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Angolan Revolution - Vol. 2: Exile Politics and Guerilla Warfare, 1962-1976

by

Marcum, John A.

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Angolan Revolution - Vol. 2: Exile Politics and Guerilla Warfare, 1962-1976, ISBN 9780262131360 Own This Book? Sell It
ISBN-13:

9780262131360

ISBN:

0262131366

Pub Date: 1978
Publisher: MIT Press Summary: The first volume of this work, subtitled The Anatomy of an Explosion, 1950-1962,described the background and the first two years of the armed struggle for Angolan independence. It was published in 1969, and left its readers eagerly awaiting the sequel. Thus, a reviewer in the Journal of Modern African Studieswrote that "...this volume was a joy to read. Its contribution to a fuller understanding of Portuguese Africa  [read more]
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Product Details
ISBN-13:

9780262131360


ISBN:

0262131366


Pub Date: 1978
Publisher: MIT Press

The first volume of this work, subtitled The Anatomy of an Explosion, 1950-1962,described the background and the first two years of the armed struggle for Angolan independence. It was published in 1969, and left its readers eagerly awaiting the sequel. Thus, a reviewer in the Journal of Modern African Studieswrote that "...this volume was a joy to read. Its contribution to a fuller understanding of Portuguese Africa is immense, especially in light of the meager literature in English. MIT Press will publish a second volume, which will bring us beyond 1962, and I, for one, would not miss it for all the coffee in Angola." And another scholar, writing in the American Historical Review,concluded that "Professor Marcum's able study of the struggle for Angolan independence in 1962 is not likely to be easily replaced for quite some time to come. Everyone interested in this struggle will eagerly look forward to his second volume that brings the story through the sixties." The second volume narrates how Angola won her independence from Portugal in 1975, traces the course of the continuing conflict among revolutionary groups to its effectively final outcome, and ends as Angola gains worldwide recognition as a sovereign and (tenuously) unified nation. This new volume fully meets the expectations aroused by its predecessor, with its scrupulous linking of events and evidence. Moreover, since the historical incidents leading to the denouementare intrinsically more dramatic than those of the early years of the struggle, the second volume possesses a heightened narrative drive, enabling the reader to keep up with the quickening and sometimes confusing pace of events. Marcum thoroughly documents the rival revolutionary parties-based as much on ethnicity as on ideology-that fought the Portuguese and each other. (Two major movements were active in the field up to 1966, when a third party emerged as a full contender.) The origin, programs, leadership, and structure of these parties are examined in considerable detail, including the extent to which their guerrilla operations were controlled by exiled insurgents. The book explores the transterritorial relations among the parties and their interaction with external powers, both before the collapse of Portuguese rule and during the civil war that followed. In particular, Marcum traces the shifting patterns of political and material support provided to the various factions by contiguous African nations, the United States, China, the Soviet Union, Cuba, and others, especially during the final phase of the struggle. The reportorial and scholarly sources referenced here make the civil war understandable-and demonstrate the extent of its predictability, if not its inevitability.

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