Kole:
Interesting ideas and questions. May I also submit that another (more positive) way to look at the issues you raised is to focus on “friends” instaed of “enemies”. As a professional coleague of my (Chris Maser) likes to remind us, we need to do a better job of consciously framing in the positive some of the most important, human-related aspects of sustainable development. This he submits is critical because we humans (some world say especially in western cultures) are trained from infancy to think in the negative. Maser and others suggest that, if we want a better world, we need to start thinking more in the positive and thus framing our scholarship, action plans, etc accordingly. However, I also recognize some of the limitations to this thesis. Hope to see you at the International Association of Nigerian Studies and Development for the 22nd Annual Conference in
Regards,
Okey
From: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com [mailto:usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Oluwatoyin Ade-Odutola
Sent: Friday, July 30, 2010 1:26 PM
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re:
Is there anyone reading this who encountered the works of Esiaba Irobi? Are you interested in African ideas and how Western ideas "tried" to displace them? We need an Esiaba Irobi Virtual Institution of African Intellection. OR Esiaba Irobi summer school, where his ideas will be thoroughly discussed. This brother left behind a trove. In the last few days I have been reading snippets of Esiaba Irobi's writings. I must confess that he was profound, prophetic, and was never afraid to look into other areas of scholarship others would be afraid venturing into. At the same time, I chanced on Commander Obey's song on the inevitability of enemies in the life of an individual. Whatever one doe, he seems to say, there will be enemies. I want to assume that as it is for individuals so it must be for nations. Can you imagine a nation actually studying all the moves of a potential enemy? I do not mean the type of studies that go on in War Colleges around the world. It is on this basis that it occurred to me to search the Internet for any institution that makes the study of Enemies its main business. I have not found any yet; but I want to believe there must be a professor /researcher whose main scholarship is built on or around the study of enemies. He may not yet be the expert on Enemology but I am sure the world needs to focus on the study of enemies. Who in fact is an Enemy; how do they present? What theory can be used to understand enemies? I hope there can be fields such as: Cultural dimensions of enemy studies |
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