"This is a 'docu-drama' in book form.... Paul Tiyambe Zeleza reinterprets the African condition and examines those who study it. Especially fascinating is his scrutiny of Africa's most dangerous marabouts of the twentieth century-academic Africanists from Western and neo-western universities. Postmodernism and postcoloniality may still be in vogue, but this book inaugurates the new era of post-pessimism."
Prof. Ali A. Mazrui, Albert Schweitzer Professor in the Humanities, Binghamton University, New York.
"The Manufacturing African Studies and Crises is a provocative and stimulating book written by a brilliant angry mind. It is a challenge to the practice of African Studies and its political significance. The book is important for all Africanists. It will upset you, as it did me, and force you to re-evaluate our work and understand our predicament as students of African cultures and affairs." Prof. V.Y. Mudimbe, William R. Kennan Jf. Professor of French, Comparative Literature & Classics, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
"To the student of Africa, this collection of essays, offers irreverent insights of an informed outsider, at a time when the field is in great need of reflection. To some in the "African Studies" establishment, its words may prick like coming from the pen of an inside agitator. If the result has the effect of a bitter medicine, it will be no less therapeutic for those who dare read through it. In short, Zeleza's book merits diverse audiences and has the potential of triggering a much-needed soul-search in 'African Studies.'"
Prof. Mahmood Mamdani, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
"One of the most comprehensive and effective rebuttals of the way in which Africa has been studied in much of North America and Europe."
Prof. Adebayo Olukoshi, Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, Uppsala, Sweden.
Awarded the 1998 Special Commendation of the Noma Award with the following jury citation:"Manufacturing African Studies and Crises" by Paul Tiyambe Zeleza is a rebuttal of interpretations and attitudes of scholars mainly, though not wholly, outside Africa, who have appropriated for themselves the study of Africa. The work is an important contribution to African intellectual history in the post-independence period."