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Africa in What Age: Post-Global or Post-Rwanda?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 July 2017

Abstract

In “African Literature in the Post-Global Age” Tejumola Olaniyan is to be found asking: Where is the world at—and Africa with it? And for Olaniyan, the contemporary world is most ideally mapped as “post-global.” The purview of the post-global—its “field commonsense”—yields a world of humanity beyond the boundaries of nation, race, and territory, joined in commonalities of global need and planetary responsibility. What are the implications of the world thus known for Africanist literary practice? Can it rightly continue to be a particularist practice dedicated in restricted humanist service to Africa known in racialist, nationalist, and nativist particularity? Or ought Africanist practice to direct its humanism expansively to the service of a world in transnational and cosmopolitan linkage? Olaniyan wants Africanist literary practice to be post-global—and therefore universalist. But is Africanist literary practice well served in discarding the particular? This essay is guided in answer by Aimé Césaire’s caveat: “There are two ways to lose oneself: by segregation in the particular or by dilution in the universal.”

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Forum
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2017 

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References

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4 Ibid, 387.

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9 Ibid., 389.

10 Ibid., 389.

11 Ibid., 389.

12 Ibid., 390.

13 Ibid., 391.

14 Ibid., 392.

15 Ibid., 390.

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19 Ibid., 393.

20 Ibid., 393; emphasis added.

21 Ibid., 393.

22 Ibid., 394.

23 Ibid., 394; emphasis in original.

24 Ibid., 394.

25 Ibid., 394.

26 Ibid., 393.

27 Ibid., 395.

28 Ibid., 396.

29 Ibid., 395.

30 Ibid., 395.

32 Césaire is quoted in Christopher Miller, Theories of Africans: Francophone Literature and Anthropology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993), 24 Google Scholar; emphasis added.

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