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Description
Is there a new scramble for Africa involving China, Japan, and India in competition with each other and with the Western world? In the second half of the twentieth century, Mao’s China and Jawaharlal Nehru’s India were political players in Africa, while Japan limited itself to trade and investment in Africa. Africa and Asia have historically been allies against Western exploitation and have also been rivals as producers of raw materials. India and West Asia have led the way in the soft power of culture and religion in Africa while Japan and China have engaged in the harder disciplines of the economy and the construction of infrastructure. This book explores the historical and unfolding dynamic interactions among China, India, Japan, and Africa and their ramifications.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Toward Afro-Asian Strategies for Containing Globalization
ALI A. MAZRUI
SECTION I
HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
1 Africa and Asia in the Postcolonial Era
ALI A. MAZRUI
2 The Baganda and the Japanese
ALI A. MAZRUI
3 The Lion of Judah and the Dragon
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
SECTION II
RACE, RELIGION AND DIPLOMACY
4 The Yellow Man’s Burden: Race and Revolution in Sino-African Relations
ALI A. MAZRUI
5 Changing the Guards from Hindus to Muslims
ALI A. MAZRUI
6 Africa in Japanese Diplomatic Thought
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
7 Diplomacy and Economics of Sino-Optimism in Ethiopia
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
SECTION III
NATIONALISM, DECOLONIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT
8 John Locke and Mahatma Gandhi in African Resistance
ALI A. MAZRUI
9 Gandhi, Marx and the Warrior Tradition: Towards Androgynous Liberation
ALI A. MAZRUI
10 Comparative Culture and Development: The Case of Japan
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
SECTION IV
BETWEEN WAR AND PEACE
11 Islam at War and Communism in Retreat: What is the Connection?
ALI A. MAZRUI
12 Japan and the Iraq War
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
13 Conflict Resolution in Japan
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
SECTION V
MIGRATION AND DIASPORIZATION
14 Africa and India as Mothers of Diasporas
ALI A. MAZRUI
15 Comparative Diasporas in Japan and the United States
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
16 Afro-Optimism from Mahatma Gandhi to Barack Obama
ALI A. MAZRUI
SECTION VI
ROLE MODELS IN THE ERA OF GLOBALIZATION
17 Africa between Meiji Restoration and Legacy of Atatürk
ALI A. MAZRUI
18 Is Japan’s Cultural Experience Relevant for Africa’s Development?
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
19 Japan in Africa
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
20 The Arab Spring and Female Empowerment
ALI A. MAZRUI
21 Conclusion: Toward Sociology of Discourse on Sino-African Relations
SEIFUDEIN ADEM
SECTION VII
APPENDICES
Appendix One. God’s Omnipotence and Human Genius: From the Afro-Asian Tsunami to Shakespeare’s Tempest
ALI A. MAZRUI
Appendix Two. From Osagyefo Nkrumah to Nana Obama: Between the Post-Colonial and the Post-Racial
ALI A. MAZRUI
Product details
Published | May 02 2013 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 436 |
ISBN | 9780761885023 |
Imprint | University Press of America |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This is not, strictly speaking, a ‘Tale of Two Continents’ so much as a number of eclectic offerings about parts of Africa and parts of Asia, crossing time, space, races, and cultures. Indeed, it is rewarding precisely for this reason, and for trying to move scholarship forward in ways that, building on broad historical foundations, endeavour to be fresh, critical, and self-reflexive.The book offers a colourfully presented and decidedly mixed, wide-ranging menu, rather than a sustained argument. . . .Afrasia: A Tale of Two Continents will likely benefit those with some familiarity with its subject areas more than those new to, or starting to engage, its core themes. Overall, it offers an enlivening and unconventional contribution, with the potential to catalyse further work in positive ways. Its critical invocation of the need for a discourse about discourse on Africa’s relations with China, Japan, or India points the way to promising scholarly directions, including, as Ngugi wa Thiong’o would like to see, ways that go beyond the age of European empires and post-colonial influence. This can only be a good thing, especially if it catalyses further such insightful works by leading African scholars that properly enrich and advance these avenues of enquiry.
E-International Relations
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In a volume of over four hundred pages Afrasia: A Tale of Two Continents offers many interesting questions to ponder. The chapters are glimpses, reflections, and in some cases lengthy discussions on many issues[.] . . .Afrasia: A Tale of Two Continents contain sufficient thoughts, arguments, and references for further investigation of the layered complexities of Afro–Asian relations. [It will] certainly will generate debates and induce more critical research.
African Studies Review