About the Author:
Elizabeth Schmidt is Professor of History at Loyola College in Maryland. She is the author of Decoding Corporate Camouflage: U.S. Business Support for Apartheid (Institute for Policy Studies, 1980) and Peasants, Traders, and Wives: Shona Women in the History of Zimbabwe, 1870-1939 (Heinemann, 1992).
Review:
?This book makes a welcome contribution to studies of independence movements, gender roles and political participation, and Guinea's tumultuous and rich history. It also opens the door to more investigations on political participation and mobilization in Guinea.?-July 2006
?Using a variety of archival and oral sources, the latter to very good discursive effect, Schmidt has written a highly readable, jargon-free, and well-organized account of Guinean African nationalism from below. In the often peculiar lexical universe of academic discourse, this is no mean achievement....[s]he has produced a model text, one of the best dissections of a nationalist movement anywhere in Africa. Hers is a foremost contribution to the literature as well as the interpretation of African nationalism.?-April 2006
?Instead of the traditional top-down approach to nationalist anticolonial movements, this study adopts a "bottom-up" approach. Schmidt examines the role played by the Guinean branch of the Rassemblement Democratique (Democratique) Africain (RDA) in achieving independence from France, focusing on the ability of its Western-educated elites to form a broad-based ethnic, class, and gender alliance with grassroots groups (military veterans, trade unionists, peasants, and women) that had their own grievances against the French colonial state and its native collaborators (chiefs). Schmidt convincingly argues that these groups shaped the party's nationalist agenda and struggle....[a] timely contribution to the scholarship on African anticolonial nationalism. Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above.?-Choice
?Elizabeth Schmidt's latest book is a welcome addition to African historiography and in particular among works seeking to recast and question our historical interpretation of post-World War II African nationalism. This is a groundbreaking work both in its scope and methodology, as Schmidt combines careful archival work with nuanced use of oral histories. The result is a much needed synthesis of two previously opposing tropes: the political narrative of African nationalism as the confines of elite Western-educated men, and the social historian's understanding of non-elite participation in strikes, community politics, and regional and ethnic associations....The "masses" in Schmidt's work are far from undifferentiated or docile, and the resulting narrative offers numerable insights into the nature of African politics not only in the period of nationalist mobilization but for other periods as well, including the recent past.?-2006
"Instead of the traditional top-down approach to nationalist anticolonial movements, this study adopts a "bottom-up" approach. Schmidt examines the role played by the Guinean branch of the Rassemblement Democratique (Democratique) Africain (RDA) in achieving independence from France, focusing on the ability of its Western-educated elites to form a broad-based ethnic, class, and gender alliance with grassroots groups (military veterans, trade unionists, peasants, and women) that had their own grievances against the French colonial state and its native collaborators (chiefs). Schmidt convincingly argues that these groups shaped the party's nationalist agenda and struggle....[a] timely contribution to the scholarship on African anticolonial nationalism. Recommended. Upper-level undergraduates and above."-Choice
"This book makes a welcome contribution to studies of independence movements, gender roles and political participation, and Guinea's tumultuous and rich history. It also opens the door to more investigations on political participation and mobilization in Guinea."-The Journal of African History
"Using a variety of archival and oral sources, the latter to very good discursive effect, Schmidt has written a highly readable, jargon-free, and well-organized account of Guinean African nationalism from below. In the often peculiar lexical universe of academic discourse, this is no mean achievement....[s]he has produced a model text, one of the best dissections of a nationalist movement anywhere in Africa. Hers is a foremost contribution to the literature as well as the interpretation of African nationalism."-American Historical Review
"Elizabeth Schmidt's latest book is a welcome addition to African historiography and in particular among works seeking to recast and question our historical interpretation of post-World War II African nationalism. This is a groundbreaking work both in its scope and methodology, as Schmidt combines careful archival work with nuanced use of oral histories. The result is a much needed synthesis of two previously opposing tropes: the political narrative of African nationalism as the confines of elite Western-educated men, and the social historian's understanding of non-elite participation in strikes, community politics, and regional and ethnic associations....The "masses" in Schmidt's work are far from undifferentiated or docile, and the resulting narrative offers numerable insights into the nature of African politics not only in the period of nationalist mobilization but for other periods as well, including the recent past."-Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History
"[Schmidt] shows how the politics of independence [were] fired by the interests, grievances, and energies of women, male trade unionists and ex-soldiers after the Second World War. Their indigenous nationalism was not always united, but it carried great force, often to the alarm of the western-educated elites. By renewing the history of West African nationalism Schmidt has also given greater historical depth to the conflicts between 'ordinary Africans' and those who claim to speak for them."-John Lonsdale Emeritus Professor University of Cambridge
"Using colonial archives, especially police reports, and oral interviews, Elizabeth Schmidt has written a brilliant study of the nationalist movement in Guinea that focuses not on a handful of leaders, but on the mass of followers. By looking at the way different groups of people articulated their grievances against the colonial state, she provides a richly textured study of the end of colonialism in Guinea. The success of Sekou Toure and his collaborators was thus not in creating opposition, but in riding the waves of popular feeling and pulling together disparate strands of discontent into a powerful national movement."-Martin Klein Emeritus Professor University of Toronto
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.