Title
Imagining A Nation: History And Memory In Making Zimbabwe (Reconsiderations In Southern African History),Used
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In Imagining a Nation, Ruramisai Charumbira analyzes competing narratives of the founding of Rhodesia/Zimbabwe constructed by political and cultural nationalists both black and white since occupation in 1890. The book uses a wide array of sourcesincluding archives, oral histories, and a national monumentto explore the birth of the racialized national memories and parallel identities that were in vigorous contention as memory sought to present itself as history. In contrast with current global politics plagued by divisions of outsider and insider, patriot and traitor, Charumbira invites the reader into the liminal spaces of the regions history and questions the centrality of the nationstate in understanding African or postcolonial history today.Using an interdisciplinary methodology, Charumbira offers a series of case studies, bringing in characters from farflung places to show that history and memory in and of one small place can have a farreaching impact in the wider world. The questions raised by these stories go beyond the history of colonized or colonizer in one former colony to illuminate contemporary vexations about what it means to be a citizen, patriot, or member of a nation in an everglobalizing world. Rather than a history of how the rulers of Rhodesia or Zimbabwe marshaled state power to force citizens to accept a single definition of national memory and identity, Imagining a Nation shows how ordinary people invested in the soft power of individual, social, and collective memories to create and perpetuate exclusionary national myths.Reconsiderations in Southern African History
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