Race and Bureaucracy Revisited: Hannah Arendt's Recent Re-Emergence in African Studies

Publication Type:

Book Chapter

Source:

Hannah Arendt and the Uses of History: Imperialism, Nation, Race, and Genocide, Berghahn, New York, p.68–86 (2007)

ISBN:

978-1-84545-361-9

URL:

http://v2.berghahnbooks.com/title.php?rowtag=KingHannah

African Futures

As major transformations unfold, our understanding of Africa, its past, its future and its relation to the world seems to be caught between two contending paradigms. The first is shaped by the discourse of crisis and disaster, emergency and survival. The second is future-oriented. It is preoccupied with Africa’s shifting position within the global economy and its apparent rise, the material and virtual flows and the infrastructures that connect Africa to its diasporas and the broader world, and to the social and aesthetic experiences of its inhabitants. This project will take stock of the contending discourses on African futures. It aims at drawing together in robust conversation a broad range of parallel debates currently going on in areas as diverse as literature, science-fiction, music and digital technologies, economics, futures markets, demography and public health, environmental studies, arts, design and fashion. It will also tease out the theoretical and practical implications of these discourses and the extent to which Afro-futurism could be read against similar trends elsewhere, in China, India, Russia and Brazil in particular.

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