School of Social and Political Science

When Will We Be Free? Scenes from a Historical Memoir on Colonialism and Freedom

Category
Seminar Series
17 January 2024
15:30 - 17:00

Venue

Hugh Robson Building, Lecture Theatre (G.04)

Description

The Centre of African Studies is delighted to invite you to the following seminar:

When Will We Be Free? Scenes from a Historical Memoir on Colonialism and Freedom

Speaker: Dr Simukai Chigudu, Associate Professor of African Politics (University of Oxford)


In this talk, Simukai Chigudu previews a chapter from the book he is currently writing, When Will We Be Free? Living in the Shadow of Empire and the Struggle for Decolonisation. The book is a work of literary nonfiction that combines memoir, political history, and cultural criticism. Chigudu interweaves his personal and family story with the history of Africa’s anti-colonial struggles from the 1950s to the present, with the hopes and frustrations of African independence, and with Britain’s public whitewashing of its colonial history in order to provide an intimate and nuanced account of colonization not merely as a historical or political phenomenon but as something that inescapably affects a person’s heart and mind, a person’s sense of identity and home—and he investigates what it would mean to be truly free of it.


When: Wednesday 17th January 2024 (3.30pm-5pm)

Where: Hugh Robson Building, Lecture  Theatre G.04

To attend this event: Please register on Eventbrite


Speaker Biography:

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Simukai Chigudu is an associate professor of African politics at the University of Oxford and a fellow of St Antony’s College, Oxford. In 2022-23, he was a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University. His monograph, The Political Life of an Epidemic: Cholera, Crisis and Citizenship Zimbabwe (Cambridge University Press, 2020), won the prestigious Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award from the International and American Political Science Associations. Before coming to academia, he worked as a junior doctor in the UK’s National Health Service for three years. He holds a medical degree from Newcastle University, a master of public health from Imperial College London, an MSc in African Studies and a DPhil in International Development from the University of Oxford. His doctorate won the Audrey Richards Prize, a biennial award from the African Studies Association for the best PhD thesis in African studies examined in the UK. He was a founding member of the Rhodes Must Fall movement in Oxford and he spends too much of his free time learning rap lyrics.

 

Key speakers

  • Dr Simukai Chigudu (Oxford University)

Price

Free

Location

Hugh Robson Building Lecture Theatre G.04 15 George Square EH8 9XD