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Continuous Pasts - Frictions of Memory in Postcolonial Africa (Paperback)
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Continuous Pasts - Frictions of Memory in Postcolonial Africa (Paperback)
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In Continuous Pasts, author Sakiru Adebayo claims that the
post-conflict fiction of memory in Africa depicts the intricate
ways in which the past is etched on bodies and topographies,
resonant in silences and memorials, and continuous even in
experiences as well as structures of migration. Adebayo argues that
the post-conflict fiction of memory in Africa invites critical
deliberations on the continuity of the past within the realm of
positionality and the domain of subjectivity-that is to say, the
past is not merely present; instead, it survives, lives on, and is
mediated through the subject positions of victims, perpetrators, as
well as secondary and transgenerational witnesses. The book also
argues that post-conflict fiction of memory in Africa shows the
unfinished business of the past produces fragile regimes of peace
and asynchronous temporalities that challenge progressive
historicism. It contends that, in most cases in Africa, the
post-conflict present is beset with a tight political economy
wherein the scramble for survival trumps the ability to imagine a
just future among survivors-and that it is precisely this
despairing disposition toward the future that the some writers of
post-conflict fiction attempt to confront in their works. On the
whole, Continuous Pasts shows how post-conflict fictions of memory
in Africa recalibrate discourses of futurity, solidarity,
responsibility, justice, survival, and reconciliation. It also
contends that post-conflict fictions of memory in Africa provide
the tools for imagining and theorizing a collective African memory.
Each text analyzed in the book provides, in very interesting ways,
an imaginative possibility and template for how post-independence
African countries can 'remember together' using what the author
describes as an African transnational memory framework.
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