非殖民化的非洲知识:托因·法罗拉的民族志和非洲认识论

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Yoruba culture is his case study, but his account of it mirrors several sub-Saharan African contexts that share striking similarities. The book is divided into fourteen chapters. In the first two, Falola conceptualizes the novel archive as a sort of cultural \"signage … [a] systemic collection of signs and referents\" (2). These chapters present a justification for using an autoethnographic method. On the side of justification, autoethnography lends voice to subaltern cultures that have different codes of record and interpretations unknown to mainstream epistemology. Chapter 3 deals with narrative politics and cultural ideologies. In it, Falola contests that African histories are embedded in manifestations of orality, including proverbs, riddles, myths, and legends. It presents the concepts of time and memory tracing, the cultural norm of long discursive greetings, naming as a circumstantial practice, taboos, and superstition. It illuminates the practices of collectivism and cultural spirituality, especially [End Page 101] the Yoruba cosmic belief in the interdependence of the worlds of the living, the dead, and the spirit or unborn (64). The salient issues in chapter 4 include narratives of magic and myth and their comparison with miracles. Chapter 5 illuminates the importance of poetry as part of cultural narratives and an active political agent, which bears cultural virtues. Chapter 6 continues with the role of poetry in the narratives of self and its development as part of a social whole. Chapter 7 discusses the role of literature in sustaining culture and documenting history by revealing the good and bad in society. Chapter 8 treats intricacies of the connection between politics and narrative, and it demonstrates that being in charge of narrative is a tool for controlling the people for whom narratives define reality and meanings. Chapter 9 begins the unveiling of the nonalphabetic historical texts found in Yoruba visual arts. Culture is posed as a form of symbolic aesthetics, in which artists reflect social contexts and portray themselves as entities that form part of one cultural whole. Thus, Yoruba sculptors' works are an archive of history into which artisans infuse their acquired knowledge, the history of their nation, couched in myths, morals, spirituality, craft, industry, gender-role differentiation, and sense of beauty. Chapter 10 continues by exploring the unique historical texts woven into Yoruba textiles, whose use of colors, threads, designs, and imprinted images are intelligible signs (283) of the process, economics, and history of their making. These textiles, when used as dress, express gender, sociopolitical status, and group affiliation (298). Chapter 11 presents other dimensions of Yoruba arts and culture, especially painting, which, being culturally bounded, expresses the people's lifeworld, spirituality, and mysticism. Chapter 12 discusses Yoruba hair art, an important text, from which the bearer's age and social category can be read. Hairstyle reveals married, unmarried, and eminent persons (381). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

《非殖民化的非洲知识:民族志与非洲认识论》,托因·法罗拉,托因,2022。非殖民化非洲知识:民族志和非洲认识论。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,536页,精装本39.99美元,电子书39.99美元。在这本书中,托因·法罗拉挑战了只在不存在的或稀少的字母记录中寻找非洲历史的做法。他关注不同形式的非字母文本,如雕塑、发型、绘画、文化规范,以及其他提供丰富历史记录和见解的来源。那些与这些文本及其文化媒介的象征意义缺乏联系的局外人,最终对非洲及其历史的理解有限。这本书介绍了一种新的历史档案形式,作者将其视为一个广泛的知识领域,包括经验,物质文物,文化实践,甚至是内部人士对自己文化认识论的叙述。这个档案是一个非传统历史的体现,是一个连接文化、自我和社会文化存在维度的系统。从中汲取材料,法罗拉进行了一场与主流知识形式的思想自由斗争,这种知识形式通过模糊非西方文化标准在学术叙述中的存在而贬低了非西方文化标准。法罗拉设计了一个非殖民化的项目,并以一种自我民族志的方法进行,从他的经验遭遇中汲取,他对研究背景的欣赏使他能够提取更深层次的意义,以对抗欧洲中心学术的霸权项目,并断言非洲认识论的价值。约鲁巴文化是他研究的案例,但他对它的描述反映了撒哈拉以南非洲的几个背景,这些背景有着惊人的相似之处。这本书分为十四章。在前两章中,法罗拉将小说档案概念化为一种文化“标志……标志和指涉物的系统集合”(2)。这两章为使用自我民族志方法提供了理由。在证明方面,自我民族志为具有不同记录代码和主流认识论所未知的解释的次等文化提供了声音。第三章论述叙事政治与文化意识形态。在书中,法罗拉质疑非洲的历史根植于口头表达,包括谚语、谜语、神话和传说。它提出了时间和记忆追踪的概念,长话语问候的文化规范,命名作为一种环境实践,禁忌和迷信。它阐明了集体主义和文化灵性的实践,特别是约鲁巴人对生者、死者、精神或未出生世界相互依存的宇宙信仰(64)。第四章的主要问题包括魔法和神话的叙述以及它们与奇迹的比较。第五章阐述了诗歌作为文化叙事的一部分和积极的政治媒介的重要性,它承载着文化美德。第六章继续探讨诗歌在自我叙事中的作用及其作为社会整体一部分的发展。第七章讨论了文学通过揭示社会的善恶来维持文化和记录历史的作用。第8章论述了政治与叙事之间错综复杂的联系,并论证了对叙事的掌控是一种控制人们的工具,而对这些人来说,叙事定义了现实和意义。第九章开始揭示在约鲁巴视觉艺术中发现的非字母历史文本。文化是一种象征美学形式,艺术家反映社会背景,并将自己描绘成构成一个文化整体的实体。因此,约鲁巴雕塑家的作品是一个历史档案,工匠们在其中注入了他们获得的知识,他们国家的历史,以神话、道德、灵性、工艺、工业、性别角色分化和美感为形式。第10章继续探索编织在约鲁巴纺织品中的独特历史文本,其颜色、线、设计和印迹图像的使用是其制作过程、经济和历史的可理解标志(283)。这些纺织品,当用作服装时,表达了性别、社会政治地位和群体归属(298)。第11章介绍了约鲁巴艺术和文化的其他方面,特别是绘画,它在文化上受到限制,表达了人们的生活世界,精神和神秘主义。第12章讨论了约鲁巴人的头发艺术,这是一个重要的文本,从中可以看出持有者的年龄和社会类别。发型揭示已婚、未婚和知名人士(381)。作为条目…
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Decolonizing African Knowledge: Autoethnography and African Epistemologies by Toyin Falola (review)
