"A School in the Interior": African Studies: Engagement, and Interdisciplinarity
Charles Ambler
Editors' note: The following article is a slightly revised version of the Presidential Address delivered at the fifty-third Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association in San Francisco in 2010.
Charles Ambler was president of the African Studies Association in 2010. He is a professor of history at the University of Texas at El Paso, where he was formerly Dean of the Graduate School. . He is the author of Kenyan Communities in the Age of Imperialism (Yale University Press, 1988), , and numerous book chapters, and journal articles, most recently on the history of media in Africa. He has alsobeen the recipient of a number of major grants aimed at increasing educational opportunity for minority students.. E-mail: cambler@utep.edu
Abstract:
On June 26, 1903, Edward Blyden, the preeminent intellectual of the Black Atlantic, presented an address to the African Society in London titled "West Africa before Europe"(Blyden 1905: 127_28). By Blyden's own account this was a momentous occasion. In the third year of the Society's existence, he was the first person of African descent invited to speak to a meeting of the members. At this annual meeting the African Studies Association, which is dedicated to the theme of diaspora, it is particularly appropriate that we should return, after more than a century, to Blyden's words and to the circumstances of his lecture. He was, after all, quintessentially a person of the diaspora. In the introduction to the collection of Blyden's lectures that includes this 1903 address, the Ghanaian barrister and scholar Casely Hayford describes Blyden as almost uniquely "universalist" in the sense that he truly spoke for Africans everywhere and that in contrast to most of the black intellectuals of that era had developed an "African school of thought" in which the measure of progress was derived not from white culture but from African culture (Blyden 1905:ii).1
The First Africanists
What, then, did Edward Blyden have to say to the African Society in 1903 that would be of interest to us today? He began by positioning himself in subversive terms, promising "unconventional views." At the core of his subversion was an argument that African societies and history must be understood from the inside out and that African experience must be expressed in an African vocabulary-not in relationship to Europe or in terms of European concepts. Yet he was careful to stress that African perspectives need not be inscrutable to non-Africans. In fact, although his talk introduced elements of the racialist philosophy that has dominated most interpretations of Blyden's thought, he was careful to acknowledge the continent's diversity-noting his own position as an outsider in his study of West African Islam.
He lauded the African Society's commitment to the scientific study of Africa and encouraged investigations that incorporated various disciplinary and thematic perspectives. Predictably, Blyden invoked the memory of Mary Kingsley, in whose name the Society had been founded, and applauded her commitment to cultural relativism and her determination to observe African societies first hand. Yet he took issue with Kingsley's determination to "think black." Blyden countered: "We do not want to think black. We want to utilize black." Blyden, like Africanists today, was frustrated by Africa's seeming marginality to the rest of the world and troubled by the concomitant tendency to define Africa from an external position in terms of a series of problems requiring external solution. At the same time, he was impatient with theoretical knowledge. Even if some of his own claims may have rested on rather limited evidence, he advocated a research agenda on Africa that would marshal resources wherever they could be found to promote progress for African people and societies-as they defined it themselves. Strikingly, elements of this perspective of interdisciplinarity and engagement were reflected in the audience that Blyden addressed-the members of the African Society. They were practicioners, many of them, in the sense that their engagement with Africa derived from their careers-in government, in business, in missionary work, even in what we might today refer to as human rights.5
Blyden intruded into my intellectual world only relatively recently. I had been vaguely familiar with his career as a historical character, but it was only as I began to explore debates around ideas of race and difference in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century West Africa that I was forced to confront his truly remarkable writing-and that of a number of his contemporaries such as Africanus Horton and James "Holy" Johnson.6 How was it, I wondered (like my predecessors Pearl Robinson and Joseph Miller in their 2007 and 2008 presidential addresses) that this body of work did not form the basis of the intellectual foundation of our discipline-African studies? Instead, in what was I suppose a predictable process, these men had somehow found themselves transformed from thinkers into actors and then marginalized as Westernized elites-in the process giving way to a narrative that linked the founding of African studies to the efforts of professional scholars at European and North American universities.7 As a graduate student in African history in the 1970s, I encountered Blyden and his contemporaries almost exclusively as historical figures and their writings as original documents from which history might be written-rather than as predecessors who could help me learn how to be a scholar of African societies. Even at that, these texts held declining interest since they appeared to document the histories of people whose experience was foreign to the masses of Africans. This would have been unfortunate enough if it were merely an act of historical erasure and their work had had little influence on subsequent generations. Lost in the grand narrative of the rise of imperial racism is the fact that intellectuals like Edward Blyden were influential and respected participants in the debates that linked people in Europe, America, and Africa in an effort to document and interpret African societies-which in turn created a body of knowledge, practice, and values that insinuated itself, largely unacknowledged, into African studies as it emerged as an academic field. Yet as recently as 1995 the prominent historian John Fage, in his short list of late nineteenth-century pioneering Africanists, would reflect this erasure by listing only Winwood Reade, T. E. Bowditch, and Mary Kingsley-all three Europeans. Fortunately, thanks to the work of Philip Zachernuk (2000), Toyin Falola (Lindfors, Falola, & Harlow 2002), Anthony Appiah (1992), and others, figures like Blyden are being dragged out of the archive and reinserted into intellectual history, where they belong.
