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  3. Vol. 2 No. 2 (2006): Africa Review of Books, Volume 2, n° 2, 2006
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Vol. 2 No. 2 (2006): Africa Review of Books, Volume 2, n° 2, 2006

Issue Published : January 7, 2022

1- Conversing with “Pan-Africanism"

https://doi.org/10.57054/arb.v2i2.4869
Shireen Ally

Corresponding Author(s) : Shireen Ally

no-replay@codesria.org

Africa Review of Books, Vol. 2 No. 2 (2006): Africa Review of Books, Volume 2, n° 2, 2006
Article Published : April 5, 2006

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Abstract

Conversing with Africa: Politics of Change
by Mikoma wa Ngig
Kimaathi Publishing House, 2003, 210pp.+ xxiii,
ISBN 0797425616


“Africa, define yourself!” commands Thabo Mbeki,1 the South African president who styles himself as the architect of an “African Renaissance”, a“pan-Africanism” by political fiat, arguably for economic ends. Given this context where the future of the continent is defined and enacted by a political elite rather than the masses who authorise their power, Mikoma wa Ngig’s Conversing with Africa represents an important and timely intervention. Both a philosophical treatise and a political manifesto, it – in crude summation - crafts two useful analytics: one diagnostic, the other prescriptive, for the contemporary malaise of Africa. In each of these analytics are bold claims, none more so than its conclusion – a call for a revolutionary Pan-Africanism. I argue that the political aspirations of Conversing are worthy of discussion; at the same time, I attempt to complicate the theoretical analysis that makes the claim possible.

Keywords

Pan-Africanism Africa Africanist views history

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Author Biography

Shireen Ally

is Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Wits University in Johannesburg, South Africa. She has published several articles on the politics of race and knowledge-production in South Africa, and is currently working on a major project on care work and state formation in post-apartheid South Africa.

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