1st Edition

Revolution, Counter-Revolution and Revisionism in Postcolonial Africa The Case of Mozambique, 1975-1994

By Alice Dinerman Copyright 2006
    424 Pages
    by Routledge

    448 Pages
    by Routledge

    This groundbreaking study investigates defining themes in the field of social memory studies as they bear on the politics of post-Cold-War, post-apartheid Southern Africa. Alice Dinerman offers a detailed chronicle of the Mozambican government’s attempts to revise the country's troubled postcolonial past with a view to negotiating the political challenges posed by the present. In doing so, she lays bare the path-dependence of memory practices, while tracing their divergent trajectories, shifting meanings and varied combinations within ruling discourse and performance.

    Central themes include:

    • the interplay between past and present
    • the dialectic between remembering and forgetting
    • the dynamics between popular and official memory discourses
    • the politics of acknowledgement.

    Dinerman’s original analysis is essential reading for students of modern Africa, the sociology of memory, Third World politics and post-conflict societies.

    List of Maps  Acknowledgments  Glossary and Acronyms  Notes on Terminology, Orthography and Currency  Prologue: The Making and Unmaking of the Namapa Naparamas  1. Myth as a ‘Meaning-making’ Device in Post-Independence Mozambique  2. Aspects of Precolonial and Colonial Nampula  3. From ‘Abaixo’ to ‘Chiefs of Production’, 1975-1987  4. The Context, 1987-1994  5. Multipartyism, the Retraditionalization of Local Administration and the Apparent Duplication of State Authority: The Case of Nampula Province  6. Labor, Tribute and Authority  7. In the Name of the State  8. Roots, Routes and Rootlessness: Ruling Political Practice and Mozambican Studies  Bibliography

    Biography

    Alice Dinerman