苹果淫院

Pedro Monaville

Pedro Monaville
Contact Information
Address: 

Leacock 610
Department of History 855 Sherbrooke West
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 2T7

Email address: 
pedro.monaville [at] mcgill.ca
Position: 
Associate Professor
Office: 
Leacock 610
Degree(s): 

Ph.D. (University of Michigan, 2013) ; M.A. (European University Institute, 2005); M.A. (Universit茅 Catholique de Louvain, 2004); B.A. (Universit茅 de Li猫ge, 2002)

Specialization by time period: 
1900 - Today
Specialization by geographical area: 
Africa
Biography: 

Pedro Monaville is a historian of modern Africa. His research focuses on colonial and postcolonial Congo, revolutionary movements, political subjectivities, knowledge production, popular culture, memory work, and the connections between visual arts and history. His first book, Students of the World: Global 1968 and Decolonization in the Congo was published by Duke University Press in 2022. The book focuses on student activism in the Democratic Republic of Congo in the 1960s and 1970s. Through their activism and intellectual work, students introduced and mediated new ideas about culture, politics, and the world. In this book, Monaville shows how students reimagined the Congo as a decolonized polity by connecting their country to global discussions about revolution, authenticity, and equality.

Professor Monaville is currently working on three new research projects: a history of the decolonization of the Catholic church in the Congo, a study of knowledge production in postcolonial Africa centered around the trajectory of the late Congolese scholar Tshikala Kayembe Biaya, and a book about Belgian colonialism in the interwar years. He is also the co-editor of two forthcoming volumes: a collection of essays around the work of the Bandes-Dessin茅es artist Mfumu'Eto and an English translation of Yoka Mudaba Lye's Kinshasa, signes de vie.

Before joining 苹果淫院, Pedro Monaville taught at the University of Michigan, Williams College, and New York University Abu Dhabi.

Selected publications: 

Students of the World: Global 1968 and Decolonization in the Congo. Theory in Forms Series, Duke University Press, 2022.

鈥溾橪ove is Stronger in Prison than Outside鈥: The Intimate Politics of Independence in the Congo,鈥 in Love and Revolution in the Twentieth-Century Colonial and Postcolonial World, edited by G. Arunima, Patricia Hayes, and Premesh Lalu, New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2021, p.263-290.

鈥淎 History of Glory and Dignity: Patrice Lumumba in Historical Imagination and Postcolonial Genealogies,鈥 in Lumumba in the Arts, ed. by Matthias De Groof, Leuven, Leuven University Press, 2020, p.62-77.

鈥淭he Political Life of the Dead Lumumba, the Congolese Student Left, and Cold War Histories,鈥 in Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, 2019 (89): S15-S39.

鈥淥n the Passage of a Few Congolese Through the Situationist International,鈥 in The Other Country/L鈥橝utre Pays, ed. by Vincent Meessen, Brussels and Berlin, Wiels and Sternberg Press, 2018, p.57-66.

鈥淢aking a 鈥楽econd Vietnam鈥: The Congolese Revolution and its Global Connections in the 1960s鈥 in Routledge Handbook of the Global Sixties, ed. by Chen Jian, Martin Klimke, Masha Kirasirova, Mary Nolan, Marilyn Young, Joanna Waley-Cohen, New York, Routledge, 2018, p.106-118.

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