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Overview

Recognizing philosophy’s traditional influence on—and literature’s creative stimulus for—sociopolitical discourses, imaginations, and structures, African Philosophical and Literary Possibilities: Re-readingthe Canon, edited by Aretha Phiri, probes the cross-referential, interdisciplinary relationships between African literature and African philosophy. The contributors write within the broader context of renewed interest in and concerns around epistemological decolonization and to advance African scholarly transformation. This volume argues that, in their convergent ideological and imaginative attempts to articulate an African conditionality, African philosophy and literature share overlapping concerns and aspirations. In this way, this book engages and examines the intersectional canons of these disciplines in order to determine their intra-continental epistemological transformative possibilities within broader, global societal explorations of the current moment of decolonization. Where much of the scholarship on African philosophy has focused on addressing issues associated with the postcolonial task of African self-assertion in the face of or against Euro-modernist hegemony, this innovative book project shifts the focus and broadens the scope away from merely discoursing with the global North by mapping out how philosophy and literature can be viewed as mutually enriching disciplines within and for Africa.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781498571241
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 06/23/2020
Series: African Philosophy: Critical Perspectives and Global Dialogue
Pages: 180
Product dimensions: 6.23(w) x 9.03(h) x 0.64(d)

About the Author

Aretha Phiri is a senior lecturer in the Department of Literary Studies in English (DLSE) at Rhodes University and was a research fellow at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) in South Africa (2017–2019).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: Re-reading the Canon, Re-reading Africa

Aretha Phiri

Chapter 1 Philosophy and an African Conscience

Oritsegbubemi Anthony Oyowe

Chapter 2 African Literature as a Handmaid of African Philosophy

Chielozona Eze

Chapter 3 Conflict and Compromise in Three Novels of the Eastern Cape

George Hull

Chapter 4 Blind Sisyphus: Two Perspectives on Meursault

Pedro Tabensky

Chapter 5 Digital Media, Literacies, Literature, and the African Humanities

Pier Paolo Frassinelli and Lisa Treffry-Goatley

Chapter 6 African Gaze: Hollywood/Nollywood and the Postcolonial Science Fiction Imagery in Nnedi Okorafor’s Lagoon

Rocío Cobo-Piñero

Chapter 7 Transgressing Borders: (Re)imag(in)ing Africa(ns) in the World

Aretha Phiri

Chapter 8 “The Whims of the White Masters”: Miriam Tlali’s Between Two Worlds and the Totality of White Power

Marzia Milazzo

Index

About the Contributors

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