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Telling the neglected history of decolonisation and violence in Burundi, Aidan Russell examines the political language of truth that drove extraordinary change, from democracy to genocide. By focusing on the dangerous border between Burundi and Rwanda, this study uncovers the complexity from which ethnic ideologies, side-lined before independence in 1962, became gradually all-consuming by 1972. Framed by the rhetoric and uncertainty of 'truth', Russell draws on both African and European language source material to demonstrate how values of authority and citizenship were tested and transformed across the first decade of Burundi's independence, and a post-colony created in the interactions between African peasants and politicians across the margins of their states. Culminating with a rare examination of the first postcolonial genocide on the African continent, a so-called 'forgotten genocide' on the world stage, Russell reveals how the postcolonial order of central Africa came into being.
Sociology of culture --- Political sociology --- Internal politics --- anno 1960-1969 --- anno 1970-1979 --- Burundi --- Decolonization --- Political violence --- --Décolonisation --- --Violence politique --- --Politique et gouvernement --- --Relations interethniques --- --XXe s., --- History --- Politics and government --- Ethnic relations --- Decolonization. --- Ethnic relations. --- Political violence. --- Politics and government. --- 1900-1999. --- Burundi. --- Decolonization - Burundi --- Political violence - Burundi - History --- Décolonisation --- Violence politique --- Politique et gouvernement --- Relations interethniques --- XXe s., 1901-2000 --- Burundi - Politics and government - 20th century --- Burundi - Ethnic relations --- History.
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