TY - JOUR
T1 - 'History has to play its role'
T2 - Constructions of Race and Reconciliation in Secondary School Historiography in Zimbabwe, 1980-2002
AU - Barnes, Teresa
N1 - Funding Information:
* Research support from the Carnegie Council on Ethics in International Affairs in 2002 is gratefully acknowledged. My thanks go also to the JSAS readers for their helpful comments, and to Government Phiri and interviewees for their assistance. It should be noted that I examine the discourses of race in relation to whites rather than other minority groups in Zimbabwe. 1 T. Ranger, ‘Nationalist Historiography, Patriotic History and the History of the Nation: The Struggle Over the Past in Zimbabwe’, Journal of Southern African Studies, 30, 2 (June 2004), 215–34. 2 N. Kriger, ‘From Patriotic Memories to “Patriotic History” in Zimbabwe, 1990–2005’, Third World Quarterly, 27, 6 (September 2006), 1,151–69. 3 T. Scarnecchia, ‘The ‘Fascist Cycle’ in Zimbabwe, 2000–2005’, JSAS, 32, 2 (June 2006), 221–37. 4 This article relies on four main sources of data: an extensive re-reading of secondary school history syllabi that were used from 1980 to 2001 and of four of the history book series that were produced in the late 1980s and early 1990s; interviews with secondary school teachers; and a written questionnaire sent to history textbook authors.
PY - 2007/9
Y1 - 2007/9
N2 - This article examines changes in Zimbabwean secondary school history syllabi and textbooks, specifically their treatment of the issue of race; and relates these developments to larger social forces at work after 1980. A nationalist, Africa-centred and Marxist-inspired history syllabus was introduced in 1991; it was revised in 2000 and replaced in 2002 by one that was narrower, less comparative and with less emphasis on the development of critical reading and interpretive skills. In each instance, history was made to 'play its role'. Drawing on evidence from the syllabi, authors, teachers and schools, this article argues that although the first nationalist syllabi and textbooks were distinct improvements over their Rhodesian-era predecessors, they presented polarising messages along racial lines to a burgeoning school population. In conjunction with the passive 'live and let live' style of racial reconciliation in wider society, these educational circumstances contributed to a social avoidance of large-scale racial targeting, while racial identity and citizenship simultaneously came to be seen through the lens of political expediency. Although state-sponsored violence and propaganda certainly spread in the period under review, the article also suggests a possible counter-trend: that the promulgation of 'patriotic history' in Zimbabwe might find itself tempered to some extent by the country's educational structures, traditions and conditions.
AB - This article examines changes in Zimbabwean secondary school history syllabi and textbooks, specifically their treatment of the issue of race; and relates these developments to larger social forces at work after 1980. A nationalist, Africa-centred and Marxist-inspired history syllabus was introduced in 1991; it was revised in 2000 and replaced in 2002 by one that was narrower, less comparative and with less emphasis on the development of critical reading and interpretive skills. In each instance, history was made to 'play its role'. Drawing on evidence from the syllabi, authors, teachers and schools, this article argues that although the first nationalist syllabi and textbooks were distinct improvements over their Rhodesian-era predecessors, they presented polarising messages along racial lines to a burgeoning school population. In conjunction with the passive 'live and let live' style of racial reconciliation in wider society, these educational circumstances contributed to a social avoidance of large-scale racial targeting, while racial identity and citizenship simultaneously came to be seen through the lens of political expediency. Although state-sponsored violence and propaganda certainly spread in the period under review, the article also suggests a possible counter-trend: that the promulgation of 'patriotic history' in Zimbabwe might find itself tempered to some extent by the country's educational structures, traditions and conditions.
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U2 - 10.1080/03057070701475740
DO - 10.1080/03057070701475740
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34548169999
SN - 0305-7070
VL - 33
SP - 633
EP - 651
JO - Journal of Southern African Studies
JF - Journal of Southern African Studies
IS - 3
ER -