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STORMING THE CITADEL: DECOLONIZATION AND POLITICAL CONTESTATION IN GUINEA'S FUTA JALLON, 1945–61
Journal article   Peer reviewed

STORMING THE CITADEL: DECOLONIZATION AND POLITICAL CONTESTATION IN GUINEA'S FUTA JALLON, 1945–61

John Straussberger
Journal of African history, Vol.57(2), pp.231-249
07-2016

Abstract

Regional Struggles in Colonial West Africa
This article examines how contestation between political parties, politicians, and their supporters shaped Guinea's decolonization from 1945 to 1961. The last region to resist the rise of Sékou Touré's PDG, the Fulbe-dominated Futa Jallon – as both a political space and representation of Fulbe culture – was at the center of strategic and intellectual struggles over the shape of the postcolonial Guinean state and society. What resulted from contestation was the general belief that the Fulbe and the Futa Jallon were divergent from the rest of Guinea, a fragment in the making.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0021853716000050View

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