|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
This anthology marks the 55th anniversary of the historic 1962 Makerere Conference of African Literature in Uganda bringing together post-independence African writers many of whom would go on to play major roles in defining Africa’s literary history.
One of them wrote; “we were amazed that fate had entrusted us with the task of interpreting a continent to the world.”
Those who gathered included the Nigerian Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Christopher Okigbo, JP Clark, Kofi Awoonor, Frances Ademola, Cameron Doudu, Lewis Nkosi, Dennis Brutus, Ezekiel Mphahlele, Bloke Modisane, the African American writer Langton Hughes et al. Fifty-five years on, many have joined the ancestors but there are a few survivors who attended the launch of this Anthology at SOAS in London on 28th October 2017.
This book addresses the troubling dearth of knowledge that many
American undergraduate students have about Africa. Many scholars
with research interest in Africa are caught by surprise at the
superficial knowledge that students bring to their classrooms; it
is a knowledge base that is bereft of an insightful analytical
framework of the pertinent issues just as it is deprived of a
well-informed historical context of the events. There is no
mistaking of the import the mass media and neighborhood folklore in
shaping the students' perception about the realities of Africa's
developments. Mitigating these effects requires access to a
college-level introductory textbook on Africa covering a gamut of
themes that are germane to the contemporary realities of the
continent. It is a textbook that does not romanticize Africa, but
addresses the persistent stereotypes that characterize issues about
the region. The book does so in two significant ways. First, it
offers a refreshing examination of African issues from an
afrocentric perspective. This allows the writers to present issues
from which they have practical experience, and for the reader to
examine them from insider scholarship. Second, it provides an
opportunity for scholars and readers to analyze the issues from an
interdisciplinary perspective. Interdisciplinarity is a testament
that issues are complex and no single discipline can sufficiently
address them. A combination of these two approaches ensures that
the book does not develop into a limited and parochial view of
issues. The themes covered in the book include: disciplinary
perspectives in African studies, ethnocentricism in teaching human
geography of Africa, and topics of geography, religion and
spirituality, mathematics, psychology, government and public
policy, the transformation of higher education, rural development,
communication and socio-economic development, culture and decision
making styles all as they relate to Africa.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
|