
Are
All African Intellectuals Doing African Studies?
A Response
to Issa
Shivji’s Harold Wolpe Memorial Lecture
Chambi Chachage
It is difficult, indeed redundant, to respond to someone or
something you almost fully agrees with. However, when a point of disagreement
close to one’s own heart, no matter how small, emerges, one is bound to
respond. So, here I am, responding to Shivji’s take on African Studies.
Shivji presents a profound personal and collective “auto-critique”
of African intellectuals. In doing so, however, he singles out a “few, brilliant
ones” who “migrate to the North joining ivy leagues.” Although he does not
name names, one can sense that the example par
excellence is none other than his friend and colleague during the heydays
of the radical Dar es Salaam School of the 1970s, Mahmood Mamdani, currently
based at Columbia and Makerere. Shivji queries:
What
about our migrants to the North? A significant few attain celebrity status.
They are held up as an example of some – I say some! – brilliance in an
otherwise intellectually barren continent. They are under pressure to produce
best sellers to maintain their status. And what sells best in the North is that
which finds a niche in the academic fashion of the day. Which means they end up
recycling and regurgitating the same content packaged in fancier language.

Karim Hirji, another colleague of Mamdani during the famed Dar
es Salaam School, shares Shivji’s nostalgic sentiments. However, Hirji is more
overt as he does not shy away from naming names. In his recent book on The Enduring Relevance of Walter Rodney’s
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, he devotes a whole section on Mamdani as “an
instructive example”:
The
Ugandan political Scientist Mahmood Mamdani is a case in point. An erstwhile
Marxist and colleague of Rodney at the University of Dar es Salaam, he authored
well regarded leftist books…. To this day, he remains a prolific, respected,
award winning writer on African issues. Yet while a few of his writings still
display a critical stand on the Western role in global affairs… his conceptual
horizon shifted in a fundamental way. Economic issues and ideas like
underdevelopment, imperialism, neo-colonialism, neoliberalism and class
analysis are no longer germane to his analytical method. Instead, he operates
on the legal, political, and cultural planes with identity group, ethnicity,
religion, race, tribe, and nation as his basic unit of analysis. His focus is on
politics, law, administration and conflict resolution, with class and
anti-imperialist struggles deleted from the picture. Insightful and well
researched as his analysis is, it is incomplete and biased as it avoids the
underlying reality and economic trends that constitutes the long-term
foundation for the problems he examines…Mamdani thus…stands in the company of
the bulk of modern day historians of Africa who can go no further than distort
and superficially critique the works and Marxist approach of Walter Rodney.
Contrast that with what Shivji lamented about in 2003 on
Mamdani’s apparent metamorphosis:
It is unfortunate that in his
magnum opus, Citizen and Subject:
Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism (New Jersey:
Princeton, 1996), Mahmood Mamdani abandons political economy too radically and
falls into an institutional analysis
of the colonial state. He finds that the colonial state was bifurcated, when an
examination of its social character reveals the unity of state power. While his conclusions on the tasks of
democratic struggle are unassailable, his institutional analysis results in a
“recommendation” that state structures be reformed rather than a call for a new
form of nationalist struggle. Throughout his analysis, Mamdani concentrates on
the “native question,” the preoccupation of the colonial power, but has little
to say about the National Question, the preoccupation of the resistance.

This background enables us to see where Shivji is coming from
when he thus laments in 2017:
As
the academia is increasingly commodified, universities become market places.
Academics, willingly or under duress, have to break up their courses and
introduce new ones to make them saleable to the consumers. They have to
package, brand and certify their products. History becomes tourism and
heritage; corporate greed becomes corporate responsibility and democratic
governance is taught as good governance. Archaeology is museumised whose
artifacts are exhibited at a fee to ignorant and disinterested American
tourists. Political economy is replaced by econometrics, with no sense of
either politics or economy. Africans in Africa study Africa in Centres of
African Studies in the image of Centres in the North. Aren’t all our studies
African studies? Law students write PhDs applying the convention on
rights of indigenous people to their own citizens. To talk of citizens’ rights
is foreign, Western; to ruminate on indigenous rights is authentic, African! We
have been metamorphosed – from colonial natives and migrants to neo-colonial
indigenous and tyrants, thanks to imperial intellectuals and their African
caricatures.
