Image for The Asaba Massacre

The Asaba Massacre : Trauma, Memory, and the Nigerian Civil War

See all formats and editions

In October 1967, early in the Nigerian Civil War, government troops entered Asaba in pursuit of the retreating Biafran army, slaughtering thousands of civilians and leaving the town in ruins.

News of the atrocity was suppressed by the Nigerian government, with the complicity of Britain, and its significance in the subsequent progress of that conflict was misunderstood.

Drawing on archival sources on both sides of the Atlantic and interviews with survivors of the killing, pillaging and rape, as well as with high-ranking Nigerian military and political leaders, S.

Elizabeth Bird and Fraser M. Ottanelli offer an interdisciplinary reconstruction of the history of the Asaba Massacre, redefining it as a pivotal point in the history of the war.

Through this, they also explore the long afterlife of trauma, the reconstruction of memory and how it intersects with justice, and the task of reconciliation in a nation where a legacy of ethnic suspicion continues to reverberate.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£84.14 Save 15.00%
RRP £98.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107140781 / 9781107140783
Hardback
31/07/2017
United Kingdom
English
254 pages
23 cm