructional Methods of the Black Rural Peoples of Southern Africa. Johannesburg: Raven.
Gaitskill, Deborah. 1990. “Devout Domesticity? A Century of African Women’s Christianity
in South Africa.” In Women and Gender in Southern Africa to 1945, ed. Cherryl Walker,
251–72. London: Currey.
Gardin, Jean-Claude. 1992. “Semiotic Trends in Archaeology.” In Representations in Archaeology, ed. Jean-Claude Gardin and Christopher S. Peebles, 87–104. Bloomington:
Indiana University Press.
Giddens, Anthony. 1984. The Constitution of Society: Outline of the Theory of Structuration.
Cambridge: Polity.
Graves-Brown, Paul M. 1995. “Fearful Symmetry.” World Archaeology 27 ð1Þ: 88–99.
———. 2000. Matter, Materiality, and Modern Culture. London: Routledge.
Grove, Richard. 1989. “Scottish Missionaries, Evangelical Discourses and the Origins of
Conservation Thinking in Southern Africa, 1820–1900.” Special issue on the politics of
conservation in Southern Africa, Journal of Southern African Studies 15 ð2Þ: 163–87.
Gulbrandsen, Ørnulf. 1993. “Missionaries and the Northern Tswana Rulers: Who Used
Whom?” Journal of Religion in Africa 13 ð1Þ: 44–83.
———. 1996. “Living Their Lives in Courts: The Counter-hegemonic Force of the Tswana
Kgotla in a Colonial Context.” In Inside and Outside the Law: Anthropological Studies of
Authority and Ambiguity, ed. Olivia Harris, 125–56. London: Routledge.
———. 2007. “Town-State Formations on the Edge of the Kalahari: Social-Cultural Dynamics of Centralization in Northern Tswana Kingdoms.” Social Analysis 51 ð3Þ: 55–77.
Gupta, Akhil. 2001. “History, Rule, Representation: Scattered Speculations on Of Revelation
and Revolution, Volume II.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies
3 ð1Þ: 40–46.
Hall, Martin. 1984. “The Myth of the Zulu Homestead: Archaeology and Ethnography.”
Africa 54 ð1Þ: 65–79.
———. 1986. “The Role of Cattle in Southern African Agropastoral Societies: More than
Bones Alone Can Tell.” In Prehistoric Pastoralism in Southern Africa, 83–87. Goodwin
Series 5. Cape Town: South African Archaeological Society.
Hall, Martin, Graham Avery, D. Margaret Avery, Michael L. Wilson, and Anthony J. B.
Humphreys, eds. 1984. Frontiers: Southern African Archaeology Today. Oxford: British
Archaeological Reports.
Hall, Simon. 1995. “Archaeological Indicators for Stress in the Western Transvaal Region
between the Seventeenth and Nineteenth Centuries.” In Hamilton 1995, 307–21.
———. 1997. Material Culture and Gender Correlations: The View from Mabotse in the Late
Nineteenth Century. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press.
———. 1998. “A Consideration of Gender Relations in the Late Iron Age ‘Sotho’ Sequence
of the Western Highveld, South Africa.” In Gender in African Prehistory, ed. Susan Kent,
235–58. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira.
Hall, Stuart. 1977. “Culture, the Media, and the ‘Ideological Effect.’ ” In Mass Communication
and Society, ed. James Curran, Michael Gurevitch, and Janet Woollacott, 315–48. London: Arnold.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
110
•
Signs and Society
Hamilton, Caroline, ed. 1995. The Mfecane Aftermath: Reconstructive Debates in Southern
African History. Johannesburg: University of Witwatersrand Press.
Harries, Patrick. 1997. “Under Alpine Eyes: Constructing Landscape and Society in Late Precolonial South-East Africa.” Paideuma 43:171–91.
Hodgson, Janet. 1982. God of the Khosa: A Study of the Origins and Development of the
Traditional Concepts of the Supreme Being. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.
Hovland, Ingie. 2007. “Umpumulo, Place of Rest: A Nineteenth-Century Christian Mission
Station among the Zulus.” Radical History Review 99:140–57.
Huffman, Thomas N. 1982. “Archaeology and Ethnohistory of the African Iron Age.” Annual
Review of Anthropology 11:133–50.
———. 1986. “Archaeological Evidence and Conventional Explanations of Southern Bantu
Settlement Patterns.” Africa 56 ð3Þ: 280–98.
———. 2001. “The Central Cattle Pattern and Interpreting the Past.” Southern African
Humanities 13:19–35.
———. 2007. Handbook to the Iron Age: The Archaeology of Pre-colonial Farming Societies in
Southern Africa. Scottsville: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.
Jacobs, Nancy J. 1996. “The Flowing Eye: Water Management in the Upper Kuruman Valley,
South Africa, c. 1800–1962.” Journal of African History 37 ð2Þ: 237–60.
Jones, Andrew. 2007. Memory and Material Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Keane, Webb. 2005. “Signs Are Not the Garb of Meaning.” In Miller 2005, 182–205.
Kinsman, Margaret. 1983. “Beasts of Burden: The Subordination of Southern Tswana
Women, ca. 1800–1840.” Journal of Southern African Studies 10 ð1Þ: 39–54.
