Rethinking Africa’s Globalization Volume 1: The Intellectual Challenges

Book Details

Author:
Paul Tiyambe Zeleza
Date of Publication:
Jan-2003
Pages:
500
Publisher:

Africa World Press

Book Overview and Reviews
Overview:

This book provide a powerful and probing critique of the myths, meanings, promises and perils of globalization, postcoloniality, and other currently popular discourses by interrogating their implications for Africa and African studies. It challenges misrepresentations and misappropriations of Africa in academic texts and in the popular media and reaffirms the importance of progressive nationalism, Pan-Africanism, and internationalism for Africa's reconstruction, a project in which universities and African intellectuals-including in the North-have a critical role to play in promoting productive transnational literacy and conversations across the Atlantic.

Erudite, interdisciplinary, and compelling, this book offers incisive reflections on the enduring questions of African development, democracy, and self-determination, and it emphasizes the importance of education and radical scholarship in meeting the daunting challenges of the new century.

Reviews:

"With this collection of essays, Paul Tiyambe Zeleza not only reinforces his preeminent position as historian but also as leading cultural critic. The collection is an intellectual feast, serving an incredibly wide range of issues without the author ever losing the thread of his argument: the need to rethink globalization and Africa's own cultural development."
Thandika Mkandawire, Director, UNRISD.