Principles
If we are, in fact, as I have argued, the inheritors of a powerful legacy derived from these African studies founders, what is it that these long-dead black (and white) men (and a few women) are saying to us today-either directly through their writings or indirectly in the ways that they influenced those who have influenced us? I turn again to Edward Blyden, both because his writings were so widely read and debated and also because he so explicitly sought, as a "universalist," in Casely Hayford's words, to establish principles or perspectives through and from which African societies should be studied. In 1881 in his inaugural address as president of Liberia College, Blyden (1994 [1888]) outlined "The Aims and Methods of a Liberal Education for Africans." He first of all sharply criticized the practice of uncritically adopting European models of educational organization and curricula in African countries. He proposed eventually to move Liberia College to "an interior site, where health of bodyŠcan be secured; where the students may devote a portion of their time to manual laborŠand thus assist in procuring the means from the soil for meeting a large part of necessary expenses; and where access to the institution will be convenient" to the masses of people-hence the title of this lecture. This proposal was part of a larger agenda to promote learning not only for "intellectual ends but for social purposes" (1994 [1888]:84,83) With the goal, then, of closely linking education and the production of knowledge to social and economic progress, Blyden went on to stress the importance of defining knowledge in relationship to African perspectives and needs. With his comment that most of the books that African students read "have been such as to force them from the groove which is natural to them," (1994 [1888]: 87) Blyden revealed a prescient grasp of the linkages between knowledge and power that have been the subject of much work in the field in recent decades.8 In his argument that African students should be permitted only very limited exposure to the histories of recent epochs (in favor of the classics), he made a claim for research and learning that he imagined as holistic and culture-free-and in particular, free of association with the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the "race-poison" linked to that trade (1994 [1888]:83). He called, in other words, for an education in Africa (and by extension for a conception of knowledge) that is closely linked to the experience of people, that is aimed at the improvement of their condition, that is constructed from an African perspective, and that is comprehensive in its approach. These notions-the interdisciplinarity and engagement of my title-have seemed to me to be the recurrent themes of African studies-themes that distinguish it from many other fields, even in area studies.
Blyden intruded into my intellectual world only relatively recently. I had been vaguely familiar with his career as a historical character, but it was only as I began to explore debates around ideas of race and difference in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century West Africa that I was forced to confront his truly remarkable writing-and that of a number of his contemporaries such as Africanus Horton and James "Holy" Johnson.6 How was it, I wondered (like my predecessors Pearl Robinson and Joseph Miller in their 2007 and 2008 presidential addresses) that this body of work did not form the basis of the intellectual foundation of our discipline-African studies? Instead, in what was I suppose a predictable process, these men had somehow found themselves transformed from thinkers into actors and then marginalized as Westernized elites-in the process giving way to a narrative that linked the founding of African studies to the efforts of professional scholars at European and North American universities.7 As a graduate student in African history in the 1970s, I encountered Blyden and his contemporaries almost exclusively as historical figures and their writings as original documents from which history might be written-rather than as predecessors who could help me learn how to be a scholar of African societies. Even at that, these texts held declining interest since they appeared to document the histories of people whose experience was foreign to the masses of Africans. This would have been unfortunate enough if it were merely an act of historical erasure and their work had had little influence on subsequent generations. Lost in the grand narrative of the rise of imperial racism is the fact that intellectuals like Edward Blyden were influential and respected participants in the debates that linked people in Europe, America, and Africa in an effort to document and interpret African societies-which in turn created a body of knowledge, practice, and values that insinuated itself, largely unacknowledged, into African studies as it emerged as an academic field. Yet as recently as 1995 the prominent historian John Fage, in his short list of late nineteenth-century pioneering Africanists, would reflect this erasure by listing only Winwood Reade, T. E. Bowditch, and Mary Kingsley-all three Europeans. Fortunately, thanks to the work of Philip Zachernuk (2000), Toyin Falola (Lindfors, Falola, & Harlow 2002), Anthony Appiah (1992), and others, figures like Blyden are being dragged out of the archive and reinserted into intellectual history, where they belong.
