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  • Doing African Philosophy: Beyond Textuality and Individual Authorship

    Doing African Philosophy by Imafidon, Elvis;

    Beyond Textuality and Individual Authorship

    Series: Bloomsbury Introductions to World Philosophies;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
    • Date of Publication 19 February 2026
    • Number of Volumes Hardback

    • ISBN 9781350464278
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages240 pages
    • Size 216x138 mm
    • Language English
    • 700

    Categories

    Short description:

    Articulates the importance of oral traditions and symbolism as repositories of philosophical knowledge and reaffirms African systems of thought as philosophy.

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    Long description:

    What defines a philosophical tradition? The primacy of the written text and individual authorship are two major defining and interwoven credentials that have been used to deny African philosophical thought prior to the postcolonial phase. In this significant contribution to the search for identity and authenticity of African philosophy, Elvis Imafidon questions the relevance of authorship and textuality in the production, storage and transmission of knowledge. Drawing from the rich and robust philosophical heritages of sub-Saharan African traditions, he showcases the many non-textual and textual ways philosophy is collaboratively and intersubjectively done and critiqued.

    His focus is on two major repositories of philosophical knowledges: orality and symbolism. Storytelling, adages, names and naming, folklores, proverbs and forms of symbolically encoded knowledges found in artefacts, symbols, textile patterns, motifs and corporeal and performative arts contest dominant narratives. They ask us to rethink the logic of binaries between literacy and illiteracy, text and non-text, and speech and writing.

    Paying close attention to the Binis and Esans in Southern Nigeria, the Akans and Gas in Ghana, the Shonas in Zimbabwe, and the Zulu people in South Africa, Imafidon affirms the place of orality, symbolic art and different indigenous methods for philosophising. Exploring the concept of street philosophy in Nigeria, we see how oral and symbolic forms of philosophizing persist in modern African societies.

    This much-needed book reclaims the voices, agency and narratives of African thought across history revealing the deeply embedded intersubjective and ecocentric Intellegence, and enigmatics of African philosophy. It challenges our understanding of the discipline of Philosophy and argues for an inclusive definition of philosophy in our trans-human, trans-textual age.

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    Table of Contents:

    "

    Acknowledgements
    Series Editors Preface
    Foreword by Michael Onyebuchi Eze

    Preliminaries: Doing African Philosophy
    Doing Philosophy
    The African Way
    Reimagining Identity


    1. Redefining a Philosophical Tradition
    The Dominant Understanding of a Philosophical Tradition
    Contesting Individual Authorship
    Contesting Textuality
    Contesting the Politics of Naming and Transgenerational Coherency
    Contesting Whiteness and Literacy
    What is a Philosophical Tradition?

    2. The Orality of African Philosophy
    Oral Repositories of Philosophy
    Orality, Transgenerationality and Epistemic Reliability
    Language, Orality and Truth
    Names and the Philosophy of Human Existence
    Oralising Relationality

    3.Symbolism and African Philosophy
    Problematising the Aesthetic Hermeneutical Encounter
    Creating, Performing and Curating Philosophy
    Symbolising Ontological Commitments
    Symbolising Individuality in Relationality
    Symbolising Knowing and Learning

    4.The Textuality of African Philosophy
    Legacies
    Resistance
    Defence
    Mirroring
    Doing

    5.Trans-textuality and Collaborative Strategies
    Trans-textuality and the Crisis of Relevance
    Afro-communitarianism as Method toward Ecocentric Intellectuality
    Relationality, Fluidity and Difference
    Collaborative Research and Pedagogies
    On Polemics and Enigmatics

    6.Contemporaneities and Futures: On Street Philosophy

    Acknowledging Contemporaneity: Philosophy in the Streets
    Japa, Sapa and the Philosophy of Migration
    ""School na Scam"": Critiquing Education
    Reimagining Futures

    References
    Index

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