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Full Description
Whilst much analysis of African philosophy focuses on humanistic traditions, this book argues that there is an alternative history of African philosophy based on understandings of the nonhuman, or 'the world', from across the continent.
The book starts with a precolonial Swahili poem which has reached across the continent with direct and indirect philosophical resonances and intellectual contiguity. Centring textual traditions in African languages, the book departs from philosophical topics drawn from European languages or world philosophy. Instead, the book demonstrates that locally constituted discourses have alternative philosophical orientations and interests, alternative intellectual histories in which the reception of the philosophical heritage passes through specific textual and linguistic channels. Interrogating texts in Swahili, Shona, Ndebele, Wolof, and Kinyarwanda, the book's coverage ranges from classical poetry to existentialist and postmodern novels, to songs and post-conflict literature.
Challenging humanist and Europhone African philosophical assumptions, this book is an important read for researchers of African philosophy, literature, languages, and cultural studies.
Contents
Introduction 1: The nonhuman: Another history of African philosophy 2: Lifeworlds of the postcolony: Between metaphysics and existence 3: Àddina: A non-objective representation of "the world" in Boubacar Boris Diop's Doomi Golo 4: A phenomenology of death 5: African philosophies of violence 6: Meanings of the nonhuman Concluding words



