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Title: | Cameroonian nationalists go global: from forest 'maquis' to a pan-African Accra |
Author: | Terretta, Meredith![]() |
Year: | 2010 |
Periodical: | The Journal of African History (ISSN 0021-8537) |
Volume: | 51 |
Issue: | 2 |
Pages: | 189-212 |
Language: | English |
Geographic terms: | Cameroon Ghana |
Subjects: | nationalism Union des Populations du Cameroun pan-Africanism political history decolonization |
External link: | https://www.jstor.org/stable/40985070 |
Abstract: | This article reassesses the political alternatives imagined by African nationalists in the 'first wave' of Africa's decolonization through the lens of Cameroonian nationalism. After the proscription of Cameroon's popular nationalist movement, the 'Union des Populations du Cameroun' (UPC), in the mid-1950s, thousands of Cameroonian nationalists went into exile, most to Accra (Ghana), where they gained the support of Kwame Nkrumah's Pan-African Bureau for African Affairs. The UPC's external support fed Cameroon's internal 'maquis' (as UPC members called the underground resistance camps within the territories), rooted in culturally particular conceptions of freedom and sovereignty. With such deeply local and broadly international foundations, the political future that Cameroonian nationalists envisaged seemed achievable: even after the Cameroon territories' official independence, UPC nationalists kept fighting. But, by the mid-1960s, postcolonial States prioritized territorial sovereignty over 'African unity' and Ghana's support of the UPC became unsustainable, leading to the movement's disintegration. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] |