Principles
If we are, in fact, as I have argued, the inheritors of a powerful legacy derived from these African studies founders, what is it that these long-dead black (and white) men (and a few women) are saying to us today-either directly through their writings or indirectly in the ways that they influenced those who have influenced us? I turn again to Edward Blyden, both because his writings were so widely read and debated and also because he so explicitly sought, as a "universalist," in Casely Hayford's words, to establish principles or perspectives through and from which African societies should be studied. In 1881 in his inaugural address as president of Liberia College, Blyden (1994 [1888]) outlined "The Aims and Methods of a Liberal Education for Africans." He first of all sharply criticized the practice of uncritically adopting European models of educational organization and curricula in African countries. He proposed eventually to move Liberia College to "an interior site, where health of bodyŠcan be secured; where the students may devote a portion of their time to manual laborŠand thus assist in procuring the means from the soil for meeting a large part of necessary expenses; and where access to the institution will be convenient" to the masses of people-hence the title of this lecture. This proposal was part of a larger agenda to promote learning not only for "intellectual ends but for social purposes" (1994 [1888]:84,83) With the goal, then, of closely linking education and the production of knowledge to social and economic progress, Blyden went on to stress the importance of defining knowledge in relationship to African perspectives and needs. With his comment that most of the books that African students read "have been such as to force them from the groove which is natural to them," (1994 [1888]: 87) Blyden revealed a prescient grasp of the linkages between knowledge and power that have been the subject of much work in the field in recent decades.8 In his argument that African students should be permitted only very limited exposure to the histories of recent epochs (in favor of the classics), he made a claim for research and learning that he imagined as holistic and culture-free-and in particular, free of association with the trans-Atlantic slave trade and the "race-poison" linked to that trade (1994 [1888]:83). He called, in other words, for an education in Africa (and by extension for a conception of knowledge) that is closely linked to the experience of people, that is aimed at the improvement of their condition, that is constructed from an African perspective, and that is comprehensive in its approach. These notions-the interdisciplinarity and engagement of my title-have seemed to me to be the recurrent themes of African studies-themes that distinguish it from many other fields, even in area studies.
This same perspective led other Africanists, both African and European (including Mary Kingsley) to the opposite conclusion-that restrictions on the alcohol trade impeded local economic development and that the claims made regarding the dangers of alcohol on local societies were based on prejudice, incomplete evidence, and misunderstandings of the nature of African societies. In the controversy that surrounded the 1909 Southern Nigeria Liquor Commission, an assorted alliance of practitioner-scholars (and many others) made the case, in fact, for analyzing the trade in gin and its consumption within a fuller understanding of African, in this case southern Nigerian, institutions and practices-concluding persuasively that there was no real evidence that alcohol was wreaking havoc in the region.10
From the Past to the Present
When I joined the Board of the African Studies Association two years ago, I had given relatively little thought to these questions-to the nature of African studies as a field. I was trained mostly in a single discipline, and I have for the most part worked at an institution where African studies does not exist as an identified field and where I am thus largely confined to my specific discipline of history. I was quite content, however, that the annual meeting of the ASA provided me with an escape and refuge each year to present papers, to build a career beyond my home institution, to interact with fellow scholars-largely historians. Thus it seemed to me appropriate that during my term on the Board, and in particular during the time I had the privilege to serve as president, I would reflect on the concept of African studies. And in any case, as the Board undertook the task of recruiting a new executive director and initiated a process of strategic planning, I was forced to confront this question.
