Tim Woods
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Figuring African history, memory, and trauma
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This chapter examines the relations between history, memory, trauma and African postcolonialism. Maps are not only about the primary importance of memory in the assertion of one's current identity in the face of unintegrated experiences from one's past, but it also displays the traumatic rupture caused by colonial violence that many African countries have experienced. To understand the experience, historicism must break with the monopoly of history by cognitive phrases and venture forth to acknowledge what is not presentable under the 'rules' of knowledge. In this respect, African writers urge readers to read Africa in a new way. Yet the relations between memory and history are complex, and especially their import for aesthetic, political and ethical issues. The subtle complexities of these issues can be tackled in a number of questions. The chapter explores some of these questions.

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African pasts

Memory and history in African literatures

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