Fr. 189.00

Free(ing) France in Colonial Brazzaville - Race, Urban Space, and the Making of Afrique Francaise Libre

English · Hardback

Will be released 31.01.2019

Description

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List of contents

Introduction: Considering Space and Race in the Making of Afrique Française Libre
Chapter One: Charles de Gaulle, Giant Gorillas, and "Fantastically Clad Negroes": Imagining a Free France in Brazzaville
Chapter Two: Robinson Crusoe and the "New Jean of Arc" in Brazzaville: Defining, Modernizing and Living in a European Afrique Française Libre
Chapter Three: "If There is a Place on this Earth to Be Happy, This is Not It": Discipline, Control, and Daily Life Through Numbers in Afrique Française Libre
Chapter Four: Palm Wine, Whispers, and Wishes: Social Life, Entrepreneurialism, and African Resistance in Wartime Brazzaville
Chapter Five: Rioting through Religion: Faith, Upheaval, and Anti-Colonialism in Wartime Brazzaville
Epilogue: Transnational Brazzaville and Imagining a Free Future

About the author

Danielle Porter Sanchez is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Muhlenberg College, USA.

Summary

This monograph examines Brazzaville’s role in remaking the Free France movement after the fall of France in 1940. Suddenly, Brazzaville, a marginal city in the French empire prior to the fall of France, became the capital of Afrique Française Libre.
This book analyzes the international imagining of AFL through the simultaneous constructions of virtual and physical Brazzavilles. It also examines how French efforts to reconstruct the city heavily influenced many aspects of daily life within the capital, ranging from food shortages, displacement, the increased policing of African bodies, and the development of multiple avenues of resistance among Africans. Sanchez dramatically re-centers the Second World War by following sources that emphasize the profound value of Brazzaville following the fall of France. Brazzaville is integral to understanding not only France’s progression in the war, but also the repercussions of decades of colonial neglect and forcing Africans to participate in a war effort that emphasized the hypocrisy of colonial rule. Furthermore, the book draws attention to a history of the Second World War in Africa that pushes beyond military recruitment or forced labor and considers the lived experiences of a population that felt the repercussions of this global conflict in their daily lives
Offering a highly original and scholarly contribution to the literature, this book is an important read for uper level students and scholars of colonial history, Francophone Africa and the Second World War.

Product details

Authors Danielle Sanchez, Danielle (Muhlenberg College Sanchez
Publisher Routledge Academic
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Release 31.01.2019, delayed
 
EAN 9780815358541
ISBN 978-0-8153-5854-1
No. of pages 240
Series Global Africa
Global Africa
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Geosciences > Geography

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