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ID120366
Title Proper2010 Independence jubilees
Other Title Informationthe politics and aesthetics of national commemoration in Africa
LanguageENG
AuthorLentz, Carola
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 2010, as many as seventeen African states celebrated their independence jubilees. The debates surrounding the organisation of these celebrations, and the imagery and performances they employed, reflect the fault lines with which African nation-building has to contend, such as competing political orientations as well as religious, regional and ethnic diversity. The celebrations represented constitutive and cathartic moments of nation-building, aiming to enhance citizens' emotional attachments to the country and inviting to remember, re-enact and re-redefine national history. They became a forum of debate about what should constitute the norms and values that make-up national identity and, in the interstices of official ceremonies, provided space for the articulation of new demands for public recognition. A study of the independence celebrations thus allows us to explore contested processes of nation-building and images of nationhood and to study the role of ritual and performance in the (re)production of nations.
`In' analytical NoteNations and Nationalism Vol. 19, No.2; Apr 2013: p.217-237
Journal SourceNations and Nationalism Vol. 19, No.2; Apr 2013: p.217-237
Key WordsNational Days ;  Independence Jubilees ;  National Commemoration ;  National Heroes ;  Africa ;  Ethnic and National Identities