The 1945 General Strike in Northern Nigeria and its Role in Anti-Colonial Nationalism
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Date
2014
Authors
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Publisher
University of the Western Cape
Abstract
This thesis follows the course of the Nigerian general strike of 1945 in the Northern provinces, a previously under-researched region. It examines some of the many ways in which the strike has been understood in the academy, focusing in particular on the works of Alkasum Abba, Kazah-Toure and Bill Freund who have regarded the strike as well supported and successful. By employing Ian Phimister and Brian Raftopoulos's analysis of the 1948 general strike in colonial Zimbabwe, this thesis re-reads the narrative of success by bringing to the fore previosuly ignored issues relating to questions of planning, tactics, propaganda, solidarity, leadership, and execution of the strike. This re-reading reveals a considerably more varied and uneven response across and within the different categories of workers than has been previously assumed by scholars. Such unevenness challenges notions of "solidarity" and "steadfastness" attributed to the industrial action, with implications for how workers struggles have been incorporated into wider narratives of decolonization and anti-colonial nationalism.
Description
Magister Artium - MA
Keywords
Nationalism Labour Political Unionism General Strike Northern Nigeria, Anti-colonial Nationalism, Labour, Political Unionism, General Strike, Northern Nigeria, Workers Union, Colonial Economic Re-organization, Industrial Dispute, Historiography