You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
How youth-centered ambitions destroyed the ideals of nationhood in Guinea
The book is a study of identity transformation and negotiation of identity as applied to Ahmed Sékou Touré and subordinates in colonial and post-colonial Guinea.
Leadership in Post-Colonial Africa examines the leadership concepts and lessons that emerged during and after the attainment of independence with insightful studies of Africa's first female presidents, gangster elitism, Nelson Mandela, and beyond.
Provides basic yet comprehensive facts about the social, economic, political and millitary institutions of the country.
Provides a study of the political evolution of Guinea from World War Two to the present. Based on primary-source information, this book examines with rare depth and breadth the eventful history of this nation-state, whose trajectory has impacted in no small ways Francophone Africa and the rest of the continent.
"Sangalan Oral Traditions examines the relationship in the African French Guinea between the social relations and the struggle of the people of Sangalan, the Sangalankas, over memories and the history of their identities. The book is based on the politics of memory of different corporate groups (elites and subordinates, men and women), their shared philosophy of history and the individual, and the sociology of pre-colonial (1850-1920) and colonial (1920-1958) Sangalan (northeast of Guinea). It focuses on the accounts of past events, which Sangalan corporate groups used not only to define themselves, but also to shape or reshape their relations with other corporate groups and outside forces."--BOOK JACKET.
His Master's Voice refutes the simplistic pattern of condescending criticism versus a complacent justification which often transpires from the debate on post-colonial Africa's general departure from political pluralism toward autocracy under single-party regimes. Hence, it places the debate in the historical context of statecraft and nation-building, whereby the line between pre-colonial heritage, colonial legacy and post-colonial innovations - against all appearances - has chiefly been a thin one.