Interests and Identity in European Monetary Integration
In: Korean Journal of International Relations, Volume 45, Issue 5, p. 103-129
ISSN: 2713-6868
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In: Korean Journal of International Relations, Volume 45, Issue 5, p. 103-129
ISSN: 2713-6868
In: Orbis: FPRI's journal of world affairs, Volume 49, Issue 1, p. 7-19
ISSN: 0030-4387
In: Contemporary Southeast Asia, Volume 27, Issue 2, p. 323-326
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Volume 25, Issue 2, p. 505-506
ISSN: 1548-226X
In: Orbis: FPRI's journal of world affairs, Volume 49, Issue 1, p. 7-19
ISSN: 0030-4387
World Affairs Online
In: The political quarterly: PQ, Volume 76, Issue 4, p. 497-504
ISSN: 0032-3179
World Affairs Online
In: Contemporary Southeast Asia, Volume 27, Issue 2, p. 323-326
ISSN: 0129-797X
In: Government & opposition: an international journal of comparative politics, Volume 40, Issue 1, p. 90-109
ISSN: 0017-257X
In: Africa Review of Books, Volume 1, Issue 1
ISSN: 0851-7592
For some time now, Achille Mbembe has warned African social scientists against the ghetto to which Marxism and nationalism has consigned them. This admonition is rooted in a personal belief that Africa lacks refreshing, internationally relevant and philosophically grounded scholarship. According to him, African scholarship is steeped in a selfimposed ghetto that has produced stultifying nativist and Afro-radicalist narratives. The narratives have, in turn, driven African scholarship to "a dead end," one that repeatedly laments the effects of the West's contamination of a pure "Africanness" and calls for a return to the self's mythical ontological purity. In reclaiming this lost purity, Mbembe adds, African scholarship draws its fundamental categories from Marxism and nationalism to argue for a revolutionary politics that would free the continent from imperialism and dependence. He identifies suffering and victimization as the main episteme in these narratives. These two, he argues, position Africa as always being acted upon by forces outside its control but never acting for itself. He therefore proposes African modes of self-writing that neutralize the power relations between Africa and its colonizers and restores "agency to Africans. Unfortunately, this restoration ends up alleging that Africans are as much responsible for their suffering and trauma as those others that they accuse whether one is considering slavery, colonization or apartheid.
In: Current anthropology, Volume 45, Issue 1, p. 1-2
ISSN: 1537-5382
In: Politics & policy: a publication of the Policy Studies Organization, Volume 32, Issue 2, p. 385-387
ISSN: 1555-5623
Includes bibliographical references (p. 343-363) and index. ; Introduction: transformative trials and dilemmas of democracy -- Performing the past : the role of the political lawyer -- From Faust to Kastner : the judge as storyteller -- The poet's countertrial -- A tale of two narratives -- Reflective judgment and the spectacle of justice -- Social criticism in the shadow of a transformative trial -- Between ordinary politics and transformative politics -- "A Jewish and democratic state" reconsidered -- Conclusion: between transformative trials and truth commissions. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: International politics, Volume 41, Issue 3, p. 430-439
ISSN: 1384-5748
In: Culture and European Union Law, p. 276-297