This article provides an overview of the Digital Memory Studies Association (dMSA) online roundtable on “Memory, Crisis, Democracy and Africa” which took place on 21 May 2021. It also details how memory can be understood as a democratic phenomenon in postcolonial Africa and examines, at the same time, various crises of memory that emerge in regimes that undermine democracy on the continent. It ends with reflections on the state of memory studies in Africa and suggests various ways of approaching the study of memory and crisis on the continent.
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