"Some Are More White Than Others": Racial Chauvinism As A Factor of Rhodesian Immigration Policy, 1890-1963
Abstract
This article analyses the role of ethnic chauvinism in determining the
patterns and trends of white immigration into Rhodesia from the country’s
occupation in 1890 to the Second World War. It argues that, while scholars
have rightly emphasised white settler racism and discrimination against the
African majority, and have tended to treat settler white society as a
homogenous entity which shared a common identity, a closer examination
of the racial dynamics within white colonial society reveals that strong
currents of ethnic chauvinism maintained sharp divisions within the white
settler society, even though settlers presented a united front when protecting
their collective interests in the face of the perceived African threat. This
article focuses specifically on racial and cultural chauvinism emanating
from settlers of British stock which, among other things, determined the
pace, volume and nature of white immigration into the country and
contributed, together with other factors, to the fact that fewer white immigrants
entered the country than had originally been envisaged by Cecil John
Rhodes. Thus, while Rhodes had dreamt of creating Rhodesia as a white
man’s country, this dream remained unfulfilled because of the dominant
British settler community’s reluctance to admit whites of non-British stock. It
is argued, therefore, that, throughout the period under study, British colonial
settlers continued to regard themselves as “more white than others” with
respect to other non-British races.
Additional Citation Information
Mlambo, Alois, (2000), "'Some Are More White Than Others': Racial Chauvinism As A Factor of Rhodesian Immigration Policy, 1890-1963". Zambezia, vol. 27, no. 2, pp.139-160.Publisher
University of Zimbabwe Publications