Knappett, Carl. 2002. “Photographs, Skeuomorphs and Marionettes: Some Thoughts on
Mind, Agency and Object.” Journal of Material Culture 7 ð1Þ: 97–117.
———. 2004. “The Affordances of Things: A Post-Gibsonian Perspective on the Relationality of Mind and Matter.” In Rethinking Materiality: The Engagement of Mind with the
Material World, ed. Elizabeth DeMarrais, Chris Gosden, and A. Colin Renfrew, 43–51.
Cambridge: McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research.
Knappett, Carl, and Lambros Malafouris, eds. 2008. Material Agency: Towards a Nonanthropocentric Approach. New York: Springer.
Kockelman, Paul. 2005. “The Semiotic Stance.” Semiotica 157:233–304.
———. 2006. “Residence in the World: Affordances, Instruments, Actions, Roles, and Identities.” Semiotica 162:19–71.
———. 2007. “Agency: The Relation between Meaning, Power and Knowledge.” Current
Anthropology 48 ð3Þ: 375–401.
Labode, Modupe. 1993. “From Heathen Kraal to Christian Home: Anglican Mission Education and African Christian Girls, 1850–1900.” In Women and Missions: Past and
Present; Anthropological and Historical Perceptions, ed. Fiona Bowie, Deborah Kirkwood,
and Shirley Ardener, 126–44. Oxford: Berg.
Landau, Paul S. 1992. “Inventing the Role of Preacher in East-Central Botswana: Moruti
Seakgano, c. 1865–1953.” Collected Seminar Papers: Institute of Commonwealth Studies
18:90–103.
———. 1995. The Realm of the Word: Language, Gender and Christianity in a Southern
African Kingdom. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
111
———. 1999. “ ‘Religion’ and Christian Conversion in African History: A New Model.”
Journal of Religious History 23 ð1Þ: 8–30.
———. 2010. Popular Politics in the History of South Africa, 1400–1948. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Lane, Paul. 1994–95. “The Use and Abuse of Ethnography in Iron Age Studies of the
Southern African Iron Age.” Azania 29–30: 51–64.
———. 1998. “Engendered Spaces and Bodily Practices in the Iron Age of Southern Africa.”
In Gender in African Prehistory, ed. Susan Kent, 179–203. Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira.
———. 1999. “Archaeology, Nonconformist Missions and the ‘Colonisation of Consciousness’ in Southern Africa, c.1820–1900.” In Case Studies in Archaeology and World
Religion, ed. Timothy Insoll, 153–65. BAR International Series 755. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports.
———. 2001. “The Archaeology of Christianity in Global Perspective.” In Archaeology and
World Religion, ed. Timothy Insoll, 148–81. London: Routledge.
———. 2004. “Re-constructing Tswana Townscapes: Towards a Critical Historical Archaeology.” In Reid and Lane 2004, 269–99.
Larsson, Anita, and Viera Larsson. 1984. Traditional Tswana Housing: A Study in Four
Villages in Eastern Botswana. Stockholm: Swedish Council for Building Research.
Latour, Bruno. 1993. We Have Never Been Modern. New York: Harvester Wheatsheaf.
———. 1999. Pandora’s Hope: Essays on the Reality of Science Studies. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press.
———. 2005. Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Lele, Veerendra P. 2006. “Material Habits, Identity, Semeiotic.” Journal of Social Archaeology
6:48–70.
Leonardi, Cherry. 2003. “Laying the First Course of Stones: Building the London Missionary
Society Church in Madagascar, 1862–1895.” International Journal of African Historical
Studies 3:607–33.
Liebmann, Matthew. 2008. “The Innovative Materiality of Revitalization Movements: Lessons from the Pueblo Revolt of 1680.” American Anthropologist 110 ð3Þ: 360–72.
Liszka, James Jakób. 1990. “Peirce’s Interpretant.” Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society
26 ð1Þ: 17–62.
Maggs, Tim. 1976. “Iron Age Patterns and Sotho History on the Southern Highveld: South
Africa.” World Archaeology 7:318–32.
———. 1994–95. “The Early Iron Age in the Extreme South: Some Patterns and Problems.”
Azania 29–30:171–78.
Miller, Daniel, ed. 2005. Materiality. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Moore, Henrietta. 1986. Space Text and Gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Morton, Christopher. 2004. “Fixity and Fluidity: Chiefly Authority and Settlement Movement in Colonial Botswana.” History and Anthropology 15 ð4Þ: 345–65.
Okihiro, Gary Y. 2000. A Social History of the Bakwena and Peoples of the Kalahari of
Southern Africa, 19th Century. Lewiston: Mellon.
Omer-Cooper, John D. 1966. The Zulu Aftermath: A Nineteenth-Century Revolution in Bantu
Africa. London: Longmans.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
112
•
Signs and Society
Ortner, Sherry B. 2001. “Specifying Agency: The Comaroffs and Their Critics.” Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies 3 ð1Þ: 76–84.
