Narratives of progress : Zimbabwean historiography and the end of history
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Date
Authors
Phimister, I.R. (Ian R.)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
This brief commentary takes its inspiration from the opening address delivered by
John Hoffman, and printed in these pages; that is, progress is usefully understood
as a contradictory, contested and ambiguous process. But rather than attempt a
comprehensive survey of the past 40 or so years of academic analyses of
Zimbabwe’s pasts, what follows has as its focus the emergence of ‘patriotic
history’ and particularly its nationalist antecedents. These are critically examined.
Although not concerned with the generality of recent studies that are neither
nationalist nor materialist in orientation, this paper sketches in outline the rise,
fall and rise of radical accounts. It ends by suggesting how such analyses might be
taken forward.
Description
Keywords
Zimbabwe, Historiography, Patriotic history, Nationalism, Political economy, Matabeleland
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Ian Phimister (2012) Narratives of progress: Zimbabwean historiography
and the end of history, Journal of Contemporary African Studies, 30:1, 27-34, DOI:
10.1080/02589001.2012.639657.