Beyond Decolonial African Philosophy dives into decoloniality discourse, challenging some of its shortcomings and offering alternative perspectives on the nature of Africanity and Afrotopia (Africas better future) from leading African philosophers.
Beginning with an overview of philosophy in contemporary Africa, the first half of the book goes on to critically interrogate and rethink decolonialitys deconstructivist approach. The second half of the book considers a range of alternative new conceptualizations of Afrotopia and Africanity that transcend decolonial theory, drawing on constructivist and creative approaches. The book considers key questions such as:
Is Africanity immutable (essentialism), or mutable (nominalism)?
Should we emphasise idealist, identitarian concerns, or pragmatic, developmentarian concerns?
Should we prioritise African agency, or structures and circumstances?
Should Africa embrace hybrid interculturality and creative self-manifestive identity or essentialist purity?
Drawing on rich insights from African philosophers across the continent, this book challenges students and researchers to think beyond the concept of decolonization to alternative forms of African identities and African futures.
This book dives into decoloniality discourse, challenging some of its shortcomings and offering alternative perspectives on the nature of Africanity and Afrotopia from leading African philosophers. The book challenges students and researchers to think beyond decolonization to alternative forms of African identities and futures.
Introduction I. Philosophy and Decolonial African Thinking
1. Philosophy
in the Present Context of Africa II. Challenging and Rethinking Decolonialism
2. Criticisms and Self-Criticisms: The Decolonial Question and Some
Unthinkables in Francophone Experiences
3. Decolonization Beyond History:
Rethinking the Epistemology of Resistance
4. The Locals Also Have a Hand in
It: Properly Understanding Coloniality for the Rethinking of Decoloniality
in Africa
5. Africas Future: Political and the Economic Discourse
6.
Decoloniality or Indigenisation? The Vexing Question of Decolonizing
Education in Africa III. Decolonialism Revisited New Concepts
7. Beyond the
Politics of Decolonial Thought
8. Quest for Afrotopia in Late Postcolonial
Lusophone Literature: A Focus on Guinea-Bissau
9. Constructivism as the Root
of Transcolonial Approach to African Affairs
10. On the Decolonial Paradigm
of Development
11. The Case Against Decolonisation: A Legal Perspective
12.
Towards a Dialogic Trans-colonial African Identity
13. Refracting Ubuntu
Philosophy Through a Constructivist Lens
14. Reappraisal and Conclusion
Joseph C. A. Agbakoba is a professor of philosophy at the University of Nigeria. He is a 2022 recipient of the prestigious Georg Forster Research Award. He has been a Volkswagen Foundation grantee, an Alexander von Humboldt fellow, an alumnus of Budapests Central European University, SUN programme, a visiting scholar at Cape Coast and Frankfurt. He was Head of Department of Philosophy at the University of Nigeria from 2007 to 2010 and Dean, School of General Studies, 20122013; from 2013 to 2017, he was Deputy Vice Chancellor (Vice President) at Madonna University Nigeria. He is a former president of the Nigerian Philosophical Association. Agbakoba is also the Regional Coordinator for Africa for the Council for Research in Values and Philosophy (CRVP), Washington DC; the Vice President for Africa for COMIUCAP (Conférence Mondiale des Institutions Universitaires Catholiques de Philosophie) and a member of the Steering Committee of the International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP), 2008 to 2024. His current research interest is in the field of development philosophy and ethics in relation to Africa and intercultural philosophy. He has published widely locally and internationally.
Marita Rainsborough is an associate professor (PD) at the Institute for Philosophy and Art History at Leuphana University Lüneburg and at the Institute for Romance Studies at Kiel University, Germany. She is an associate member of the Centre of Philosophy University of Lisbon (CFUL) and co-editor of the journal Estudos Kantianos. She was visiting professor at several universities in Brazil, for example at the Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG), the Federal University of Bahia (UFBA) and the University of Campinas (UNICAMP). Her recent publication is Intercultural Thinking in African Philosophy: A Critical Dialogue with Kant and Foucault (London, New York: Routledge, 2024).