Freedom Fractures: Anti-Colonial Movements, Militancy, and Negotiated Independence (Paperback) by Olivia Morris on MixCache.com
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Freedom Fractures: Anti-Colonial Movements, Militancy, and Negotiated Independence MTA
From Grassroots Organizing to Armed Struggle, 1919–1975

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About this book:
Freedom Fractures: Anti-Colonial Movements, Militancy, and Negotiated Independence

"Freedom Fractures" by [Author's Name] provides a comprehensive analysis of anti-colonial movements in Africa from 1919 to 1975, examining the diverse strategies employed to achieve independence. The book argues that these movements were not monolithic, but rather dynamic "mosaics of strategies" encompassing legal advocacy, labor action, mass protest, and armed struggle. It explores how leaders and communities made tactical choices under colonial pressure, how ideas spread across borders, and how these decisions ultimately shaped the nature of the newly independent African states.

The book traces the evolution of these strategies, beginning with the interwar period (1919-1939) where legal petitions, labor organizing, and the burgeoning African press laid the groundwork for opposition. Chapters delve into specific case studies, such as the strategic use of labor strikes as "political schools," the development of legalist opposition through newspapers and courts, and the mobilization power of religious networks. It also highlights the critical roles played by students, exiles, and pan-African circuits in fostering solidarity and intellectual exchange. The impact of World War II on accelerating decolonization is also thoroughly examined, showing how the global conflict both disrupted colonial authority and created new opportunities for nationalist movements.

The latter half of the book focuses on the varied paths to independence, contrasting examples like Ghana's "electoral pathway" through mass parties and ballot boxes with Nigeria's complex federal compromises that often led to internal strife. It covers Guinea's radical "break with France" under Sékou Touré, the internationally supervised transitions of Cameroon and Togo, and the intense rural insurgency of the Mau Mau uprising in Kenya. The book further explores key moments like Egypt's nationalization of the Suez Canal and its role in the Bandung Conference, as well as the brutal urban warfare of the Algerian War for Independence.

Finally, "Freedom Fractures" analyzes the protracted struggles in Portuguese Africa, exemplified by FRELIMO's war and negotiations in Mozambique, the multi-factional conflict in Angola involving MPLA, FNLA, and UNITA, and PAIGC's unique "theory in practice" in Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde. It also scrutinizes the challenges faced by settler republics, detailing Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence and the regional fallout, and the long, underground struggle against apartheid in South Africa leading up to 1975. The concluding chapter reflects on 1975 as a pivotal year, marking the "unfinished decolonization" and underscoring how the means of liberation profoundly influenced the character and challenges of the post-colonial states.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book maps a strategic spectrum of anti-colonial tactics—legal advocacy, labor action, mass protest, and armed struggle—showing how movements assembled and revised these repertoires based on local conditions and colonial responses.
  • Leadership and ideology were central, with leaders interpreting freedom through distinct moral languages (nationalism, Pan-Africanism, socialism, Islamic reform) that shaped tactical choices and postcolonial state formation.
  • Anti-colonial strategies constantly interacted: strikes could precipitate constitutional conferences, failed petitions could radicalize youth wings, and insurgency often coexisted with negotiation rather than replacing it.
  • Everyday politics in markets, mines, farms, and neighborhoods—sustained by women traders, dockworkers, catechists, teachers, and veterans—formed the essential backbone of movements beyond elite leadership.
  • International arenas (UN, OAU, Non-Aligned Movement) and the Cold War significantly influenced liberation struggles, with external patrons providing resources and neighboring states offering sanctuary or imposing borders.
Who's It For:

This book is intended for students and scholars of African history, decolonization studies, and postcolonial politics; researchers interested in social movement strategy and comparative liberation struggles; and readers seeking to understand how the means of achieving independence shaped the character and challenges of postcolonial African states. It will particularly benefit those examining the interplay between local organizing, leadership decisions, and international context in anti-colonial movements.

Author:

Olivia Morris

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

May 5, 2026

Language:

English

Word Count:

69,120 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 50 minutes

Sample:

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