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Populism and Nationalism: a Comment on D.A. Low's “The Advent of Populism in Buganda”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
Extract
Anthony Low is surely right in urging students of modern African politics to probe deeper into African society and culture than they have been accustomed to do. In part because of the speed with which political events have unfolded during the past decade – making it difficult enough just to keep up with day-to-day events – and in part because of the disjunction between traditional socio-cultural groupings and modern political boundaries – making it easy to believe that the former are irrelevant to the latter – much recent writing on African affairs, even when “well informed”, has been exceedingly superficial. Low's work on Buganda, including especially his sensitive study of Ganda-British relations during the early years of the Protectorate, stands as an admirable exception. Both in the earlier studies and in his present analysis of populism, twentieth-century Baganda are shown to act in ways, and out of sentiments, that are understandably related both to contemporary circumstances and to the Ganda past.
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- Populism and Nationalism
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- Copyright © Society for the Comparative Study of Society and History 1964
References
1 Low, D.A. and Pratt, R.C., Buganda and British Overrule 1900–1955 (London, 1960), pp. 3–159.Google Scholar
2 Geertz, C., “The Integrative Revolution: Primordial Sentiments and Civil Politics in the New States”, in Geertz, C. (ed.), Old Societies and New States (Glencoe, 1963), pp. 105–157.Google Scholar
3 Kohn, H., The Idea of Nationalism (New York, 1944).Google Scholar
4 Safran, N., Egypt in Search of Political Community (Cambridge, 1961)Google Scholar; Stavrianos, L.S., The Balkans Since 1453 (New York, 1958).Google Scholar
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