Edited by
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza
ISBN: 2-86978-198-9 (ISBN
13: 978-2-86978-198-6) 420 pages, Release date April 2007
It is not even an ordinary encyclopaedia for the study of the
continent. Rather, it establishes entirely new parameters for
Africanist scholarship. Without a doubt, an offering to
celebrate among Africans, Africanists, and anyone interested in
answering the question: What is Africa’s place in the world
today?”
Ato Quayson,
Professor of English and Director Centre for Diaspora and
Transnational Studies, University of Toronto, Canada.
“This important publication provides the most comprehensive and
critical analyses of Africa studies in the world today.
Globally, the book reveals a fundamental, though depressing,
fact that the terms of global intellectual exchange are unequal.
There is therefore the need to construct an African ‘library’, a
body of knowledge that can fully encompass, engage, and examine
African phenomena. And it is the responsibility of African
scholars, both in the continent and in diaspora, to spearhead
this struggle for intellectual decolonization and
deconstruction.”
Bethwell A. Ogot,
Chancellor, Moi University, Professor Emeritus of History Maseno
University,
Kenya.
“Paul Tiyambe Zeleza has put together a timely publication that
presents admirably critical assessments of the role and
relevance of ‘African Studies’—its content, its march from
Eurocentrism to be solidly based in contemporary Africa and its
place within the globalization agenda—in its wider political and
socio-economic contexts. These discussions will provide
scholars, policymakers and practitioners with useful insights
into the continuing challenges and opportunities for African
studies be it disciplinary or interdisciplinary; be it in Africa
or anywhere else.”
Professor
Lennart Wohlgemuth,
Centre for African Studies, Gothenburg University, formerly
Director Nordic Africa Institute, Sweden.
“These
two volumes will be indispensable reading to anyone with an
interest in African Studies and in the production of knowledge
on Africa. Paul Tiyambe Zeleza has assembled an impressive
international group of contributors who address a range of
important topics including the disciplines and
interdisciplinarity in African Studies, the histories and
politics of African Studies in different national contexts
outside and within the continent, and the role of the African
diaspora in the globalization of knowledge on Africa. Both
volumes are framed and contextualised by masterly introductions
by the editor which in themselves will become required reading
in our field.”
Megan Vaughan,
Smuts Professor of Commonwealth History, University of
Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Paul
Tiyambe Zeleza
is Professor and Head, Department of African American Studies at
the University of Illinois at Chicago and Honorary Visiting
Professor at the University of Cape Town. He has published
scores of essays and has authored or edited more than a dozen
books, including most recently Rethinking Africa’s
Globalization (2003), the Routledge Encyclopedia of
Twentieth Century African History, Leisure in Urban
Africa (2003), Science and Technology in Africa
(2003) and African Universities in the Twentieth Century
(2 volumes) (2004). He is the winner of the 1994 Noma Award for
his book A Modern Economic History of Africa (1993) and
the 1998 Special Commendation of the Noma Award for
Manufacturing African Studies and Crises (1997). He has also
published works of fiction.
Contributors
Anshan Li,
Aparajita Biswas, Alan Cobley, Jean-Philippe Dedieu, Elizabeth
Dimock, Irina Filatova, Bogumil Jewsiewicki, Ronald Kassimir,
John McCracken,
Mônica Lima, Tanya Lyons, James H. Mittelman, Peter Probst,
Pearl T. Robinson, Ann Schlyter, Jomo Kwame Sundaram,
Masao Yoshida, and Paul Tiyambe Zeleza.
Contents
|
Acknowledgements |
v |
|
List of Contributors |
vi |
| |
Introduction: The Internationalisation of African Knowledges
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza |
1 |
| |
Part I: Globalisation Studies and African Studies |
|
| 1. |
Globalisation: An Ascendant Paradigm? Implications for
African Studies
James H. Mittelman |
27 |
| 2. |
If You Are Part of the Solution, You Are Likely Part of the
Problem: Transboundary Formations and Africa
Ronald Kassimir |
45 |
| 3. |
Economic Liberalisation and Development in Africa
Jomo Kwame Sundaram |
62 |
| 4. |
African Diasporas and Academics: The Struggle for a Global
Epistemic Presence
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza |
86 |
| 5. |
The Problem of Translation in African Studies: The Case of
French
Jean-Pierre Dedieu |
112 |
|
Part II: African Studies in Regional Contexts |
|
| 6. |
African Studies: France and the United States
Bogumil Jewsiewicki |
127 |
| 7. |
New Directions in African Studies in the United Kingdom
John McCracken |
146 |
| 8. |
Betwixt and Between: African Studies in Germany
Peter Probst |
157 |
| 9. |
Research on Africa: A Swedish Perspective
Ann Schlyter |
188 |
| 10. |
Anti-Colonialism in Soviet African Studies (1920s–1960)
Irina Filatova |
203 |
| 11. |
Area Studies in Search of Africa: The Case of the United
State
Pearl T. Robinson |
235 |
| 12. |
‘Returning to the Caribbean by Way of Africa’: African
Studies
in the Caribbean in Historical Perspective
Alan Cobley |
277 |
| 13. |
Let the Drums Sound: The Teaching of African History
and the History of Africans in Brazil
Mônica
Lima |
295 |
| 14. |
African Studies in India
Aparajita Biswas |
305 |
| 15. |
The State of African Studies in Australia
Tanya Lyons and Elizabeth Dimock |
315 |
| 16. |
African Studies in China in the Twentieth-Century: A
Historiographical Survey
Li
Anshan |
336 |
| 17. |
African Studies in Recent Years in Japan
Masao Yoshida |
369 |
|
Index |
|
ISBN: 2-86978-198-9 (ISBN
13: 978-2-86978-198-6) 420 pages; Release Date April 2007
Africa: 35.00 USD; CFA 17,000 ; Elsewhere: USD 50.00 / £39.95
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