Multiple Hamitic Theories and Black Egyptians: Negotiating Tensions between Standards of Scholarship and Political Imperatives in UNESCO’s General History of Africa (1964–1998)

Q2 Arts and Humanities History of Humanities Pub Date : 2021-09-01 DOI:10.1086/715866
Larissa Schulte Nordholt
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Abstract

UNESCO’s eight-volume General History of Africa (GHA) was a politically engaged but scholarly endeavor that aimed to Africanize the writing of African history. It did so partly through an expulsion of historical explanations that hinged on the idea that greatness had been transported into Africa from the outside. This article shows how the GHA developed scholarly standards while at the same time grappling with the political tension inherent in a move away from European colonialist historiography. It was specifically during the editing of the chapter written by Cheikh Anta Diop on the origins of the ancient Egyptians that political imperatives seemed to clash with standards of academic rigor and scholarly methods. This article offers an analysis of reports produced by the GHA during the editing of the series to show how the GHA navigated these tensions and why they chose to include the Diop chapter even if not all historians working on the GHA agreed with it. The article thereby shows how a decolonization of history took place in historiographical practice.
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多元哈密理论与埃及黑人:联合国教科文组织《非洲通史》(1964-1998)中奖学金标准与政治要求之间的紧张关系
联合国教科文组织的八卷本《非洲通史》(GHA)是一部政治参与但学术努力的著作,旨在使非洲历史的写作非洲化。它之所以能做到这一点,部分原因是它摒弃了一些历史解释,这些解释依赖于伟大是从外部传入非洲的观点。本文展示了GHA是如何在发展学术标准的同时,与远离欧洲殖民主义史学所固有的政治紧张局势作斗争的。特别是在编辑谢赫·安塔·迪奥普写的关于古埃及人起源的章节时,政治要求似乎与学术严谨的标准和学术方法发生了冲突。本文分析了GHA在编辑该系列丛书期间所产生的报告,以展示GHA如何应对这些紧张局势,以及为什么他们选择包括迪奥普章节,即使不是所有从事GHA工作的历史学家都同意这一章。这篇文章由此展示了历史的非殖民化是如何在史学实践中发生的。
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来源期刊
History of Humanities
History of Humanities Arts and Humanities-Arts and Humanities (all)
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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