6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1271dcd
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Protocol, politics and popular culture: the independence jubilee in Gabon
Christine Frickesubject
education.field_of_studymedia_common.quotation_subjectGeography Planning and DevelopmentPopulationMedia studiesPopular cultureIndependencePoliticsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)State (polity)Declaration of independenceLawPolitical Science and International RelationsSociologyeducationOrder (virtue)media_commondescription
National days are powerful moments of commemoration that aim at renewing the citizens' bonds to the nation and the state. In order to be successful, public rituals need to draw large audiences, and their ceremonial design therefore has to be adapted to suit the masses, employing elements of popular culture and everyday forms of nationhood. Despite drawing its significance from the declaration of independence in 1960, however, Gabon's independence jubilee was less concerned with history and commemoration than with celebrating the state and the nation in the present. The ceremonial design of Gabon's jubilee featured intensive preparations, official ceremonies, popular festivities and symbolic politics. In this article, I look at why history and commemoration played such an unimportant role during the celebrations and how Gabon's jubilee organisers included official as well as popular forms of nationhood to assure the population's participation.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013-03-01 | Nations and Nationalism |