North Korean monuments in southern Africa : legitimizing party rule through the National Heroes' Acres in Zimbabwe and Namibia

TitleNorth Korean monuments in southern Africa : legitimizing party rule through the National Heroes' Acres in Zimbabwe and Namibia
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsT.A. van der Hoog
Date Published2017///
Publication Languageeng
Keywordsmonuments, Namibia, national liberation movements, North Korea, South Africa, Zimbabwe
Abstract

Scattered across the whole of southern Africa, impressive North Korean monuments celebrate the rise of young, independent African nations. In an extraordinary fashion, these constructions merge typical North Korean socialist realism with African nationalism. The research question of this thesis is why the regimes of Namibia and Zimbabwe use the services of the North Korean firm Mansudae Overseas Projects to construct their National Heroes' Acres. This phenomenon can be explained through the historical connections that existed between the southern African liberation movements and the DPRK, that have been fostered since the 1960s. The DPRK funded southern African liberation movements during their struggle for independence and thereby strengthened their ideas on post-colonial history writing. It will be argued that the Heroes' Acres can be understood as potent symbols of nationalist history, used to legitimize the rule of the former liberation movements and inspired by the example that the DPRK has set for their African allies.

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/52194
Citation Key9371