WISER publications
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Filters: Author is Christopher J. Lee [Clear All Filters]
From Imperial Subjects to Global South Partners: South Africa, India, and the Politics of Multilateralism. In: Competing Visions of India in World Politics: India's Rise Beyond the West. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2015. 7. p. 79-93p.
The Rise of Third World Diplomacy: Success and Its Meanings at the 1955 Asian-African Conference in Bandung, Indonesia. In: Foreign Policy Breakthroughs: Cases in Successful Diplomacy. New York: Oxford University Press; 2015. 4. p. 47-71p.
Decoloniality of a special type: solidarity and its potential meanings in South African literature, during and after the Cold War. Journal of Postcolonial Writing. 2014;50:466-477.
Mourning Mandela. Transition. 2014:167-171.
Review of Piero Gleijeses, 'Visions of Freedom: Havana, Washington, Pretoria, and the Struggle for Southern Africa, 1976-1991'. The American Historical Review. 2014;119:1638-1641.
Unreasonable Histories: Nativism, Multiracial Lives, and the Genealogical Imagination in British Africa. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press; 2014.
Bandung Conference, 1955.; 2013.
Between a Moment and an Era: The Origins and Afterlives of Bandung. In: The Rise and Fall of Modern Empires: Reactions to Colonialism. Vol IV. Farnham: Ashgate; 2013. 3. p. 377-418p. (The Rise and Fall of Modern Empires; vol IV).
Beyond analogy: bare life in the West Bank. Postcolonial Studies. 2013;16:374-387.
Gender without Groups: Confession, Resistance and Selfhood in the Colonial Archive. In: Gabaccia DR, Maynes MJo, editors. Gender History Across Epistemologies. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd; 2013. 1. p. 181-197p.
The Indian Ocean during the Cold War: Thinking through a Critical Geography. History Compass. 2013;11:524-530.
Aftermath. In: The Ashgate Research Companion to Modern Imperial Histories. Farnham: Ashgate; 2012. 6. p. 601-615p.
Gender without Groups: Confession, Resistance and Selfhood in the Colonial Archive. Gender & History. 2012;24:701-717.
The Story of O. Transition. 2012:117-129.
Decolonization of a Special Type: Rethinking Cold War History in Southern Africa. Kronos. 2011:6-11.
Do colonial people exist? Rethinking ethno-genesis and peoplehood through the longue durée in south-east central Africa. Social History. 2011;36:169-191.
Jerusalem Day, 2011. Jerusalem Quarterly. 2011:39-45.
Jus Soli and Jus Sanguinis in the Colonies: The Interwar Politics of Race, Culture, and Multiracial Legal Status in British Africa. Law and History Review. 2011;29:497-522.
Locating Hannah Arendt within Postcolonial Thought: A Prospectus. College Literature. 2011;38:95-114.
Steve Chimombo.; 2011.
Between a Moment and an Era: The Origins and Afterlives of Bandung. In: Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press; 2010. 1. p. 1-43p.
Children in the Archives: Epistolary Evidence, Youth Agency, and the Social Meanings of “Coming of Age” in Interwar Nyasaland. Journal of Family History. 2010;35:25-47.
Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives. Ohio University Press; 2010.
Malawian Literature after Banda and in the Age of AIDS: A Conversation with Steve Chimombo. Research in African Literatures. 2010;41:33-48.
Tricontinentalism in Question: The Cold War Politics of Alex La Guma and the African National Congress. In: Making a World after Empire: The Bandung Moment and Its Political Afterlives. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press; 2010. 2. p. 266-287p.
At the Rendezvous of Decolonization. Interventions. 2009;11:81-93.
Sovereignty, Neoliberalism, and the Postdiasporic Politics of Globalization: A Conversation about South Africa with Patrick Bond, Ashwin Desai, and Molefi Mafereka ka Ndlovu. Radical History Review. 2009;2009:143-161.
‘Causes’ versus ‘Conditions’: Imperial Sovereignty, Postcolonial Violence and the recent Re-Emergence of Arendtian Political Thought in African Studies. South African Historical Journal. 2008;60:124-146.
Crisis as Catalyst: Contemporary Zimbabwe and the Reinstatement of Region in a Global Era. Safundi. 2007;8:117-138.
How to Do Things with Words: African Oral History and Its Textual Incarnations. Words and Silences: The Journal of the International Oral History Association. 2007;4:1-5.
Race and Bureaucracy Revisited: Hannah Arendt's Recent Re-Emergence in African Studies. In: Hannah Arendt and the Uses of History: Imperialism, Nation, Race, and Genocide. New York: Berghahn; 2007. 6. p. 68-86p.
Arendt's Lesson: The Challenge and Need for Teaching Empire in the Present. Radical History Review. 2006;95:129-144.
Desperately Seeking Tsitsi. Transition. 2006:128-150.
Entre la rue et le musée : le problème du « moment présent » en Afrique du Sud. Politique Africaine. 2006;103:81-99.
Voices from the Margins: The Coloured Factor in Southern African History. South African Historical Journal. 2006;56:201-218.
The 'Native' Undefined: Colonial Categories, Anglo-African Status, and the Politics of Kinship in British Central Africa, 1929-1938. The Journal of African History. 2005;46:455-478.
Subaltern Studies and African Studies. History Compass. 2005;3:1-13.
Power Rarely Fails. Safundi. 2004;5:1-6.
South Africa, Israel-Palestine, and the Contours of the Contemporary World Order. Safundi. 2004;5:1-16.