Zulu Wars The Boer War First World War Second World War Rhodesia & the rhodesian Conflict South African Border War / Namibian Independence South African colours & markings Modern African Conflicts piracy books of the british south african police Commemorative Figures Commemorative Plaques Wargaming African Conflicts
Jocelyn Alexander, JoAnn McGregor and Terence Ranger
Publisher: James Currey (2000)
Paperback – 320 pages
Our Price: £19.99 + (£3.99 p&p)
£23.98 - (Incl Postage)
Violence has powerfully shaped the history of Matabeleland from the 1890s to the 1980s, and silence has surrounded the history of this region of Zimbabwe, excluding it from national memory. This text aims to break the silence and redress the imbalance of Zimbabwe's national history.
‘This is a complex and fascinating book...revisionist history in the best sense of the term - challenging the orthodox view of an established historiography by bringing to light new data and subjecting it to fresh interpretation...the best account yet available of Zimbabwe's dreadful violence in the 1980s, and should be essential reading for all those interested in understanding the nature of the post-colony in Africa...In understanding violence, detail and context matter; and while social scientists may be frustrated that the authors of Violence and Memory have largely ignored social theories of violence, they will surely welcome the emphasis upon events and their gestation. This is an important book that should be widely read’.. -
David M. Anderson in JOURNAL OF MODERN AFRICAN STUDIES