Youth, Nationalism, and the Guinean Revolution
- Africa;
- Social Movements
Topics:
In 1958, Guinea declared independence from France and propelled Ahmed Sekou Toure to power. Early revolutionary fervour was not to last, and until his death in 1984, Sekou Toure ruled with an iron fist. What would it have been like to participate in Guinea's changing political fortunes? 1999 IDRF Fellow Jay Straker invites readers to reconsider the sources, stakes, and ramifications of Guinea's nation-building experience. By engaging official political tracts, state and popular newspapers, education journals, novels, poems, plays, photographs, and personal histories, Straker offers an alternative view of the uneven effects of the state's attempts to reshape popular attitudes, social practice, and youth consciousness. Showing how visions of ideal youth played into the workings of revolutionary power, Straker creates a captivating and intense history that uncovers the ambitions that drove militant socialist-revolutionary politics in Guinea. Buy from Amazon
Published: Indiana University Press, 2009
ISBN: 978-0253220592
Citation: Straker, James David, Youth, Nationalism, and the Guinean Revolution (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2009).


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