The Area Studies Lament
That language of crisis that has figured so largely in discussions about African studies and in more than a few of these presidential lectures also has its historical antecedent in the thought of our turn-of-the-century ancestors.11 Blyden himself signaled the critical themes of our discontent when he wrote about Africa's marginality in global discourse and at the same time the need for Africans to break away from the Western institutions and values that would, he argued, prevent Africans and African societies from realizing their full potential. When Blyden imagined aloud the possibility of creating a "school in the interior," he was already pointing to the importance of educational and research institutions within the continent that would be centers not only for advanced education but also for what today we refer to as "knowledge production" rooted in an African perspective. As documented in report after report, the historic absence of such institutions, and in more recent decades their chronic underfunding and decline in the face of economic and political upheaval, has remained a persistent source of frustration. Yet as Tade Akin Aina so persuasively argued in his Abiola Lecture at our 2009 annual meeting (Aina 2010), African universities and research institutions, however underfunded, have proved remarkably resilient precisely because of their capacity to demonstrate their importance, even necessity, in the promotion of social and economic change. Notwithstanding sharply increased competition from private institutions, and pressure (which is hardly unique to Africa) to focus on vocational education, the humanities and social sciences have not only survived but also have thrived in many universities-with distinctive curricular and research approaches that situate local approaches in a global context.12
Fieldwork: Among the Africanists
The minutes of the Board meetings of the ASA, reinforced in the actual experience of the discussions they document, reveal a remarkably consistent vision of African studies on the part of the Association's leadership: that African studies should be engaged with African issues and reflect African perspectives and that it should have a broad embrace, including a wide range of disciplines as well as applied fields of practice. As I began my term as president of the ASA, I decided to see what a broader constituency of Africanists thought. In short, I decided to conduct some fieldwork-a signal characteristic of African studies.14 Like much fieldwork, this particular exercise was driven as much by opportunity, time limitations, and above all financial constraint as by any systematic project. In a context of global economic recession, in conjunction with some of those trends I have already outlined, African studies plainly faces very serious difficulties. Funding from government and nongovernment sources in the U.S., Europe, and Africa has been reduced; and pressure has increased to direct support to applied research in an increasingly restricted set of priority areas. This has had a direct impact on the African Studies Association itself. Although the organization is financially stable, membership and participation in the annual meeting has declined in recent years, as it has in other professional organizations. Yet the data I collected suggest a vibrant field, marked by exciting new research initiatives-even if these are not always evidence in our own annual meeting.
Are Africanists Absent from the Table? Redefining African Studies
At the same time that I set about my own unsystematic fieldwork, the field came to me. I have spent most of my career at a regional public university, where I have been the sole Africanist (at least since the well-known political scientist Kathleen Staudt shifted her focus to the U.S._Mexico border).18 Then, last year, Sarah Ryan, a new faculty member in the Department of Communication with an interest in Rwanda, set about organizing what turned out to be a sizeable number of faculty and staff with various Africa interests. I draw attention to this development for two reasons: first, it is a reminder that a great deal of teaching and scholarship in African studies in the U.S. goes on at universities that do not have substantial African studies programs; and second, and most important, that a great deal of new African studies work is occurring outside the traditional disciplinary and departmental contexts-in health-related fields, education, communication, business, and even science and engineering-and is being undertaken by scholars who do not have formal African studies training. Thus, at UTEP Sarah Ryan's expanding work on Rwanda includes a funded project that combines the development of a master's program in women's studies with research into how students make graduate education choices.19 Godwin Udo, a senior professor in Information and Decision Sciences, recently returned from a Fulbright at the University of Calabar and is focusing increasingly on the rapid spread of cell phone usage in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa.20
It is in fact quite unusual to see these kinds of topics and these kinds of scholars listed in the ASA annual meeting program-although the research would certainly be of considerable interest to many of us. There are more than a few of these gaps, and if we are going to preserve the comprehensive and engaged perspective pioneered by Edward Blyden and his contemporaries, we need to aggressively expand our reach-particularly into those areas that are of crucial interest to colleagues and institutions based in Africa. Take, for example, a field that I have been working on-the growth of the new Nigerian film industry. In recent years there have been many papers presented at the ASA on Nigerian films, but very few on the industry itself-its organization and financing and the entrepreneurs that have created and sustained it. Unfortunately, this is by no means surprising. My review of annual meeting programs revealed recent sessions on the impact of large international corporations on the continent, but next to nothing on African private enterprise-a critical theme in this neoliberal era.21 Even more surprising is the apparent lack of attention to the most recent trends in development economics.