Parmentier, Richard J. 1985. “Diagrammatic Icons and Historical Processes in Belau.” American Anthropologist 87 ð4Þ: 840–52.
———. 1987. The Sacred Remains: Myth, History, and Polity in Belau. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press.
Parsons, Neil. 1995. “Prelude to Difaqane in the Interior of Southern Africa, c. 1600–c. 1822.”
In Hamilton 1995, 323–49.
———. 1998. King Khama, Emperor Joe and the Great White Queen: Victorian Britain
through African Eyes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Peel, John David Yeadon. 1995. “ ‘For who hath despised the day of small things?’ Missionary Narratives and Historical Anthropology.” Comparative Studies in Society and History
37 (3): 581–607.
———. 2000. Religious Encounter and the Making of the Yoruba. Bloomington: Indiana
University Press.
Peirce, Charles S. 1868a. “On a New List of Categories.” Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 7:287–98.
———. 1868b. “Questions concerning Certain Faculties Claimed for Man.” Journal of
Speculative Philosophy 2:103–14.
———. 1868c. “Some Consequences of Four Incapacities.” Journal of Speculative Philosophy
2:140–57.
———. 1877. “The Fixation of Belief.” Popular Science Monthly 12 ðNovemberÞ: 1–15.
———. 1931–58. Collected Papers. Ed. Charles Hartshorne, Paul Weiss, and Arthur Burks.
Vols. 1–8. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
———. 1955. “Logic as Semiotic: The Theory of Signs.” In Philosophical Writings of Peirce,
ed. Justus Buchler, 98–119. New York: Dover.
Pistorious, Julius C. C. 1992. Molokwane: An Iron Age Bakwena Village. Johannesburg: Preskor.
Porter, Andrew. 2004. Religion versus Empire? British Protestant Missionaries and Overseas
Expansion, 1700–1914. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Pratt, Mary Louise. 1985. “Scratches on the Face of the Country; or, What Mr. Barrow Saw
in the Land of the Bushman.” Critical Inquiry 12:119–43.
Preucel, Robert W. 2006. Archaeological Semiotics. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Preucel, Robert W., and Alexander A. Bauer. 2001. “Archaeological Pragmatics.” Norwegian
Archaeological Review 34 ð2Þ: 85–96.
Ranger, Terence O. 1999. Voices from the Rocks: Nature, Culture and History in the Matopos
Hills of Zimbabwe. Oxford: Currey.
Reid, Andrew, and Paul J. Lane, eds. 2004. African Historical Archaeologies. London: Kluwer.
Reid, Andrew, Paul J. Lane, Alinah Segobye, Lowe Borjeson, Nonofo Mathibidi, and Princess
Sekgarametso. 1997. “Tswana Architecture and Responses to Colonialism.” World Archaeology 28 ð3Þ: 370–92.
Sahlins, Marshall. 1976. Culture and Practical Reason. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
———. 1981. Historical Metaphors and Mythical Realities: Structure in the Early History
of the Sandwich Islands Kingdom. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Schapera, Isaac. 1935. “The Social Structure of the Tswana Ward.” Bantu Studies 9:203–24.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Semeiosis and Nineteenth-Century Tswana Architecture
•
113
———, ed. 1959. David Livingstone: Family Letters, 1841–1856. 2 vols. London: Chatto &
Windus.
———. 1984. The Tswana. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
Sekgarametso, Princess. 2001. “An Archaeological Survey of Ntsweng in Molepolole.” Pula:
Botswana Journal of African Studies 15 ð1Þ: 23–45.
Short, Thomas Lloyd. 1981. “Semiosis and Intentionality.” Transactions of the Charles S.
Peirce Society 17:197–223.
———. 2007. Peirce’s Theory of Signs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Showers, Kate B. 1989. “Soil Erosion in the Kingdom of Lesotho: Origins and Colonial
Response, 1830s–1950s.” Journal of Southern African Studies 15 ð2Þ: 263–86.
Singer, Milton. 1984. Man’s Glassy Essence: Explorations in Semiotic Anthropology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Skeie, Karina Hested. 1999. “Building God’s Kingdom: The Importance of the House to
Nineteenth Century Norwegian Missionaries in Madagascar.” In Ancestors, Power and
History in Madagascar, ed. Karen Middleton, 71–100. Leiden: Brill.
Swanepoel, Natalie, Amanda Esterhuysen, and Philip Bonner, eds. 2008. Five Hundred Years
Rediscovered: Southern African Precedents and Prospects. Johannesburg: Wits University
Press.
Taussig, Michael T. 1993. Mimesis and Alterity: A Particular History of the Senses. New York:
Routledge.
Volz, Stephen C. 2001. Chief of a Heathen Town: Kgosi Sechele and the Arrival of Christianity among the Tswana. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
———. 2003. “European Missionaries and Tswana Identity in the 19th Century.” Pula:
Botswana Journal of African Studies 17 ð1Þ: 3–19.
Watts, Christopher M. 2008. “On Mediation and Material Agency in the Peircean Semeiotic.”
In Knappett and Malafouris 2008, 187–207.
This content downloaded from 128.59.233.50 on Tue, 23 Sep 2014 14:39:24 PM
All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions