Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:27:38.576Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Roots of African Despotism: The Question of Political Culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

Early in this decade a political observer, looking at one of Africa's least known and most sanguinary states, described Equatorial Guinea as “Cambodia minus ideology” (Pélissier, 1980:13). During the eleven year presidency (1968-1979) of Francisco Macias Nguema, up to half of the population was liquidated or went into exile. Little is known on the internal workings or ideology of the regime. However, just as we can no longer say that there are peoples without histories, we can no longer assume that there are rulers without ideologies. Much statistical and other information on Equatorial Guinea is fragmentary or missing. It is possible, however, to trace the lineaments of the rise and fall of the first post-independent government. It is the purpose of this essay to examine that development. We shall seek an explanation, although it be a partial one, of the ideological and economic conditions which provided the context for the creation of a mass concentration camp in the tropics.

Since the nineteenth century, the materialist/idealist dichotomy has been at the center of much historiographical debate. A sub-theme has been the role of the individual in history. An increasingly wide range of scholars have used material conditions as the basis for their analysis. The individual is not an automous historical force, but rather represents a class and its interests as the class acts to maintain or establish its hegemony. Others, on the contrary, continue to maintain that the individual can, under certain circumstances, mold history to his or her will. It can and has been maintained that the idiosyncratic behavior of a leader can be an important independent variable in history.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Amin, Samir. 1974. Neo-Colonialism in West Africa. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
ANRD Position Paper 5. 1975. Geneva: Alianza Nacional de la Restauracion Democratica.Google Scholar
Artucio, A. 1980. The Trial of Macias in Equatorial Guinea: The Story of a Dictatorship (Geneva, 1980), 33.Google Scholar
Bruckner, Pascal. 1986. The Tears of the White Man. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Church, R. J. H. 1977. Africa and the Islands. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Clarence-Smith, G. 1979. Slaves, Peasants and Capitalists in Southern Angola, 1840-1926. London: Cambridge University Press Google Scholar
Clarence-Smith, G. 1985. “The Impact of the Second World War on Portuguese and Spanish Africa.” Journal of African History 26/2: 309–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1976. “The Political Economy of the African Peasantry and Modes of Production,” pp. 90111 in Gutkind, Peter C.W. and Wallerstein, I. (eds.) The Political Economy of Contemporary Africa. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Cordero, , Torres, J. 1941. Tratado Elemental de Derecho Colonial Español. Madrid: Editora Nacional.Google Scholar
Cronjé, S. 1976. Equatorial Guinea, the Forgotten Dictatorship: Forced Labour and Political Murder in Central Africa. London: Anti-Slavery Society.Google Scholar
Equatorial Guinea.” 1969. Africa Report 14/1: 2223.Google Scholar
Garcia, Ramon. 1977. Guinea, Macias, la ley del silencio. Barcelona: Plaza y Janes.Google Scholar
Fernandez, James. 1970. “The Affirmation of Things Past: Alar Ayong and Bwiti as Movements of Protest in Central and Northern Gabon,” pp. 427–57 in Rotberg, Robert and Mazrui, Ali (eds.) Protest and Power in Black Africa. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fernandez, James. 1972. “Fang Representations and Acculturation,” pp. 348 in Curtin, P. (ed.) Africa and the West, Intellectual Responses to European Culture. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Fernandez, James. 1982. Bwiti, An Ethnography of the Religious Imagination in Africa. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Fernandez, R. 1976. Materia Reservada. Madrid: Sedmay.Google Scholar
Gard, Robert. 1973. “The Colonization and Decolonization of Equatorial Guinea.” Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Gard, Robert. 1974. Equatorial Guinea: Machinations in Founding a National Bank. Pasadena, CA: Munger Africana Library.Google Scholar
Genovese, Eugene D. 1969. “Materialism and Idealism in the History of Negro Slavery in the Americas,” pp. 238–55 in Foner, Laura and Genovese, Eugene D. (eds.) Slavery in the New World, A Reader in Comparative History. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
Harris, Marvin. 1980. Cultural Materialism, The Struggle for a Science of Culture. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Howe, R.W. 1966. “Spain's Equatorial Island.” Africa Report 11/6:48.Google Scholar
