Article contents
BRINGING HISTORY BACK IN: PAST, PRESENT, AND CONFLICT IN RWANDA AND THE EASTERN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 October 2017
Abstract
This article argues that on the borderland between eastern DRC and Rwanda, the past and its representations have been constantly manipulated. The cataclysmic events in both Rwanda and Congo since the 1990s have widened the gap between partial and politicized historical discourse and careful historical analysis. The failure to pay attention to the multiple layers in the production of historical narratives risks reproducing a politicized social present that ‘naturalizes’ differences and antagonisms between different groups by giving them more time-depth. This is a danger both for insiders and outsiders looking in. The answer is to focus on the historical trajectories that shape historical narratives, and to ‘bring history back in’.
Keywords
- Type
- Reimagining and Contesting the Past
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017
Footnotes
I would like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their crucial comments on an earlier draft of this article. This article benefited tremendously from the comments and insights provided by Judith Verweijen and David Newbury. It would have been impossible to write this without the help of several Congolese and Rwandan researchers, and without the patience of many Congolese and Rwandans who were so kind to sit down and share their histories with me. Author's email: [email protected]
References
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119 Published interview with Laurent Nkunda, 7 Sept. 2007, (http://www.laconscience.com/Laurent-Nkunda-Je-ne-protege-pas-les-Tutsi-Je-plaide-leur-cause-Il-y-a-une-cause-tutsie-qui-n-a.html). For similar sentiments, see Nkunda's speech in Nyamitaba, 6 Aug. 2006 in Stearns, From, 26.
120 On the naturalizing capacities of autochtony discourses, see Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J. L., ‘Naturing the nation: aliens, apocalypse, and the post-colonial state’, Social Identities, 7:2 (2001), 648–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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