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First published in 1983. Amilcar Cabral was one of Africas leading revolutionary figures. Universally recognised as the founding father at the independent state of Guin-Bissau, he was also the first truly important political thinker to have emerged from Africas two decades of revolution. This book was the first publication to present a critical analysis of his standing as a political theorist. Born in 1925 in the then Portuguese colony of Guin, Cabral devoted his life to the liberation of his people from colonialism and was instrumental in founding the PAIGC, the African Party for the Independence of Guin and Cape Verde. He was assassinated early in 1973, but the PAIGC continued his task and Guin-Bissau gained independence in September 1973. Guins revolution came late, but it was a genuine revolution and, like all revolutions, was accompanied by a theory of its own. That theory is found in the writings of Cabral. In this study Jack McCulloch explains that, because of the conjunction of a number of historical factors, the revolution in Guin assumed an importance for out of proportion to the size or economic significance of the country, and shows that consequently Cabrals theory has come to have an historical significance of its own. This account of Cabrals political theory demonstrates clearly that the effect of Cabrals career was to help bring down the last of the great colonial empires in Africa and, in the realm of theory, to dismantle the central shibboleths of African socialism.
- Format: Inbunden
- ISBN: 9780367247720
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 170
- Utgivningsdatum: 2019-12-04
- Förlag: Routledge