A deeply felt and engaging personal account of Zimbabwe's political
awakening by one of its best-known historians.
I did not set out for Rhodesia as a radical' writes Terence Ranger. This
memoir of the years between 1957, when he first went to Southern
Rhodesia, and 1967 when he published his first book, is both an intimate
record of the African awakening which Ranger witnessed during those ten
years, and of the process which led him to write Revolt in Southern
Rhodesia. Intended as both history and as historiography, Writing Revolt
is also about the ways in which politics and history interacted. The men
with whom Ranger discussed Zimbabwean history were the leaders of
African nationalism; his seminar papers were sent to prisons and into
restricted areas. Both they and he were making political as well as
intellectual discoveries. The book also includes a brief account of
Ranger's life before he went to Africa.
TERENCE RANGER was Emeritus Rhodes Professor of Race Relations,
University of Oxfordand author of many books including Are we not also
Men? (1995), Voices from the Rocks (1999) and Bulawayo Burning (2010),
and co-editor of Violence and Memory (2000).
Zimbabwe & Southern Africa (South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland,
and Namibia): Weaver Press