Reviewed by: Decolonizing African Knowledge: Autoethnography and African Epistemologies by Toyin Falola Bernard Nwosu Falola, Toyin. 2022. Decolonizing African Knowledge: Autoethnography and African Epistemologies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 536 pp. $39.99 (hardback), $39.99 (ebook). In this book, Toyin Falola challenges the search for African history exclusively in nonexistent or scanty alphabetic records. He draws attention to different forms of nonalphabetic text, such as sculptures, hairstyling, painting, cultural norms, and other such sources that provide copious historical records and insights. Outsiders who lack a connection with the symbolism of these texts and their cultural media end up with a limited understanding of Africa and its history. The book introduces a novel form of historical archive, which the author views as a broad knowledge-scape, encompassing experiences, material artifacts, cultural practices, and even insiders' narratives of their own cultural epistemologies. This archive, an embodiment of unconventional history, is a system for connecting culture, self, and dimensions of sociocultural existence. Drawing materials from it, Falola undertakes an intellectual freedom struggle against the dominant knowledge form, which disparages non-Western cultural standards by obscuring their presence in scholarly narratives. Falola designs a decolonial project and undertakes it with an autoethnographic method, drawing from his experiential encounters, from which his appreciation of the context of research enables him to extract deeper meanings to counter hegemonic projects of Eurocentric scholarship and assert the value of African epistemologies. Yoruba culture is his case study, but his account of it mirrors several sub-Saharan African contexts that share striking similarities. The book is divided into fourteen chapters. In the first two, Falola conceptualizes the novel archive as a sort of cultural "signage … [a] systemic collection of signs and referents" (2). These chapters present a justification for using an autoethnographic method. On the side of justification, autoethnography lends voice to subaltern cultures that have different codes of record and interpretations unknown to mainstream epistemology. Chapter 3 deals with narrative politics and cultural ideologies. In it, Falola contests that African histories are embedded in manifestations of orality, including proverbs, riddles, myths, and legends. It presents the concepts of time and memory tracing, the cultural norm of long discursive greetings, naming as a circumstantial practice, taboos, and superstition. It illuminates the practices of collectivism and cultural spirituality, especially [End Page 101] the Yoruba cosmic belief in the interdependence of the worlds of the living, the dead, and the spirit or unborn (64). The salient issues in chapter 4 include narratives of magic and myth and their comparison with miracles. Chapter 5 illuminates the importance of poetry as part of cultural narratives and an active political agent, which bears cultural virtues. Chapter 6 continues with the role of poetry in the narratives of self and its development as part of a social whole. Chapter 7 discusses the role of literature in sustaining culture and documenting history by revealing the good and bad in society. Chapter 8 treats intricacies of the connection between politics and narrative, and it demonstrates that being in charge of narrative is a tool for controlling the people for whom narratives define reality and meanings. Chapter 9 begins the unveiling of the nonalphabetic historical texts found in Yoruba visual arts. Culture is posed as a form of symbolic aesthetics, in which artists reflect social contexts and portray themselves as entities that form part of one cultural whole. Thus, Yoruba sculptors' works are an archive of history into which artisans infuse their acquired knowledge, the history of their nation, couched in myths, morals, spirituality, craft, industry, gender-role differentiation, and sense of beauty. Chapter 10 continues by exploring the unique historical texts woven into Yoruba textiles, whose use of colors, threads, designs, and imprinted images are intelligible signs (283) of the process, economics, and history of their making. These textiles, when used as dress, express gender, sociopolitical status, and group affiliation (298). Chapter 11 presents other dimensions of Yoruba arts and culture, especially painting, which, being culturally bounded, expresses the people's lifeworld, spirituality, and mysticism. Chapter 12 discusses Yoruba hair art, an important text, from which the bearer's age and social category can be read. Hairstyle reveals married, unmarried, and eminent persons (381). As an entry...
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Africa Today
Africa Today Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
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期刊介绍: Africa Today, a leading journal for more than 50 years, has been in the forefront of publishing Africanist reform-minded research, and provides access to the best scholarly work from around the world on a full range of political, economic, and social issues. Active electronic and combined electronic/print subscriptions to this journal include access to the online backrun.
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