“…While the interdisciplinary fields of African studies and memory studies do intersect in the research of African liberation (see MacArthur 2017; Lentz & Lowe 2018), colonialism (see Ball 2018; Alexander, McGregor, & Ranger 2000), post-colonialism (see Kössler 2010; Werbner 1998b), monumentalization (see Becker 2011; Marschall 2005), and the political uses of memory (see Baba & Freire 2019; Pearce 2015a; Igreja 2008; Pitcher 2006), there is scarce understanding of the political memorialization of heroes and villains in public thought (exceptions include, for example, Rantala 2016; Fouéré 2014; Becker 2013). Specifically, there is little on the correlation between the “villain-ization and hero-ization of certain individuals” and political attitudes (Gugushvili et al 2017:2). To unpack this task, a focus on the politics of memorialization can assist in unravelling the construction of historical figures, how they are remembered, forgotten, or silenced, and in which socio-political context this takes place.…”