References
Aina, Tade Akin. 2010. "Beyond Reforms: The Politics of Higher Education Transformation in Africa." African Studies Review 53: 21_40.
Appiah, Kwame Anthony. 1992. In My Father's House: Africa in the Philosophy of Culture. New York: Oxford University Press.
Ayandele, E. A. 1970. Holy Johnson: Pioneer of African Nationalism, 1836_1917. New York: Humanities Press.
Barnes, Sandra, and Andrzej W. Tymowski. 2007. "Strengthening the African Humanities through Fellowships to Individuals in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda: Findings and Recommendations." Report from the American Council of Learned Societies to Carnegie Corporation of New York.
Berger. Iris. 1997. "Contested Boundaries: African Studies Approaching the Millennium: Presidential Address to the 1996 African Studies Association Annual Meeting." African Studies Review 40: 1_14.
Bagchi, Kallol, and Godwin Udo. 2010. "An Empirical Assessment of ICT Diffusion in Africa and OECD." International Journal of Information Technology and Management 9: 162_84
Blyden, Edward. 1902. "Islam in Western Soudan." Journal of the African Society 2 (5): 11_37.
_______. 1905. West Africa before Europe and Other Addresses Delivered in England in 1901 and 1903. London: C.M. Phillips.
.
_______. 1994 (1888). Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race. Baltimore: Black Classic Press.
Dipio, Dominic. 2007. "Religious Sense/Religious Perception, Art, Culture, Human Search, Nigerian Films." Westminster Papers in Communication and Culture 4: 65_82.
_______. 2008. "Uganda Viewership of Nigerian Movies" In African through the Eye of the Video Camera, edited by by Foluke Ogunleye, 52_73. Matsapha, Swaziland: Academic Publishers.
_______. 2009. "Gender and Religion in Nigerian Popular Films." African Communications Research 2: 85_116.
Duflo, Esther. 2000. "Child Health and Household Resources in South Africa: Evidence from the Old Age Pension Program." American Economic Review 90: 393_98.
_______. 2003. "Grandmothers and Granddaughters: Old Age Pension and Intra-household Allocation in South Africa." World Bank Economic Review 17 (1): 1_25.
Duflo, Esther, Pascaline Dupas, and Michael Kremer. Forthcoming. "Peer Effects and the Impacts of Tracking: Evidence from a Randomized Evaluation in Kenya." American Economic Review.
Fage, J. D. 1995. "When the African Society Was Founded, Who Were the Africanists?" African Affairs 94 (376): 369_81.
Fair, Laura. 2010. "Songs, Stories, Action!" In Viewing African Cinema in the Twenty-first Century, edited by Mahir Saul and Ralph A. Austin. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
Falola, Toyin, and Alusine Jalloh, eds. 2002. Black Business and Economic Power. Rochester, N.Y.: University of Rochester Press.
Falola, Toyin, and Steven J. Salm, eds. 2005. Urbanization and African Cultures. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press.
Falola Toyin, and Raphael Chijioke Njoku, eds. 2010. War and Peace in Africa. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press.
Frenkel, M. Yu. 1974. "Edward Blyden and the Concept of African Personality" African Affairs 73 (292): 277_89.
Fyfe, Christopher. 1972. Africanus Horton, 1835_1883: West African Scientist and Patriot. New York: Oxford University Press.
Iliffe, John. 1984. The Emergence of African Capitalism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Lewis, Suzanne Grant, Jonathan Friedman, and John Schoneboom. 2010. Accomplishments of the Partnership for Higher Education in Africa, 2000-2010. New York: Partnership for Higher Education in Africa.
Hayford, Casely. 1905. "Introduction." In Edward Blyden, West Africa before Europe and Other Addresses Delivered in England in 1901 and 1903, ii. London: C.M. Phillips.
Isaacman, Allen. 2003. "Legacies of Engagement: Scholarship Informed by Political Commitment." African Studies Review 46 (1): 1_41.
"Jubilee." 1951. African Affairs 50 (200): 177_95.
July, Robert. 1967. The Origins of Modern African Thought: Its Development in West Africa during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. New York: Praeger.
Lindfors, Bernth, Toyin Falola, and Barbara Harlow. 2002. African Writers and Their Readers: Essays in Honor of Bernth Lindfors. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press.
