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This book brings together top researchers, thinkers, and activists from across disciplines to reflect on the study of Africa. Critical Dimensions of African Studies: Re-Membering Africa emphasizes a critique of power structures, the promotion of human liberation, a commitment to social justice and transformation, and critical reflection on the politics of the production and circulation of knowledge of Africa. The editors, Jennifer De Maio, Suzanne Scheld, and Tom Spencer-Walters, organize the book around three related key themes: international/transnational, humanistic, and combined critical theory and practice perspectives. They argue that each theme represents an important dimension of contemporary African and African diaspora studies and re-centering these themes within the discipline will help to advance the field. The diverse contributors capture the goal and method for re-membering Africa by reflecting and defining the field from various disciplines in order to consider the history, the critical debates, and the challenges to current views of the status and future direction of African studies.
Published | Sep 12 2023 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 1 |
ISBN | 9781978780705 |
Imprint | Lexington Books |
Illustrations | 2 b/w illustrations; 3 b/w photos; 9 maps; |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
This collection from editors De Maio, Scheld, and Spencer-Walters focuses on the concept of re-membering—the act of deliberately reasserting one's membership within a given community—in order to reintroduce a series of perspectives on African studies, orality, and literacy. This concept is valuable in and of itself for the way in which it focuses attention on the individual in a type of standpoint epistemology. All in all, the text contains well-written pieces that argue for more application of critical theory to the study of Africa, and, more importantly, for the need to hear African voices in African studies. Recommended. General readers and undergraduates.
Choice Reviews
Given an African continent that was dis-membered by the violent histories of slavery, colonization, postcolonization and modern forms of economic dispossession, racial hatred and marginalization, and geopolitical sabotage by the West, Critical Dimensions of African Studies: Re-Membering Africa undertakes the huge task of re-membering—putting back together—Africa as an indispensable center of interest in global politics, language, pedagogy, and culture. This book’s theoretical approach of interdisciplinarity not only gives it a competitive edge in both African studies and African diaspora studies, it also paves the way for collaboration between the two disciplines.
Samuel Kamara, Minnesota State University, Mankato
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