African Studies in Distress: German Scholarship on Africa and the Neglected Challenge of Decoloniality

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Abstract

This paper is a response to Matthias Basedau's article published in issue 55/2020 of the present journal. At a time when African Studies scholarship is rising beyond the flogging of dead horses, certain strands in the field in Germany seem to ignore much of the valuable scholarship and intellectual contributions by excellent African and non-African researchers alike. It is striking to see how Basedau falls prey to the same shortcomings that he draws our attention to, that is, the domination of African Studies by sources and figures outside the continent and the construction of Africa as a space of lack. This underscores the urgency of decolonizing African Studies at many levels, including liberating it from the straightjacket of area studies, interrogating purportedly objective scholarship, and opening it up to new theoretical perspectives. The restriction to comparative approaches will only ensure that these strands in African Studies remain stuck in their epistemological cul-de-sac.

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Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S. J., Seesemann, R., & Vogt-William, C. (2022). African Studies in Distress: German Scholarship on Africa and the Neglected Challenge of Decoloniality. Africa Spectrum, 57(1), 83–100. https://doi.org/10.1177/00020397221080179

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