Cameroonian Studies should focus on geographical location and other meaningful markers rather than the colonial language at play, in their analyses.
This author focuses on Southern Cameroons without the "anglophone" or "francophone" trope in the title. I have to read the book to see if this is true of the entire content.
Cameroon has about two hundred
languages cutting across Niger- Congo, Nilo-Saharan and Bantu
Language families.There may be many who speak neither French nor English. I do recall Bamum as a prominent language and also a writing system and the name of an ethnoregional polity, for example.
Ehret pointed out in his November lecture at Harvard that the
Cameroonian region was among the world's earliest iron producers around 2300BC or thereabouts, so it is no
new comer on the stage of human history.
It seems to me that the Anglophone/Francophone/ or
Germanphone categorization
conceals the fact of four millennia of
significant human interaction with the
environment, in the region, before the euro-colonizers stepped in.It also marginalizes the Indigenous languages spoken, implying that they don't exist.It ossifies the colonial era, making it retroactive to the start of human history and may even weaken the effort to do research on and embrace indigenous languages.
Politicians may find it useful in rallying the troops but scholars should probably minimize usage and center their discussions on some other preferred nomenclature. Savannah, Mountainous, Coastal; Eastern, Western, Central, Northern, Southern Cameroon? Since the dominant language families are Bantu, Niger Congo and NiloSaharan, how about Bantuphone, Nigercongophone (Nigophone) and NiloSahara phone (Nisaphone)CAMEROON?
Well I am definitely no expert on this region so these comments are subject to correction by the specialists.
I shall have a look at the book.
Thanks.
GE
On Jul 16, 2020, at 9:05 AM, Abiodun Gbada <abiodunnbadmuss@gmail.com> wrote:
--This is a complete and well balanced, fully researched history book of British Southern Cameroons spanning from pre-colonial era to post-independence and Neo-colonization. This book will be deeply cherished by the general public as well as scholars of history, international law and diplomacy. The facts are clearly presented and events are fully referenced.The book also clearly lays out the underpinnings of the crisis for sovereignty and self determination brewing in the former British Southern Cameroons and proposes a path forward that guarantees peace and prosperity for its citizens. It was written by Nfor Ngala Nfor, a well known figure in international circles as a political activist and freedom fighter. He has a lifetime of dedication to improving the wellbeing of all people through self-governance and self-determination
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