The colonial enterprise sustained its raison d'être through the concoction of a historiography that denied the historicity, humanity and governance capacity of Africans. Against a background of this denial levitated nationalist historiographical schools which challenged such myths. But their ideologies circulated within the confines of their colonial linguistic legacies although they shared the same decolonisation agenda. This paper focuses on the separate and uncoordinated efforts of intellectuals in the Anglophone and Francophone worlds to demystify and combat colonialism and consolidate the nascent nation-states through ideological revisionism and re-statement in the shape of nationalist historiographies. The ideological ammunition...
The work of investigating and reconstructing historical events does not bear any obvious relation to...
The question of how Europe ruled Africa relates to the crucial issues of settlernative identity as c...
It is over fifty years since most countries in Africa became independent but the debate about the ro...
This paper proposes rethinking nationalism as a political ideology and force in Africa outside the b...
The scramble to describe Africa, and to name the African condition in the global information and kno...
This paper examines the complex engagements between what it calls the “posts” – poststructuralism, ...
Following the official sanction for the colonization of Africa, given by the Berlin Conference, West...
The relationship between African intellectuals and Pan-Africanism and nationalism has been both a sy...
This study confronts the problem of nationalism at a particular historical juncture in British West ...
Words like 'colonialism' and 'empire' were once frowned upon in the U.S. and other Western mainstrea...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
Even in the postcolonial era, West African history remains plagued by Eurocentric myths and media-dr...
Defence date: 10 January 2018Examining Board: Professor Stéphane Van Damme, European University Inst...
Abstract Assimiles or African patriots? The Emergence of Cultural Nationalisai in French-speaking Af...
Two events served to accelerate and accentuate the process of decolonization. First, the rise of Fas...
The work of investigating and reconstructing historical events does not bear any obvious relation to...
The question of how Europe ruled Africa relates to the crucial issues of settlernative identity as c...
It is over fifty years since most countries in Africa became independent but the debate about the ro...
This paper proposes rethinking nationalism as a political ideology and force in Africa outside the b...
The scramble to describe Africa, and to name the African condition in the global information and kno...
This paper examines the complex engagements between what it calls the “posts” – poststructuralism, ...
Following the official sanction for the colonization of Africa, given by the Berlin Conference, West...
The relationship between African intellectuals and Pan-Africanism and nationalism has been both a sy...
This study confronts the problem of nationalism at a particular historical juncture in British West ...
Words like 'colonialism' and 'empire' were once frowned upon in the U.S. and other Western mainstrea...
The decolonial departure point of this article is that every human being is born into a valid and le...
Even in the postcolonial era, West African history remains plagued by Eurocentric myths and media-dr...
Defence date: 10 January 2018Examining Board: Professor Stéphane Van Damme, European University Inst...
Abstract Assimiles or African patriots? The Emergence of Cultural Nationalisai in French-speaking Af...
Two events served to accelerate and accentuate the process of decolonization. First, the rise of Fas...
The work of investigating and reconstructing historical events does not bear any obvious relation to...
The question of how Europe ruled Africa relates to the crucial issues of settlernative identity as c...
It is over fifty years since most countries in Africa became independent but the debate about the ro...