MUTED HISTORIES: UNBUNDLING SILENCES IN KENYAN HISTORY

In the wider context of African historiography, Kenya’s history has come a long way. The 1960s was dominated by the overly nationalist thinking whose main project was the repudiation of colonial denial of the existence of African history based on oral traditions. This emphasis on the new relevance of orality, as a significant source material, laid the foundation for the budding local historical scholarship that was conspicuous by its absence in Kenya’s colony.