Humanism as History in Contemporary Africa
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Title
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Humanism as History in Contemporary Africa
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Author
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Michael Onyebuchi EZE
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Page
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59-77
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DOI
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10.6163/tjeas.2011.8(2)59
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Abstract
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The socio-political imagination of contemporary Africa is usually beckoned upon a deconstruction of historiography – usually colonial history. If colonialism flourished through a misrecognition of the native as a historical subject, and by
extension, a denial of humanity, the native would have to reassert his humanity through a re-cognition of his own history. At which point, African history would become a history of humanism. The first part of this essay localizes the debate within the historical context for which the debate gained relevance. The context
is the Enlightenment and colonial history. I shall link these historicities to the emergent social political imagination in contemporary Africa. The attempt to rehabilitate the truncated African subjectivity would also become a rehabilitation
of history by attacking the intellectual roots of colonial historicity.
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Keyword
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Africanism, Humanism, coloniality, postcolonialism, enlightenment,
interculturality
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