ABSTRACT

Bringing together historians, political scientists, and literary analysts, this volume shows how biographical narratives can shed light on alternative, little known or under-researched aspects of state power in African politics.

Part 1 shows how biographical narratives breathe new life into subjects who, upon decolonization, had been reduced to silence - women, workers, and radical politicians. The contributors analyze the complex relationship between biographical narratives and power, questioning either the power of biographical codes peculiar to western, colonial origins, or the power to shape public memory. Part 2 reflects on the act of (auto-)biography writing as an exercise of power, one that blurs the lines between truth and invention.  (Auto-)biographical narratives appear as politicized, ambiguous stories. Part 3 focuses on female leadership during and after colonization, exploring on how women gained, lost, or reinvented "power". Brought together, the contributions of this volume show that the function of biographical narratives should no longer oscillate between romanticized narratives and historical evidence; their varied formats all offer fruitful opportunities for a multidisciplinary dialogue.

This book will be of interest to scholars from various disciplinary backgrounds working on the African postcolonial state, the decolonization process, women’s and gender studies, and biography writing.

chapter

Foreword

Fugitive freedoms

chapter

Acknowledgments

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

part 1|52 pages

Scales, borders, and frameworks

chapter 1|12 pages

What are the boundaries of African political biography?

Reflection based on the Biographical Dictionary of African Mobilizations and Protests, the “Maitron Afrique.”

chapter 2|19 pages

Deconstructing heroic biography

Bibi Titi Mohamed, public history, and nation building

chapter 3|19 pages

Fighting for national liberation in Africa

Pan-African itineraries and national settlements

part 2|64 pages

Autobiographies as construction sites of power

chapter 4|22 pages

Tactics of intervention

Manipulating the “problematic self” in Janet Kataaha Museveni's A Life

chapter 5|21 pages

Between truth and inventions

How public commemorations recite the biography of Amílcar Cabral

part 3|78 pages

Hide and seek

chapter 7|19 pages

Frieda von Bülow and Bibi Titi Mohammed

(De)colonized feminism in Tanzania

chapter 8|17 pages

Silenced no more

Doria Shafik speaks

chapter 9|16 pages

Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma

A thwarted political destiny

chapter |6 pages

Postscriptum

Getting to grips with “political biographies”