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Revolt and Repression: Case Studies of Resistance to Colonial Rule MTA
Detailed examinations of localized uprisings, strategies of resistance, and colonial responses across Africa
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Revolt and Repression: Case Studies of Resistance to Colonial Rule *Revolt and Repression: Case Studies of Resistance to Colonial Rule* provides a comprehensive comparative analysis of twenty-five localized uprisings and nationalist movements across Africa during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The book moves beyond a singular narrative of decolonization to highlight the vast diversity of resistance strategies, ranging from the spiritual and nonviolent defiance of the Mouride Brotherhood in Senegal to the sophisticated guerrilla warfare of the FLN in Algeria and FRELIMO in Mozambique. By examining varied geographies—from the rugged Rif Mountains to the dense forests of the Ashanti kingdom and the arid Saharan corridors—the text illustrates how regional ecologies and existing social structures dictated the possibilities and tactics of African agency against imperial power.

The collection meticulously details the specific triggers of unrest, such as land alienation in Kenya, punitive taxation in Sierra Leone and Natal, and the disruption of sacred authority in Nigeria. It also offers a rigorous examination of imperial counterinsurgency playbooks, documenting the evolution of colonial strategies that shifted from pure military force and scorched-earth tactics to "hearts and minds" campaigns and administrative co-option. Through the use of archival records and oral histories, the chapters recover the critical roles played by women, youth, and religious institutions in forming resilient coalitions that challenged the legitimacy of extractive colonial projects.

Ultimately, the book frames these revolts not as mere footnotes to European history, but as foundational events that fundamentally shaped modern African national identities and governance. While many uprisings were crushed with devastating human and economic costs, the text argues that these defeats often reconfigured political possibilities and generated the institutional and cultural frameworks necessary for later liberation movements. By juxtaposing these diverse case studies, the book provides an analytical sourcebook for understanding how ordinary people confront concentrated power and how the long afterlives of these struggles continue to influence contemporary justice and collective memory.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book showcases the wide variety of African resistance—from armed uprisings and guerrilla campaigns to mass protests, boycotts, and nonviolent spiritual movements—demonstrating that opposition to colonial rule took many forms depending on local context.
  • Leadership emerged from diverse sources, including queen mothers, Sufi shaykhs, trade unionists, charismatic prophets, and modern political parties, illustrating how authority could be rooted in tradition, religion, or newly formed organizations.
  • Geography and ecology heavily influenced tactics: forests, deserts, rivers, and highlands provided cover for ambushes, shaped supply lines, and determined whether movements could rely on mobility or needed to adopt fortified positions.
  • Colonial powers responded with a mix of brutal repression—scorched‑earth policies, concentration camps, collective fines, and aerial bombardment—and reformist tactics such as indirect rule, development projects, and limited concessions aimed at dividing opposition.
  • The struggles left enduring legacies that shaped postcolonial societies, influencing land disputes, nationalist movements, cultural memory, and ongoing debates about justice, reparations, and state‑society relations in Africa.
Who's It For:

This volume is intended for scholars and students of African history, colonial studies, and postcolonial studies, as well as researchers interested in social movements, resistance theory, and imperial governance. It will also be valuable for educators teaching courses on decolonization, comparative empire, and the legacies of colonial violence, and for activists or policymakers seeking historical insight into contemporary struggles for land, autonomy, and justice in Africa and beyond.

Author:

Isabella Ferguson

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 18, 2026

Word Count:

124,043 words

Reading Time:

8 hours 41 minutes

Sample:

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