Lynch, Hollis R. 1967. Edward Wilmot Blyden: Pan-Negro Patriot, 1832_1912. London: Oxford University Press.
Lynch, Hollis R., ed. 1971. Black Spokesman: Selected Published Writings of Edward Wilmot Blyden. London: Frank Cass.
Mbembe, Achille. 2007. "Why Am I Here?" In At Risk: Writings On and Over the Edge of South Africa, edited by Liz McGregor and Sarah Nuttal. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers.
McDade, Barbara E., and Anita Spring. 2005. "The 'New Generation of African Entrepreneurs': Networking to Change the Climate for Business and Private Sector-led Development." Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 17: 17_42.
Miller, Joseph. 2007. "Life Begins at Fifty: African Studies Enters Its Age of Awareness." African Studies Review 50 (2): 1_35.
Mudimbe, V. Y. 1988. The Invention of Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy, and the Order of Knowledge. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Moseley, William G. 2009. "Area Studies in a Global Context." Chronicle of Higher Education 56, no. 15 (November): 84_85.
Mutongi, Kenda. (2006). "Thugs or Entrepreneurs? Perceptions of Matatu Operators in Nairobi, 1970 to the Present." Africa 76 (4): 549-568.
_____________. (2011). "Transport Culture and Political Economy, 1984-1988," Paper presented at the Workshop on Politics and Citizenship, Emory University [Drawn from a forthcoming book manuscript].
Nicol, Davidson, ed. 1969. Africanus Horton: The Dawn of Nationalism in Modern Africa: Extracts from the Political, Educational and Scientific Writings of J. A. B. Horton M.D. 1835_1883. London: Longman.
Ntarangwi, Mwenda. 2010. Reversed Gaze: An African Ethnography of American Anthropology. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
Olukoju, Ayodeji. 2007. "The Challenge of Human Capacity and Institution Building in the Humanities in Nigeria." Paper for the Inaugural Conference of Deans of Faculties of Social Sciences and Humanities, Dakar, Senegal.
Parker, Ian. 2010. "The Poverty Lab." The New Yorker, May 17, 78_89.
Partnership for Higher Education in Africa. 2008. "Perspectives on Developing and Retaining the Next Generation of Academics in African Universities: Report on the Workshop." Report presented to the Africa Grantmakers Affinity Group Conference, Johannesburg. www.foundation-partnership.org.
Robinson, Pearl T. 2008. "Ralph Bunche and African Studies: Reflections on the Politics of Knowledge." African Studies Review 51 (1): 1_16.
Rodney, Walter. 1981. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press.
Sarah Ryan, et al. 2009 "Peace-building through Good Governance and Capable Statehood." Peace Review 21: 286_95.
Said, Edward. 1979. Orientalism. New York, Vintage.
Staudt, Kathleen. 1979. "Class and Sex in the Politics of Women Farmers." Journal of Politics 41 (May): 490_512.
Udo, Godwin, Kallol Bagchi, and Peeter Kirs. 2008. "Diffusion of ICT in Developing Countries: A Qualitative Differential Analysis of Four Nations." Journal of Global Information Technology Management 11: 6-27.
Van Den Bersselaar, Dmitri. 2007. The King of Drinks. Boston: Brill.
Zachennuk, Phillip. 2000. Colonial Subjects: An African Intelligentsia and Atlantic Ideas. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
Notes
1. Hayford had in fact encouraged and financed the publication of this collection of Blyden's lectures. For the notion of the "universalist," see Mbembe (2007:169).
2. See Lynch (1967).
3. See "Jubilee," (1951:177_95); Lynch (1967); Frenkel (1974).
4. I have used the 1994 reprint of the more common second edition. Blyden had also published an article titled "Islam in Western Soudan" in Journal of the African Society (1902).
5. See J. D. Fage (1995).
6. For sketches of these men and some of the other main figures, see Robert July's important book (1967). Also see Ayandele (1970)_ Nicol (1969)_ Fyfe (1972)_ Lynch (1971).
July, Robert. 1967. The Origins of Modern African Thought: Its Development in West Africa during the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. New York: Praeger.
Lindfors, Bernth, Toyin Falola, and Barbara Harlow. 2002. African Writers and Their Readers: Essays in Honor of Bernth Lindfors. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press.
Lynch, Hollis R. 1967. Edward Wilmot Blyden: Pan-Negro Patriot, 1832_1912. London: Oxford University Press.
