Book review
In: Groundings: development, pan-Africanism and critical theory : the journal of The Walter Rodney Foundation, Band 3, Heft 1
ISSN: 2573-069X
Amzat Boukari-Yabara's portrait of Guyanese scholar and activist Walter Rodney
(Walter Rodney: Un historien engagé, 1942-1980, Paris: Présence Africaine, 2018)
is not a traditional biography, but rather a narrative of the context in which
he deployed his work as an historian and a politically engaged contributor to
African and Caribbean studies in the 1960s and 1970s. The author, like Rodney
himself, believes that the history of African and Afro-diasporic peoples should
be written from the Africas and the Americas themselves. Whether writing about
the history of the slave trade, the African past, decolonization or black power,
the biographer expertly conveys Rodney's erudition while directing students of
these issues toward a broader retrospective, contextualization and actualization
of his thought. More than any existing biography or chronicle of Rodney's life,
it is a book that redefines and actualizes what it means to be an "historien
engagé," a politically and socially committed student of the past and its
lessons for the present.