Lexington Books
Pages: 584
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-0698-4 • Hardback • December 2015 • $197.00 • (£152.00)
978-1-4985-0699-1 • eBook • December 2015 • $187.00 • (£144.00)
Nicholas Kariuki Githuku is assistant professor of African history at York College, CUNY.
Chapter 1: Inside the Mau Mau Mind: “Returning the Imperial” Gaze in Centennial Perspective
Chapter 2: White Man’s Country: The Colonial Foundations and Legal Architecture of the Kenyan State
Chapter 3: Colonial Rupture: African Experiential Anxiety of Transformation in Time, Space and Place, 1900-1951
Chapter 4: ’52 Minds on Kenya’s Destiny: The view from “the above”
Chapter 5: Drudgery in Pyrrhic Victory: Whither the Fruits of Independence?
Chapter 6: “Matigari ma Njirungi”: Bifurcation, Atomization and Survival of the Mentalité of Struggle
Chapter 7: “Bado Mapambano,” Solidarity Forever: Latter Day Travails of Critical Publics
Chapter 8: The Long Kenyan Century: A People’s Elusive Quest for “the Good Life”
[T]here is much to be admired in this ambitious and unconventional approach. Githuku provides a richly detailed and passionately argued study that will be of interest to anyone who seeks to understand the making of the postcolonial state in Kenya and the continuing tensions and disaffections that lurk just beneath the surface of its modern political life.
— The International Journal Of African Studies
[This book] offers prospective readers a richly detailed analysis of the ways in which unresolved historical problems and injustices stemming from colonialism continue to haunt contemporary Kenya.
— African Affairs
Nicholas Githuku’s history confronts [Kenya’s] violence and its political effects head on. He asks new questions about Kenya’s history, quotes previously unexamined evidence, and offers his readers important new insights. In all this he challenges his fellow Kenyans to join him in resurrecting their local historiography.
— John Lonsdale, Trinity College, Cambridge
To those who contend that the history of the colonial period is no longer of much consequence in recent developments and trends in Kenya and other parts of Africa, moreover, this book provides a detailed and powerful refutation.
— Robert M. Maxon, West Virginia University
All in all, Githuku has not just opened a window into colonial and post-colonial Kenyan experiences; he has painted a highly convincing and engaging tableau of a hundred years of Kenyan history in which every aspect of the struggle for Uhuru was brought together to show that the struggle has not just taken place in the ‘forest,’ and rural parts but also in urban Kenya. He brings together both ordinary Kenyans as well as radicals who were all fighting to make sure that Uhuru does not remain elusive to them forever.
— Stichproben – Vienna Journal of African Studies