Lynch, Hollis R., ed. 1971. Black Spokesman: Selected Published Writings of Edward Wilmot Blyden. London: Frank Cass.
Mbembe, Achille. 2007. "Why Am I Here?" In At Risk: Writings On and Over the Edge of South Africa, edited by Liz McGregor and Sarah Nuttal. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers.
McDade, Barbara E., and Anita Spring. 2005. "The 'New Generation of African Entrepreneurs': Networking to Change the Climate for Business and Private Sector-led Development." Entrepreneurship and Regional Development 17: 17_42.
Miller, Joseph. 2007. "Life Begins at Fifty: African Studies Enters Its Age of Awareness." African Studies Review 50 (2): 1_35.
Mudimbe, V. Y. 1988. The Invention of Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy, and the Order of Knowledge. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Moseley, William G. 2009. "Area Studies in a Global Context." Chronicle of Higher Education 56, no. 15 (November): 84_85.
Mutongi, Kenda. (2006). "Thugs or Entrepreneurs? Perceptions of Matatu Operators in Nairobi, 1970 to the Present." Africa 76 (4): 549-568.
_____________. (2011). "Transport Culture and Political Economy, 1984-1988," Paper presented at the Workshop on Politics and Citizenship, Emory University [Drawn from a forthcoming book manuscript].
Nicol, Davidson, ed. 1969. Africanus Horton: The Dawn of Nationalism in Modern Africa: Extracts from the Political, Educational and Scientific Writings of J. A. B. Horton M.D. 1835_1883. London: Longman.
Ntarangwi, Mwenda. 2010. Reversed Gaze: An African Ethnography of American Anthropology. Champaign: University of Illinois Press.
Olukoju, Ayodeji. 2007. "The Challenge of Human Capacity and Institution Building in the Humanities in Nigeria." Paper for the Inaugural Conference of Deans of Faculties of Social Sciences and Humanities, Dakar, Senegal.
Parker, Ian. 2010. "The Poverty Lab." The New Yorker, May 17, 78_89.
Partnership for Higher Education in Africa. 2008. "Perspectives on Developing and Retaining the Next Generation of Academics in African Universities: Report on the Workshop." Report presented to the Africa Grantmakers Affinity Group Conference, Johannesburg. www.foundation-partnership.org.
Robinson, Pearl T. 2008. "Ralph Bunche and African Studies: Reflections on the Politics of Knowledge." African Studies Review 51 (1): 1_16.
Rodney, Walter. 1981. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press.
Sarah Ryan, et al. 2009 "Peace-building through Good Governance and Capable Statehood." Peace Review 21: 286_95.
Said, Edward. 1979. Orientalism. New York, Vintage.
Staudt, Kathleen. 1979. "Class and Sex in the Politics of Women Farmers." Journal of Politics 41 (May): 490_512.
Udo, Godwin, Kallol Bagchi, and Peeter Kirs. 2008. "Diffusion of ICT in Developing Countries: A Qualitative Differential Analysis of Four Nations." Journal of Global Information Technology Management 11: 6-27.
Van Den Bersselaar, Dmitri. 2007. The King of Drinks. Boston: Brill.
Zachennuk, Phillip. 2000. Colonial Subjects: An African Intelligentsia and Atlantic Ideas. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
Notes
1. Hayford had in fact encouraged and financed the publication of this collection of Blyden's lectures. For the notion of the "universalist," see Mbembe (2007:169).
2. See Lynch (1967).
3. See "Jubilee," (1951:177_95); Lynch (1967); Frenkel (1974).
4. I have used the 1994 reprint of the more common second edition. Blyden had also published an article titled "Islam in Western Soudan" in Journal of the African Society (1902).
5. See J. D. Fage (1995).
6. For sketches of these men and some of the other main figures, see Robert July's important book (1967). Also see Ayandele (1970)_ Nicol (1969)_ Fyfe (1972)_ Lynch (1971).
7. A viewpoint that has also erased the important African studies tradition in African American institutions of higher learning.
8. The most influential text is Said (1979). See also, Mudimbe (1988), notably chapter 4, "E. W. Blyden's Legacy and Questions."
9. See Van Den Bersselaar (2007).
10. Committee of Inquiry into the Liquor Trade in Southern Nigeria, Minutes of Evidence, London, HMSO, 1909 [Cd. 4907]. These debates were carried out as well in the Nigerian, West African, and U.K. press.
