In an age where neoliberal capitalism deepens global inequalities and fractures social cohesion, The Nation Undone: Kenya and the National Question in Neoliberal Africa offers a compelling critique of the continent's unfulfilled promises of decolonization. With identities politicized and economies tethered to extractive global systems, this groundbreaking book examines how the national question-once central to liberation struggles-has been eclipsed by the rise of identitarian politics.From the ruins of failed state-building projects to the weaponization of ethnicity and religion, the book exposes how neoliberal ideologies have eroded collective struggles for justice, fostering an elite-driven politics of division. Yet, amid the chaos, it also revisits the radical possibilities of pan-African solidarity and class-conscious mobilization, urging a return to the transformative visions of national liberation movements.A timely and incisive work, The Nation Undone speaks to scholars,