Klinteberg, Robert af. 1978. Equatorial Guinea - Macias Country: the Forgotten Refugees. Geneva: International University Exhange Fund Field Study.Google Scholar
Kobel, Armin. 1976. “La Republique de Guinée Equatoriale, ses resources potentialles et virtualles. Possibilitiés de développment.” Ph.D. dissertation, Université de Neuchatel.Google Scholar
Kyemba, Henry. 1977. A State of Blood, The Inside Story of Idi Amin. New York: Ace Books.Google Scholar
Jackson, R. and Rosberg, C. 1982. Personal Rule in Black Africa, Prince, Autocrat, Prophet, Tyrant. Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, R. and Rosberg, C. 1986. “Sovereignty and Underdevelopment: Juridical Statehood in the African Crisis.” Journal of Modern Africa Studies 25/2: 131.Google Scholar
Legum, C., ed. 1970. African Contemporary Record 1968-1969. London: Rex Collings: 483.Google Scholar
Legum, C. 1973. African Contemporary Record. 1971-1972. London: Rex Collings: B504.Google Scholar
Le Monde. 1975. November 28: 6.Google Scholar
Liniger-Goumaz, M. 1979. “La république de Guinée Equatoriale. Une indépendence à refaire.” Afrique Contemporaine 105 (September-October): 13.Google Scholar
Liniger-Goumaz, M. 1980. “La république de Guinée Equatoriale.” Acta Geographica (Paris), 43, third trimester: 121.Google Scholar
Liniger-Goumaz, M. 1981. “Deux ans de Dictature post-Macias Nguema.” reprint, Genève--Afrique (Journal of the Swiss Society of African Studies): 157–80.Google Scholar
Liniger-Goumaz, M. 1982. Guinée Equatoriale, De la Dictature des Colons à la Dictature des Colonels. Geneva: Editions du Temps.Google Scholar
Mamdani, Mahmud. 1976. Politics and Class Formation in Uganda. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Mamdani, Mahmud. 1984. Imperialism and Fascism in Uganda. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press.Google Scholar
Mazrui, Ali. 1975a. Soldiers and Kinsmen in Uganda, the Making of a Military Ethnocracy. Beverly Hills: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Mazrui, Ali. 1975b. “The Resurrection of the Warrior Tradition in African Political Culture.” Journal of Modern African Studies 13/1: 6784.Google Scholar
Nabudere, D. W. 1980. Imperialism and Revolution in Uganda. London: Onyx Press.Google Scholar
Ndongo Bidyogo, Donato. 1977. Historia y Tragedia de Guinea Ecuatorial. Madrid: Cambio 16.Google Scholar
Ochaga Ngomo, B. 1970. “Nacimiento de la libertad de Guinea Ecutorial.” Organo Informativo del Ministerio de Educacion Nacional de Guinea Ecuatorial. 7: n.pp.Google Scholar
Osuntokun, Jide. 1977. “Nigeria-Fernando Po Relations from the Nineteenth Century to the Present.” Sherbrooke, Quebec: Canadian African Studies Association, 26 April-3 May:37.Google Scholar
Osuntokun, Jide. 1978. Equatorial Guinea-Nigerian Relations, the Diplomacy of Labor. Ibadan: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Partido Unico Nacional de Trabajadores de la Republica de Guinea Ecuatorial. 1973. “Resoluciones Generales del Tercer Congreso Nacional,” Bata.Google Scholar
Pélissier, Réné. 1968. “Uncertainty in Spanish Guinea.” Africa Report 13/6: 1638.Google Scholar
Pélissier, Réné. 1980. “Autopsy of a Miracle.” Africa Report 25/3: 1014.Google Scholar
Rodney, Walter. 1974. How Europe Undeveloped Africa. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press.Google Scholar
Saul, John. 1976. “The State in Post-Colonial Societies: Tanzania.” The Socialist Register.Google Scholar
Sawyer, Roger. 1986. Slavery in the Twentieth Century. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Sklar, Richard. 1979. “The Nature of Class Domination in Africa.” Journal of Modern African Studies 17/4: 531–52.Google Scholar
Sklar, Richard. 1983. “Democracy in Africa.” The African Studies Review 26/3–4: 1124.Google Scholar
Stark, Frank. 1986. “Theories of Contemporary State Formation in Africa: A Reassessment.” Journal of Modern African Studies 24/2: 325–47.Google Scholar
Ungar, Sanford. 1985. Africa, the Peoples and Politics of an Emerging Continent. New York: Simon and Schuster.Google Scholar
United Nations Economic and Social Council. 1978. Resolution 1503, paragraph 6 [a].Google Scholar
Viladach de Vecina, A. 1958. La Secta del Bwiti en la Guinea española. Madrid: Institute de Estudios Africanos.Google Scholar
Walter, E.V. 1969. Terror and Resistance: A Study of Political Violence with Some Case Studies of Some Primitive African Communities. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
West Africa. 1975. 10 March: 285.Google Scholar
West Africa. 1975. 6 October: 1190.Google Scholar
West Africa. 1980. 8 September: 1731.Google Scholar
Young, Crawford. 1982. Ideology and Development in Africa. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.Google Scholar