Making South West Africa
German?
Attempting imperial, juridical, colonial, conjugal
and moral order
Wolfram Hartmann
Abstract
This article addresses the origins of a decree prohibiting racially-mixed marriages
that was issued in German South West Africa in September 1905. A close reading
of the archival sources together with the observation that only a negligible
number of such marriages took place raises the crucial question as to why such
a drastic measure was deemed necessary. It is argued that a lack of experience
in a new and developing legal field combined with administrative inefficiencies
to allow a wide leeway to implement whatever was deemed desirable by the respective
administrative official in the colony, regardless of what Berlin argued. The
determinist, even teleological, notion that German racism was imposing itself
in this situation has to be re-evaluated.
Journal of Namibian Studies, 2 (2007): 51 - 84