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Title: We Can't Go Home Again: An Argument about Afrocentrism by Clarence E. Walker ISBN: 0-19-509571-5 Publisher: Oxford University Press Pub. Date: 01 May, 2000 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $25.00 |
Average Customer Rating: 3.29 (7 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: A good book that shows the flaws in Afrocentrism
Comment: A very good book! It has a few minor flaws in developing its argument but in the end ... its conclusion is undeniable, Afrocentrism is not based as much on historical fact as it is based on politics.
Rating: 4
Summary: Examining Afrocentrism's Egyptian branch
Comment: "Nonsense" is one of Clarence Walker's favorite words in this scathing critique of Afrocentrist discourse, which focuses on the attempt to reclaim Egypt as a seat of Black culture. It is not, in fact, a conservative analysis; most of the usual right-wing suspects will run screaming from this book, which comes down hard on the pro-affirmative action side, savages what Walker sees as a return to "free market racism" (85), and drubs the homophobia shared by some black leaders and their purported opponents. (In a footnote, Walker bluntly describes Dinesh D'Souza's _The End of Racism_ as itself "racist.")
Walker's project might be described thusly: he subverts central Afrocentrist tenets about race, culture, and historical origins by demonstrating that most of these supposedly critical arguments actually derive from outmoded European beliefs. Most seriously, he shows how Afrocentric ideas of race borrow from the newly "scientific" racism of the mid- and late-19th century. Elsewhere, he catalogs ludicrous errors in Afrocentric history texts; examines methodological problems in Afrocentric research on Egypt; and attacks the anti-Semitism he sees endemic to some strands of this discourse. He also argues that Afrocentrism finds itself unable to deal with American slavery, a problem that is an artifact of one of the most serious problems with Afrocentrism as a disciplinary approach: it seems incapable of engaging in dialogue with "mainstream" scholarship.
This is an exasperated book. Walker has no patience with those who define "blackness" by one's willingness to toe a particular intellectual and political line. He is equally irritated with what he describes as the "therapeutic" trend in Afrocentrist historiography, which substitutes psychological uplift for the complexities of historical study. His use of the word "Negro" is political, since he sees nothing particularly "African" about "African-Americans." (As Walker points out, many Africans refuse to consider African-Americans "one of them.") Since Walker is writing a jeremiad and not an in-depth analysis of Afrocentrism's own history (see, e.g., Wilson Moses' _Afrotopia_), the book occasionally irons out difficulties and lumps when it ought to split. In particular, it is not always clear that Walker himself understands the particularities of contemporary Egyptology. The book hardly constitutes an assault on the study of Black history, however; it is, rather, a plea for a Black history written without romantic blinkers on.
Rating: 5
Summary: Excellent review of Afrocentrist nonsense by a real scholar
Comment: Mary Lefkowitz is quoted on the cover as saying if you read only one book on Afrocentrism, this should be the one. I think that hers is actually better, but this is an excellent polemic written by a real scholar - as opposed to Asante, Diop, the below mentioned "doctoral student" whose "research" is laughable at best, and other purveyors of poorly reearched fantasies about the past.
Walker's style is pugnacious and he tells it like it is. Nonsense and balderdash are exactly that and called such.
Can't say I agree with everything in the book. In the second half of the book he flails away at everyone who opposes or even thinks critically about affirmative action and other such policies. In fact, you will perhaps be surprised to learn that concepts like "merit" and "color blind policies" are simply racist dodges of neanderthals out to return the US to the days of Jim Crow.
If you can get by that nonsense, and focus on the discussion of Afrocentrism you will find this book invaluable. It is a brave book by a courageous author in the land of political correctness.
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Title: Precolonial Black Africa: A Comparative Study of the Political and Social Systems of Europe and Black Africa, from Antiquity to the Formation of Mod by Cheikh Anta Diop ISBN: 1556520883 Publisher: Lawrence Hill Books Pub. Date: 01 August, 1988 List Price(USD): $16.95 |
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Title: Not Out of Africa: How Afrocentrism Became an Excuse to Teach Myth As History by Mary Lefkowitz ISBN: 046509838X Publisher: Basic Books Pub. Date: 01 August, 1997 List Price(USD): $19.00 |
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Title: Civilization or Barbarism: An Authentic Anthropology by Cheikh Anta Diop ISBN: 1556520484 Publisher: Lawrence Hill Books Pub. Date: 01 April, 1991 List Price(USD): $19.95 |
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Title: The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality by Cheikh Anta Diop ISBN: 1556520727 Publisher: Lawrence Hill Books Pub. Date: 01 March, 1974 List Price(USD): $16.95 |
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Title: Achieving Our Humanity : The Idea of the Postracial Future by Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze ISBN: 0415929415 Publisher: Routledge Pub. Date: 01 September, 2001 List Price(USD): $26.95 |
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