| Literature
Review
Introduction Secondary Source Overview Comrades
&
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Secondary
Sources
Comrade-authors Comrade-authors
such as Tawia Adamafio, John Tettegah, Kojo Botsio, Kofi Batsa,[1]
June Milne,[2]
S. G. Ikoku,[3]
and W. E. B. DuBois were in some ways closer to Nkrumah than the colleague-authors
were. There were others in this category such as Genoveva Kanu, but their
works, given the nature of this study, offered only contextual support
at a maximum. Ikoku and Batsa overlap in their relationship to Nkrumah
and were considered ideological-author partners.
[1]
Though not an author, Botsio is included in this group because he was so
frequently interviewed by those writing on this era and topic.
[2]
Milne is mentioned above but since she became so close to Nkrumah she is
also mentioned here as a person that crossed categories.
[3]
A prolific and brilliant author in The Spark often penned under
the name Julius Sago. W. S. Thompson (1968) claimed that Ikoku was
the defacto editor of the ideological publication.
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