Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie

Thirty years after Said’s critique of orientalism, which was closely followed by Mudimbe’s deconstruction of Africa as a colonial invention, Africanists have yet to solve their identity problem. Do they form a discipline? Or does each Africanist primarily belong to one discipline (history, anthropol...

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Main Author: Koen Stroeken
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug 2015-02-01
Series:Afrika Focus
Online Access:https://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/4877
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spelling doaj-ce9757a02916439884f6478afb0a78d72020-11-24T21:16:53ZengGents Afrika Platform, Afrika BrugAfrika Focus0772-084X0772-084X2015-02-0128110.21825/af.v28i1.48774877Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussieKoen Stroeken0Department of Languages and Cultures, Ghent UniversityThirty years after Said’s critique of orientalism, which was closely followed by Mudimbe’s deconstruction of Africa as a colonial invention, Africanists have yet to solve their identity problem. Do they form a discipline? Or does each Africanist primarily belong to one discipline (history, anthropology, linguistics, literature and political sciences, and so on) each with its own method and object, each making the scientific claim to universality, that is, of transcending regional and cultural differences? If this is the case, then why should there be a study program called ‘African studies’ at all? Is there actually anything African to study? Is ‘African thought’ not a figment of our European, exoticising imagination? Is the continent itself not artificially delimited? The issue of regionally defined disciplines, or ‘area studies’, has recently become more acute in academia as the dominance of the positivist methodology has been increasingly felt and the humanities find themselves (again) on the defensive. The following essay can be read as an open letter, inviting students to infuse the debate with some fresh insights unhampered by academic jargon. The occasion for the debate is a previously published interview with scholars on the idea of ‘African thought’. The idea is absurd, both geographically and genetically. Yet, this essay argues, one generation after the first postcolonial wave, we can think of at least two levels at which Africa does exist: the social(-political) and the cultural(-historical). Both meanings of Africa shift the burden of proof to those deconstructing the concept. The paper is in Dutch and addresses a Dutch-speaking audience. It begins and ends with some intricate connotations of ‘Black’ (zwart), ‘race’ (ras) and ‘African thought’ (Afrikaans denken) that are characteristic of the Dutch language and Flemish society in particular.https://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/4877
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koen Stroeken
spellingShingle Koen Stroeken
Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
Afrika Focus
author_facet Koen Stroeken
author_sort Koen Stroeken
title Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
title_short Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
title_full Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
title_fullStr Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
title_full_unstemmed Bestaat het Afrikaanse denken? Bestaat Afrika? Schets voor een publieke discussie
title_sort bestaat het afrikaanse denken? bestaat afrika? schets voor een publieke discussie
publisher Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug
series Afrika Focus
issn 0772-084X
0772-084X
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Thirty years after Said’s critique of orientalism, which was closely followed by Mudimbe’s deconstruction of Africa as a colonial invention, Africanists have yet to solve their identity problem. Do they form a discipline? Or does each Africanist primarily belong to one discipline (history, anthropology, linguistics, literature and political sciences, and so on) each with its own method and object, each making the scientific claim to universality, that is, of transcending regional and cultural differences? If this is the case, then why should there be a study program called ‘African studies’ at all? Is there actually anything African to study? Is ‘African thought’ not a figment of our European, exoticising imagination? Is the continent itself not artificially delimited? The issue of regionally defined disciplines, or ‘area studies’, has recently become more acute in academia as the dominance of the positivist methodology has been increasingly felt and the humanities find themselves (again) on the defensive. The following essay can be read as an open letter, inviting students to infuse the debate with some fresh insights unhampered by academic jargon. The occasion for the debate is a previously published interview with scholars on the idea of ‘African thought’. The idea is absurd, both geographically and genetically. Yet, this essay argues, one generation after the first postcolonial wave, we can think of at least two levels at which Africa does exist: the social(-political) and the cultural(-historical). Both meanings of Africa shift the burden of proof to those deconstructing the concept. The paper is in Dutch and addresses a Dutch-speaking audience. It begins and ends with some intricate connotations of ‘Black’ (zwart), ‘race’ (ras) and ‘African thought’ (Afrikaans denken) that are characteristic of the Dutch language and Flemish society in particular.
url https://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/4877
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