The Fiftieth Anniversary of the African Independences: Marginalized, Forgotten, and Revived Political Actors
Cinquantenaire des indépendances africaines : acteurs politiques marginalisés, oubliés, ressuscités
Publicado el martes 28 de mayo de 2013
Resumen
The fiftieth anniversary of the African Independence has been an occasion for the East African countries and their diasporas, the international academic community and the former colonial nations to assess the economic, social and political achievements and failures of the past fifty years. However, such inventories tend to focus on the upheavals of the social, economic and political structures, sometimes on the memory of the fathers of the nation and former grand nationalistic narratives, but usually overlook political actors, whether individual or collective, which were marginalized by the men in power during the early post-independent years.
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Argument
The fiftieth anniversary of the African Independence has been an occasion for the East African countries and their diasporas, the international academic community and the former colonial nations to assess the economic, social and political achievements and failures of the past fifty years. However, such inventories tend to focus on the upheavals of the social, economic and political structures, sometimes on the memory of the fathers of the nation and former grand nationalistic narratives, but usually overlook political actors, whether individual or collective, which were marginalized by the men in power during the early post-independent years. These political actors, however, played a crucial role during the anticolonial struggle and in the first years following Independence. Many examples exist: in Tanzania, the educated urban Muslim traders created the first anti-colonial associations and became one of the first interlocutors of the colonial powers during the negotiations that led to independence; Swahili women and trades unions or cooperatives organized themselves to found the first political parties in the region; and many prominent political figures were eventually sidelined, such as Oscar Kambona and Abdulrahman Babu in Tanzania, or even removed or eliminated from power, like Tom Mboya and Paul Murumbi in Kenya, or Paul Mirekano in Burundi. It is essential to focus on these political actors in the light of the commemorations of Independence considering that some of them have recently been re-appropriated and sometimes even totally resuscitated: the Muslims’ participation to Tanzania’s Independence brought about the rewriting of history, and built memorials or commemorative events have increasingly flourished to revive forgotten figures, as illustrated by the case of Joseph Murumbi in Kenya.
This seminar, organized during the year of the fiftieth anniversary of Kenya’s Independence, aims at exploring these forgotten political trajectories now revived by intellectuals, politicians and the civil society. As shown for instance by the growing number of biographies recently published, the latter re-appropriate the formerly marginalized or sidelined actors and invest them with the capacity of embodying a third path during the struggle between capitalism and socialism, and even a new political morality in the current context of a crisis of political legitimacy and the demoralization of political life in Eastern Africa. Due to the resonance of their heritage and memory, these political actors of the first times of Independence constitute contemporary political languages that allow us to understand present-day political scenes in East Africa.
Submission guidelines
Kindly send your submission (a short bio and a 150-300 abstract) at seminars@ifra-nairobi.net
before June 15th 2013.
Scientific committee
- Directeur de l’IFRA : actuellement Christian Thibon - histoire
- Pensionnaire de l’IFRA : actuellement Marie-Aude Fouéré - anthropologie
- Un membre du CS des UMIFRE : Hélène Roche - archéologie
- Chris Musambayi (University of Nairobi) – sciences politiques & relations internationales
- Mildred Ndeda (Kenyatta University)- histoire
- Maurice Amutabi (UECA) - sociologie
- Burundi: Julien Nimubona (University of Burundi) – sciences politiques
- Rwanda: Gaspard Gaparayi (Kigali Institute of Education) – anthropologie
- Ouganda: Gidéon Rutaremwa (Makerere university) - démographie
- Tanzanie: Bob Nakileza (Dar Es Salaam University) - géographie
Categorías
- África (Categoría principal)
- Sociedad > Sociología
- Sociedad > Etnología, antropología
- Épocas > Época contemporánea
- Sociedad > Geografía
- Sociedad > Historia
- Sociedad > Estudios políticos
Lugares
- IFRA-BIEA Conference Room - Laikipia road, Kileleshwa
Nairobi, Kenia
Fecha(s)
- sábado 15 de junio de 2013
Palabras claves
- indépendances africaines, Afrique de l'Est, colonialisme, acteurs politiques marginalisés
Contactos
- Colas Lemaire
courriel : clemaire [at] ifra-nairobi [dot] net
URLs de referencia
Fuente de la información
- Nairobi IFRA
courriel : info [at] ifra-nairobi [dot] net
Licencia
Este anuncio está sujeto a la licencia Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.
Para citar este anuncio
« Cinquantenaire des indépendances africaines : acteurs politiques marginalisés, oubliés, ressuscités », Convocatoria de ponencias, Calenda, Publicado el martes 28 de mayo de 2013, https://doi.org/10.58079/nn9