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African Nationalism: Concept or Confusion?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
Extract
In common usage, African nationalism is descriptive shorthand for an assembly ofseparate and distinct phenomena, some of which have already taken on the protective colouring of popular understanding. Africans generally agree that they have experienced nationalism; they know the tree of nationalism when they see it and have tasted some, at least, of its fruits. For many of them, and for students of recent African events, its manifestations are obvious, although the quality of its spirit remains, like most spirits, capable only of inexact description. It is, in essence, pretty much what it is.
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References
Page 33 note 1 For an excellent study of the over-all problem, see Emerson, Rupert, From Empire to Nation: the rise to self-assertion of Asian and African peoples (Cambridge, Mass., 1959).Google Scholar
Page 38 note 1 Cf. Emerson, op. cit. pp. 110, 118, and 128.
Page 38 note 2 Carr, E. H., in Royal Instite of Interational Affairs Study Group Report on Nationalism (London, 1939,) p. 145.Google Scholar
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Page 39 note 3 Hailey's, Lord ‘Africanism’ seems particularly lacking in descriptive utility. See his An African Survey: Revised 1956 (London, 1957), pp. 251–2.Google Scholar
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Page 45 note 1 Rotberg, op. cit. p. 183.
Page 45 note 2 Young, Crawford, in Politics in the Congo: decolonization and independence (Princeton, 1965), pp. 281–98,CrossRefGoogle Scholar proposes a fivefold schema that unnecessarily includes overlapping categories.
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