List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Conflicting Visions: Framing French West Africa
2. The Lessons of War: Rethinking the Originaires
3. Toward the Interior: Rural Schools and Colonial Reform
4. Reorienting African Schoolteachers: Agents of the Future
5. Léopold Sédar Senghor and the Popular Front: New Possibilities
for Reform
6. The National Revolution in AOF: Debating the Future during the
War Years
7. Gaullist Hesitations: From the Brazzaville Conference to the
Liberation
8. The Education of African “Citizens”: Struggles over
Integration
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Harry Gamble is a professor of French and francophone
studies at the College of Wooster in Ohio.
"This informative, accessible, and well-written book highlights the
centrality of schools in matters of power and governance and offers
new insights into the political views of Senghor. It will appeal to
readers who have an interest in the history of modern France, the
French Empire, West Africa, and colonial schooling."—Kelly M. Duke
Bryant, Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"In this compelling, well-written study, Harry Gamble . . . shows
that battles over schooling, either within the French colonial
state or between Africans and French officials, encapsulated
broader debates about the nature, purpose, and future of French
rule in West Africa. . . . Gamble's periodization, eschewing the
typical dividing points of 1914 and 1940, allows him to construct a
nuanced picture of the ebbs and flows of French policy and African
activism over time. . . . He consistently shows how colonial
officials on the spot evaded or mitigated direction from the center
and/or how Africans shaped the outcome of a particular
policy."—Elizabeth A. Foster, International Journal of African
Historical Studies
"Contesting French West Africa provides critical insight into
colonial policy and practice. It will be essential reading for
colonial historians, and provides critical context for readers of
accounts such as the one written by Camara Laye."—Kathleen
Keller, H-France Review
"This monograph does much to illuminate the connections between
education and imperial politics in French West Africa, adding to a
growing English language literature on the topic. Covering
significant chronological reach and political depth, Contesting
French West Africa suggests that those working on education in the
region today would do well to examine this history."—Rachel
Kantrowitz, French Politics, Culture and Society
“Contesting French West Africa . . . . [will prove] extremely
valuable to scholars and students of colonial history, including
those working on other regions of Africa. Gamble’s work will also
be of interest to those working on postindependence constructions
of language, race, education, and belonging and wishing to
understand the historical context of these dynamics.”—Camille
Jacob, Journal of African History
"This timely book offers readers a much-needed analysis of the role
schools and schooling played in the colonial politics of French
West Africa. . . . The result is a remarkably good read, where
specialists gain insights from the attention paid to both sides of
the colonial project, while nonspecialists are introduced to the
broader context of French colonization."—Rebecca
Rogers, History of Education Quarterly
"Ce livre vient à point nommé car, comme l’indique son titre . . .
ce sont bien ces luttes, les controverses, les contestations, qu’il
restitue avec prudence et finesse . . . Pour qui ne serait pas
encore convaincu de la nécessité de dépasser l’idée qu’il a existé
un (unique) « modèle républicain » de colonisation, trop souvent
encore pensé sous une forme réifiée et abstraite, la lecture de
Harry Gamble sera très certainement salutaire."—Marie
Salaün, Genèses
"For anyone interested in the genesis and development of Western
education in French West Africa, this book answers multiple
questions about the rationale and articulation of colonial policies
as well as the attitudes and reactions of local populations. . .
. Contesting French West Africa is a must-read for Africanists
and scholars of the French empire in West Africa."—Harrouna
Malgoubri, H-Africa
“In his well-documented and enlightening study, Contesting French
West Africa, Harry Gamble homes in on educational policy to explore
the attempts to guide the federation’s development. . . . Through a
focus on the struggles over education, Gamble makes visible the
dynamic relationship between different power brokers in the French
empire. He shows that the division between subject and citizen was
not clear-cut.”—Pehr Englén, Itinerario
“Gamble’s study has many strengths. He demonstrates how . . .
debates over education during the colonial period can be used as a
focal point from which to understand the mechanisms of
state-building, as well as contested narratives of citizenship and
belonging. Another of the study’s strengths is that it explores in
detail African agency, showing how Africans both engaged with and
challenged the colonial government’s education plans, while also
seeking to reshape them.”—Tony Chafer, Historian
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