As someone who has studied African Studies in both the ‘Global
South’ and the ‘Global North’, I find it difficult to agree with Shivji’s
rhetorical question that seems to imply that all our studies are African
Studies. For instance, to study Sociology in Africa does not necessarily makes one
study African Studies. Its ‘holy trinity’ remains Karl Marx, Emile Durkheim and
Marx Weber and not Ibn
Khaldun, W.E.B.
Dubois and Ida
B. Wells. In my erstwhile discipline, Psychology, it is the same story – we
start with the likes of Sigmund Freud and Carl Rogers rather than Frantz Fanon
and Chabani
Manganyi. An African student in the Philosophy department may graduate
knowing the German George Hegel without having heard of the Ghanaian Anton
Wilhelm Amo who taught and published in German universities in the 18th
century way before Hegel. As Ernest Wamba dia Wamba reminds
us, the “foundation of African scientific research is still based on a
philosophy of returning to the Western sources.” Shivji himself has captured this intellectual predicament in regard to
his discipline elsewhere:
Some of us who adopted
more radical approaches, albeit still within Western traditions, did not
perhaps subscribe wholly to Thompson’s thesis that the rule of law was an
‘unqualified good’. Yet we, too, saw in bourgeois law and legality, space for
struggle to advance the social project of human liberation and emancipation.
Law, we argued, was a terrain of struggle; that rule of law, while expressing
and reinforcing the rule of the bourgeoisie, did also represent the achievement
of the working classes; that even though bourgeois democracy was a limited
class project, it was an advance over authoritarian orders and ought to be
defended. The legal discourse, whether liberal or radical, thus remained rooted
in Western values, exalting the Law’s Empire.
So, no, we are not all doing African Studies. However, all African
intellectuals ought to do it irrespective of our disciplinary boundaries. Harry
Garuba has consistently made a case for this by highlighting that the study of
Africa has not yet been fully integrated in the traditionally Western disciplines.
The “study of Africa”, he
aptly notes, “was calling upon us to open the disciplines rather than adopt
and justify their self-admittedly fragmentary understandings of the world.” It
is what he refers to as the “blinkers of the inherited disciplines” that needs
to be fully smashed. What is a better way of doing it than ‘Bringing
back African Studies to Africa’?
Hi Chambi,
Thanks for the good analysis. I think I am following the discussion only up to a point. So, if I am a veterinary scientist at Sokoine University in Morogoro, how can I do African Studies? What ought to be African Studies (Study of Africa) to me? Would you say I am doing African Studies only when my scientific research is not based on "philosophy of returning to the Western sources"? The entire veterinary medicine discipline is based on the philosophy of Western science.
Anon, that is exactly the point. There is a lot of scientific knowledge that Western Science learned from Africa/Africans. In this case of medicine, this PhD that will soon be published into a book is instructive:
http://hshm.yale.edu/people/carolyn-roberts
A response to Anon from Professor Adolfo Mascarenhas:
I saw your response to Chachage less than half an hour after you sent it….Unfortunately had to rush to sse my wife in the hospital. I have been working on these aspects since I left the University more than 20 years ago.
1) Every one of us is unique
2) Therefore it follows that there is no family in the world, no tribe/nation that has no knowledge, science or the drive to survive….some of this knowledge is really high tech…at -25c degrees we would not survive for more than 20 minutes, ditto San people who can survive 4 days without water.
