RIVALRY, ANTAGONISM AND WAR IN THE NATION- & STATE-BUILDING PROCESS: THE H FACTOR IN THE RELATIONS BETWEEN ERITREA AND ETHIOPIA, an article by Uoldelul Chelati Dirar
Märäb Mällaš is defi nitely the toponym which has enjoyed the
greatest favour thanks also to the homonymous title of Perini’s book. However,
the very adoption of those two toponyms speak volumes about dominant
perceptions of land and polities. In fact both denominations and particularly
Märäb Mällaš refl ects a geographical position which betrays the location of the
observant and, therefore his/her perception of space and power relations from a
perspective strongly infl uenced by the Ethiopian polity taken as a main
reference and Təgrəñña and or Amharic languages as main medium of
communication. I wonder if this representation of space and polities would
equally satisfy an Afar, Təgre, Kunama, Nara or Beni Amer speaker. Would it
accommodate his/her perception of spatial and political hierarchies? It seems
to me that dominant narratives on Eritrea and on Eritrean-Ethiopian relations
implicitly assume Eritrean Təgrəñña-speaking highlanders as their main object
and by so doing tend to fall in the common mistake of confusing the part for
the whole. Until now historiographic analyses of pre-colonial balances of power
in the region have failed in taking into adequate consideration narratives from
the Western lowlands and, to a certain extent, also those from the Eastern
lowlands of what is today the State of Eritrea. They have remained marginal
both in colonial and post-colonial literature.
https://u-pad.unimc.it/retrieve/handle/11393/41720/958/Uoldelul_Rivalry%20Antagonism%20and%20War.pdf
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