Remembering and Disremembering in Africa
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2012-11-20
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Thoughtful Museum
Abstract
In remembering the attainment of political emancipation, post-independence African countries have learned to narrate the official national narrative and to forget other stories. Commemoration of the nation’s past almost always goes hand in hand with officially decreed national amnesia.
Therefore, the story of the nation has to be narrated and remembered by forgetting certain aspects of the colonial past. By implication the dual act of remembering and forgetting sets the pattern for how the postcolonial African nation narrates itself in the postcolonial moment. Focusing on Kenya as an example, this paper argues that the national commemoration of political emancipation from colo nial rule tends to silence narratives of opposition and political incarceration that emerge in the post-colonial moment. The outcome is a remembering-and-forgetting battle that has implications for how diverse individuals conceive of themselves collectively as a nation and how they forge or fail to forge a coherent collective memory
Description
Book Chapter
Keywords
Post-independence Africa, African Countries, Colonialization
Citation
Waliaula, K. W. (2012). Remembering and Disremembering in Africa. The Thoughtful Museum. 55(2), 113-127.