11. See Isaacman (2003:2).
12. See, for example, "The Nairobi Report: Frameworks for Africa_UK Research Collaboration in the Social Sciences and Humanities" (The British Academy and the Association of Commonwealth Universities, 2009); Lewis, Friedman, and Schoneboom (2010); "Perspectives on Developing and Retaining the Next Generation of Academics in African Universities: Report on the Workshop (Africa Grantmakers Affinity Group Conference, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2008); and Olukoju (2007).
13. As noted by Iris Berger (1997).
14. See Ntarangwi (2010).
15. Recent volumes include Falola and Salm, eds. (2005) and Falola and Njoku, eds. (2010).
16. See Barnes and Tymowski (2007). I want to thank Sandra Barnes, Andrzej Tymowski, and Kwesi Yankah, the pro-vice chancellor of the University of Ghana, Legon, for facilitating my participation.
17. See Dipio (2007, 2008, 2009).
18. For an example of Staudt's pioneering work on gender in rural Kenya see Staudt (1979).
19. See also Ryan et al. (2009).
20. See, for example, Bagchi and Udo (2010:162_84); Udo, Bagchi and Kirs (2008).
21. See McDade and Spring (2005). Historians have largely failed to follow up on John Iliffe's important book The Emergence of African Capitalism (1984). But note the work of Alusine Jalloh (e.g., Falola and Jalloh, eds. 2002), the important forthcoming work by Kenda Mutongi (2006, 2011) on the matatu business in Nairobi (which will include substantial attention to the organization of the businesses involved), and Laura Fair's work on cinema in Tanzania (2010), which promises to examine the business of film showing.
22. See also Duflo (2003).
.
1
8. The most influential text is Said (1979). See also, Mudimbe (1988), notably chapter 4, "E. W. Blyden's Legacy and Questions."
9. See Van Den Bersselaar (2007).
10. Committee of Inquiry into the Liquor Trade in Southern Nigeria, Minutes of Evidence, London, HMSO, 1909 [Cd. 4907]. These debates were carried out as well in the Nigerian, West African, and U.K. press.
11. See Isaacman (2003:2).
12. See, for example, "The Nairobi Report: Frameworks for Africa_UK Research Collaboration in the Social Sciences and Humanities" (The British Academy and the Association of Commonwealth Universities, 2009); Lewis, Friedman, and Schoneboom (2010); "Perspectives on Developing and Retaining the Next Generation of Academics in African Universities: Report on the Workshop (Africa Grantmakers Affinity Group Conference, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2008); and Olukoju (2007).
13. As noted by Iris Berger (1997).
14. See Ntarangwi (2010).
15. Recent volumes include Falola and Salm, eds. (2005) and Falola and Njoku, eds. (2010).
16. See Barnes and Tymowski (2007). I want to thank Sandra Barnes, Andrzej Tymowski, and Kwesi Yankah, the pro-vice chancellor of the University of Ghana, Legon, for facilitating my participation.
17. See Dipio (2007, 2008, 2009).
18. For an example of Staudt's pioneering work on gender in rural Kenya see Staudt (1979).
19. See also Ryan et al. (2009).
20. See, for example, Bagchi and Udo (2010:162_84); Udo, Bagchi and Kirs (2008).
21. See McDade and Spring (2005). Historians have largely failed to follow up on John Iliffe's important book The Emergence of African Capitalism (1984). But note the work of Alusine Jalloh (e.g., Falola and Jalloh, eds. 2002), the important forthcoming work by Kenda Mutongi (2006, 2011) on the matatu business in Nairobi (which will include substantial attention to the organization of the businesses involved), and Laura Fair's work on cinema in Tanzania (2010), which promises to examine the business of film showing.
22. See also Duflo (2003).
.
1
--
Toyin Falola
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
1 University Station
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7224
512 475 7222 (fax)
http://www.toyinfalola.com/
www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa
http://groups.google.com/group/yorubaaffairs
http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
Department of History
The University of Texas at Austin
1 University Station
Austin, TX 78712-0220
USA
512 475 7224
512 475 7222 (fax)
http://www.toyinfalola.com/
www.utexas.edu/conferences/africa
http://groups.google.com/group/yorubaaffairs
http://groups.google.com/group/USAAfricaDialogue
No comments:
Post a Comment