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Africa and the West - (Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies: Contempo) by Isaac James Mowoe (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- This volume, written by leading African and Western specialists, is among the first to provide a broad interdisciplinary view of African culture that allows contemporary Africa to be understood on its own terms--freed from Western ethnocentric preconceptions and values.
- About the Author: ornson /f Richard /r ed.
- 286 Pages
- History, Africa
- Series Name: Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies: Contempo
Description
About the Book
This volume, written by leading African and Western specialists, is among the first to provide a broad interdisciplinary view of African culture that allows contemporary Africa to be understood on its own terms--freed from Western ethnocentric preconceptions and values. The book begins with an overview of current African scholarship, followed by Philip Curtin's historical essay on Africa's 400-year relationship with European culture, with special emphasis on the mass migrations brought about by the slave trade. Discussions of indigenous cultural symbols and religious belief systems reveal a rich and continuing heritage and deepen our understanding of modern African society. Several chapters are devoted to the intellectual and cultural life of Francophone Africa--its major writers and scholars and the deep cultural conflict experienced by French-speaking African elites. A chapter by Leopold Senghor, former president of Senegal and a leading cultural figure in Francophone Africa, offers an eloquent statement of the post-colonial African world view. A new form of imperialism--the control of the mass media by powerful industrial nations--and the dangers it poses to African identity and autonomy are examined. Other topics covered are the evolution of African legal and judicial systems and recent developments in African musicology.
Book Synopsis
This volume, written by leading African and Western specialists, is among the first to provide a broad interdisciplinary view of African culture that allows contemporary Africa to be understood on its own terms--freed from Western ethnocentric preconceptions and values. The book begins with an overview of current African scholarship, followed by Philip Curtin's historical essay on Africa's 400-year relationship with European culture, with special emphasis on the mass migrations brought about by the slave trade. Discussions of indigenous cultural symbols and religious belief systems reveal a rich and continuing heritage and deepen our understanding of modern African society. Several chapters are devoted to the intellectual and cultural life of Francophone Africa--its major writers and scholars and the deep cultural conflict experienced by French-speaking African elites. A chapter by Leopold Senghor, former president of Senegal and a leading cultural figure in Francophone Africa, offers an eloquent statement of the post-colonial African world view. A new form of imperialism--the control of the mass media by powerful industrial nations--and the dangers it poses to African identity and autonomy are examined. Other topics covered are the evolution of African legal and judicial systems and recent developments in African musicology.Review Quotes
?. . . the editors deserve praise for their success in letting African voices dominate this discussion; nine of the twelve contributors are African. The volume as a whole is a useful item for a bookshelf destined to support university instruction concerning contemporary Africa. It would be worth careful consideration as a primary text for one of the inter-disciplinary surveys of Africa which now exist in many North American universities. The best of its contributions will be read with profit by students and specialist alike.?-CJAS
." . . the editors deserve praise for their success in letting African voices dominate this discussion; nine of the twelve contributors are African. The volume as a whole is a useful item for a bookshelf destined to support university instruction concerning contemporary Africa. It would be worth careful consideration as a primary text for one of the inter-disciplinary surveys of Africa which now exist in many North American universities. The best of its contributions will be read with profit by students and specialist alike."-CJAS
About the Author
ornson /f Richard /r ed.
oe /f Isaac /i James /r ed.