3) True we have been brain washed that as you quite strikingly put it “Start Quote" The entire veterinary medicine discipline is based on the philosophy of Western science. End Quote That is your perspective
4) The Dept of Sc. Tech & Environment asked me to give a keynote address on Indigenous Knowledge & Development. The brainwashing is so complete that few off the officials actually believed me when I told them that Vasco d’Gama did not discover Africa The Chinese had already produced a silk map outlining the shape of Africa and the Indian Ocean & exhibited in RSA during their Independence.
5) Guajarati/Arab sailors knew about the trade winds for the better part of 2000 years
6) This does not mean we do not need modern science we need both Indigenous & modern
7) It’s happening …as Advisor to the National Museum of Kenya, the Board found it difficult to believe that a Veterinarian studying (in USA) the DNA of sheep could contribute much to the Museum of Kenya. How mistaken they were.
I could go on and on
A little suggestion:
I spent about 30 months in Morogoro Town and left in 1944. My father worked in the Boma. Would it not be a great idea to have a Museum in Morogoro ? A Museum of Survival, Food Diversity.
A comment from Dr. Amber Murrey-Ndewa :
I think that they’ve answered the question themselves in the comment – which is to say that an African veterinary science is possible. I am thinking here of arguments like those that Chandra Kant Raju has argued in the discipline of mathematics:
https://thewire.in/75896/to-decolonise-maths-stand-up-to-its-false-history/
A response from Professor Ernest Wamba dia Wamba:
Thanks Chambi for your sharing the response.
There are two questions, in my opinion, involved in the issue.1) How education has been organized since the emergence of the bourgeoisie–its parcellization–and how in the colonies, following the civilizing mission, the ideological object of education has been conceived and organized. Knowing Africa and thinking Africa, often separated–one is epistemological and one is ontological (people do think Africa and those thoughts exist, but not necessarily accurate). There was a time a global study of Africa along its social transformations was attempted, but this suffered from the need to respond to parcellization. 2) The existence of Africanism as the problematic or paradigm for the Western study of Africa. This has been questioned from within and from without; but its replacement has not yet been deepened to provoke a rethinking of all other so-called social disciplines being taught in Africa. 2a, Academic Marxism, often, has not respected the core principles of that problematic: concrete analysis of the concrete society; everywhere and always, it is right/correct/ just to rebel against the reactionaries; and it is the people (or for some: rebelling people) and the people alone who make history. This would have given us a different way also of conceiving Africa and organizing its knowledge. Right now, things seem to be apart, one may study a certain discipline knowing very little of Africa. I hope I made some sense.
Ernest
Thanks Chambi, Prof. Adolf, and Dr. Amber for your responses.
Great that you directed me to the work of Carolyne Roberts. I will track down her book when it comes out. It was refreshing to read a response from Prof. Ernest. I also enjoyed a piece by Raju.
So, it is true that the Sukumas, the Maasais, and the Fulanis were doing veterinary/animal science well before the Western style veterinary science was invented. It is also possible that the Western veterinary/animal science as we teach and do it today learned a lot from indigenous veterinary science, meaning that we can safely say we are doing African studies (Study of Africa). And for that reason, it would be a mistake to say that indigenous veterinary science is missing in the curriculum. But veterinary/animal science as we do and teach it today mostly seek to modernise/replace our wafugaji ways of doing things so that they can do it in Western style (which we approve of as being superior to any other and legitimate). Minister Lukuvi is on record for ordering Swiss farmers in Magugu (Babati) to stop raising cattle in Maasai style and modernise like true Europeans. Failure to do so, he threatened to kick the Swiss farmers out the country. The point is we do not really teach our students indigenous veterinary science at vet school (whether or not the veterinary science we are teaching learned a lot from the indigenous veterinary/animal science). In other words, we teach to make students leave the vet school with the attitude/dispositions that the Sukuma's way of herding cattle is primitive, outdated and must change/modernise and do it like Danish farmers so that practices are compatible with 'official' veterinary science. In this way, are we doing African studies (study of Africa) really? Or 'Western study of Africa'?