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French Cultural Studies
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After Such Knowledge, What Forgiveness?

Cultural Representations of Reconciliation in Rwanda

Roger Bromley

University of Nottingham, roger.bromley{at}nottingham.ac.uk

This article examines a small number of documentary films made since 2000 which focus on the post-genocide situation in Rwanda. It begins by tracing some of the debates about the contested versions of national unity and reconciliation produced by the RPF-led government, which seeks, at least at the level of its rhetoric, to transcend the politics of ethnicity and to end once and for all the culture of impunity which is seen as one of the root causes of the genocide. Acknowledging that the government has achieved a measure of peace and security in a relatively short space of time, critics argue that ethnicity is, however, still an issue in Rwanda and that there is an official RPF narrative — `we are all Rwandans now' — which many academics, journalists and NGO officials have bought into, while at the same time ignoring the elements of authoritarianism and the suppression of dissent which, it is claimed, mark the behaviour of the ruling, Tutsi-dominated elite. The documentary films are analysed in the context of these conflicting accounts of the complexities of the reconciliation process and are shown as cultural practices which reflect upon the contradictions and tensions manifested in the attempts to find top-down solutions to problems which require sensitive deployment of local knowledge, local resources and the experiences of everyday life in still predominantly rural Rwanda.

Key Words: documentary • ethnicity • gacaca • genocide • Hutu • memorial • reconciliation • RPF narrative • Rwandan • Tutsi

French Cultural Studies, Vol. 20, No. 2, 181-197 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0957155809102634


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