The Idea of Africa

Front Cover
Indiana University Press, Nov 22, 1994 - History - 234 pages
"A sequel to V. Y. Mudimbe's highly acclaimed The invention of Africa, this book maps the 'idea' of Africa as conceived in various historical and geographical contexts from the Greeks to the present. Mudimbe focuses on two main issues: the Greco-Roman thematization of otherness and its articulation in such concepts as barbarism and savagery and the complex process that has shaped the idea of Africa s understood by Europeans. In the considerable intellectual space covered, Africa is outlined as a paradigm of difference. Mudimbe proceeds from an interrogation of a seventeenth-century French translation of the Greek Philostratus's Icones to considerations of Greek contacts with the African continent, the Greek paradigm and its power, and the politics of memory. Individual chapters critique the present-day reactivation of Greek texts by black scholars and review contemporary activity in African art. Essential reading for anyone interested in the politics and construction of culture"--Back cover.
 

Contents

Symbols and the Interpretation of the African Past I
1
Hercules among the Pygmies from Philostratus Icones
3
Africa from the world atlas of Gerald Mercator 1595
16
Which Idea of Africa?
38
Barberini musician bronze statuette c 200 B C 23
57
Head Amadeo Modigliani 1915
63
The Power of the Greek Paradigm
71
The world in Herodotuss time 440 B C
73
Precolonial Africa
116
Mpala 1975
137
Reprendre
154
Head of a King Ashanti c 1750
155
Héro National Lumumba 1970s
166
Mukishi wa pwo the primordial mythic mother Zaïre
173
Coda
209
BIBLIOGRAPHY
215

Allegory of Africa Martin de Vos sixteenth century
81
Commercial axes across the Sahara
94
Domestication and the Conflict of Memories
105

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About the author (1994)

V. Y. MUDIMBE is the R. F. DeVernay Professor of Romance Studies and Professor of Comparative Literature and Anthropology at Duke University. His books include The Invention of Africa: Gnosis, Philosophy and the Order of Knowledge, Fables and Parables, and The Surreptitious Speech.

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