Afro-Optimism: Perspectives on Africa's Advances
By (Author) Ebere Onwudiwe
By (author) Minabere Ibelema
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 2002
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
African history
960
Hardback
200
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
482g
Debunks persistent and widespread claims that post-colonial Africa has regressed. Afro-Optimism is a book with a simple thesis: Africa is marching forward, even if at times haltingly and at a different pace from the rest of the world. A common view among journalists and academics alike is that African conditions declined the moment colonial governments left its shores. The chapters in this book cover Africa's progress in health, agriculture, transportation, cultural innovation, and economic advancement. The contributors to the book contend that development is about human beings, so they do not dwell extensively on statistical estimates and projections. The essays in this book also position the advanced Africans have achieved in spite, and at times because of, their experiences of European colonial rule. The contributors argue that in all facets of development, Africans had to overcome colonial obstacles or had to build on meager colonial foundations. Although the authors acknowledge Africa's disappointing performance in various respects, they stress throughout that exclusive concentration on African failures creates new and reinforces existing negative perceptions of contemporary Africa.
Given the difficulty of their mission, the editors and contributors do a fairly good job in managing, against the odds, to create a reasonable space for measured hope against formulations of Afro-pessimism.-African Studies Review
"Given the difficulty of their mission, the editors and contributors do a fairly good job in managing, against the odds, to create a reasonable space for measured hope against formulations of Afro-pessimism."-African Studies Review
Ebere Onwudiwe is Professor of Political Science and Executive Director of the Center for International Studies, Central State University, Wilberforce, Ohio. He is also Senior Fellow, Program on Ethnic and Federal Studies, University of Ibadan, Nigeria. Minabere Ibelema is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication Studies, University of Alabama, Birmingham.