The ideological scramble for Africa how the pursuit of anticolonial modernity shaped a postcolonial order, 1945-1966
Introduction : How African Liberation Shaped the International System -- A Foreign Policy of the Mind, 1945-1954 -- Offering Hungry Minds a Better Development Project, 1955-1956 -- The Pan-African Path to Modernity, 1957-1958 -- Redefining Decolonization in the Sahara, 1959-1960 -- The Congo Crisis...
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Format: | UnknownFormat |
Sprache: | eng |
Veröffentlicht: |
Ithaca, London
Cornell University Press
2023
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Schlagworte: |
Nkrumah, Kwame
> Influence
> Political and social views
> Decolonization
> History
> Postcolonialism
> Pan-Africanism
> World politics
> African history
> Afrikanische Geschichte
> Diplomatie
> HIS037100
> Kalte Kriege und Stellvertreterkonflikte
> POL053000
> POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Diplomacy
> Politik und Staat
> Regional studies
> Regionalstudien / Internationale Studien
> Africa
> Politics and government
> Afrika
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Online Zugang: | Cover |
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Zusammenfassung: | Introduction : How African Liberation Shaped the International System -- A Foreign Policy of the Mind, 1945-1954 -- Offering Hungry Minds a Better Development Project, 1955-1956 -- The Pan-African Path to Modernity, 1957-1958 -- Redefining Decolonization in the Sahara, 1959-1960 -- The Congo Crisis as the Litmus Test for Psychological Modernization, 1960-1961 -- Managing the Effects of Modernization, 1961-1963 -- The Struggle to Defeat Racial Modernity in South Africa and Rhodesia, 1963-1966 -- The Collapse of Anticolonial Modernization, 1963-1966 -- Conclusion : How Decolonization Made Our Times. In The Ideological Scramble for Africa, Frank Gerits examines how African leaders in the 1950s and 1960s crafted an anticolonial modernization project. Rather than choose Cold War sides between East and West, anticolonial nationalists worked to reverse the psychological and cultural destruction of colonialism.Kwame Nkrumah's African Union was envisioned as a federation of liberation to challenge the extant imperial forces: the US empire of liberty, the Soviet empire of equality, and the European empires of exploitation. In the 1950s, the goal of proving the potency of a pan-African ideology shaped the agenda of the Bandung Conference and Ghana's support for African liberation, while also determining what was at stake in the Congo crisis and in the fight against white minority rule in southern and eastern Africa. In the 1960s, the attempt to remake African psychology was abandoned, and socioeconomic development came into focus. Anticolonial nationalists did not simply resist or utilize imperial and Cold War pressures but drew strength from the example of the Haitian Revolution of 1791, in which Toussaint Louverture demanded the universal application of Europe's Enlightenment values. The liberationists of the postwar period wanted to redesign society in the image of the revolution that had created them. The Ideological Scramble for Africa demonstrates that the Cold War struggle between capitalism and Communism was only one of two ideological struggles that picked up speed after 1945; the battle between liberation and imperialism proved to be more enduring "After 1945 African nationalists were drawn into a battle for African hearts and minds. Rather than choose between East or West, Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana promoted a vision of anticolonial modernity and competed with imperial, communist, and capitalist modernization schemes to prove the superiority of his plan for postcolonial order"-- |
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Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | xi, 304 Seiten Illustrationen, Karten |
ISBN: | 9781501767913 978-1-5017-6791-3 |