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in the 1880s and 1890s. Rhodes must convince his ancestors that he has been just and honest in his dealings with the
Ndebele king Lobengula and his people, while Lobengula is required to explain to the ancestral spirits just how he had lost the land to the white man. The novel was banned in Rhodesia.
172:. The school, which opened in 1962, provided academic, technical and commercial education for black Africans. He was deeply involved in the liberal politics of Southern Rhodesia during the 1950s and 1960s, but became disillusioned when he came to the conclusion that the
290:(or Matabele) ruler, who are each tried by their ancestors for their respective parts in obtaining and granting the various concessions that led to the occupation of Matabeleland, Mashonaland and their environs by Rhodes's
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He graduated with honours from Fort Hare in 1948 and returned to
Southern Rhodesia to become a teacher. While pursuing his teaching career he began to make plans for
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outlined the white man’s conquest of
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minister and nationalist politician, and his wife, Grace Mano, a
Methodist evangelist. The family lived in
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and in
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politics, running unsuccessfully for political office on two occasions. He held high offices in
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and the most prolific of the first generation of black
Zimbabwean creative writers in English.
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in 1979, concentrating instead on his writing. With his wife, Tommie
Anderson, he wrote
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in
Rhodesia would never accept any multiracial options for the country's government.
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firm. He also taught
African history at various universities in the US, including
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Samkange moved to the United States where he took further education at the
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375:*UDI was Rhodesia’s Unilateral Declaration of Independence in 1965 (see
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278:(1966), is a tale told by an old man of the imagined twin trials of
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from that institution, he worked as a journalist and then opened a
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106:. He was a member of an elite Zimbabwean nationalist political
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Samkange returned to
Rhodesia in 1978 and became involved in
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The Literary Encyclopedia: Brief bio of Stanlake Samkange
298:Stanlake Samkange died March 6, 1988, in Zimbabwe.
377:Unilateral Declaration of Independence (Rhodesia)
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211:During his time at Indiana he began writing
453:Zimbabwean expatriates in the United States
392:The Odyssey: Brief bio of Stanlake Samkange
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27:Zimbabwean historiographer and educationist
348:– 1975 (Heinemann African Series, London)
128:British South Africa Company-administered
72:Learn how and when to remove this message
85:Stanlake John William Thompson Samkange
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329:What Rhodes Really Said About Africans
271:(1971), a popular history of Africa.
407:University of Groningen, Netherlands
402:The New York Times archive: Obituary
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263:(1980), an attempt to systematize
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181:Indiana University at Bloomington
133:. He was the son of the Reverend
195:and in 1978 he was professor of
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458:20th-century Zimbabwean writers
423:Zimbabwean historical novelists
253:United African National Council
245:Zimbabwe African People's Union
201:Northeastern University, Boston
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197:African American studies
114:Early life and education
340:On Trial for My Country
276:On Trial for My Country
265:an African epistemology
217:On Trial for My Country
155:University of Fort Hare
153:, South Africa and the
43:This article cites its
448:20th-century novelists
428:Zimbabwean journalists
364:On Trial for That UDI
323:Hunhuism or Ubuntuism
227:, the Matabele king.
352:Year of the Uprising
261:Hunuism or Ubuntuism
183:. After earning his
311:Origins of Rhodesia
237:African nationalist
104:African nationalist
336:Historical novels
193:Harvard University
87:(1922–1988) was a
213:historical novels
135:Thompson Samkange
131:Southern Rhodesia
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49:does not provide
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16:(Redirected from
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358:Among Them Yanks
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438:1988 deaths
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307:Nonfiction
247:and Bishop
124:Mashonaland
417:Categories
386:References
100:journalist
89:Zimbabwean
284:Lobengula
225:Lobengula
139:Methodist
366:* – 1986
143:Bulawayo
409:– (PDF)
288:Ndebele
207:Writing
108:dynasty
45:sources
360:– 1985
354:– 1978
342:– 1966
319:– 1970
313:– 1968
286:, the
267:, and
231:Return
120:Zvimba
331:–1982
325:–1980
302:Works
185:Ph.D.
159:Alice
151:Natal
126:, in
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