TY - BOOK AU - Monga,Célestin AU - Velguth,Madeleine TI - Nihilism and Negritude: Ways of Living in Africa SN - 9780674972568 AV - DT14 U1 - 967.03/3 PY - 2016///] CY - Cambridge, MA PB - Harvard University Press KW - Black people KW - Race identity KW - Blacks KW - Nihilism (Philosophy) KW - Social ethics KW - Africa, Sub-Saharan KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE / Black Studies (Global) KW - bisacsh N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Introduction. Nihilism: African Variations --; Desire’s Ruses: Political Economy of Marriage --; I Eat Therefore I Am: Philosophy of the Table --; Poetics of Movement: Visions of Dance and Music --; The Savor of Sin: Dialogue around God’s Funeral --; Ethic of the Uses of the Body: A Theory of Self- Esteem --; Violence as Ethic of Evil --; Conclusion. Nihilism to Tame Death --; Notes --; Acknowledgments --; Index; restricted access N2 - “A terrific meditation on contemporary African modernity, conceived through a series of essays that reflect on the practices of everyday life.” ―Kwame Anthony Appiah, New York UniversityThere are two common ways of writing about Africa, says Célestin Monga. One way blames Africa’s ills on the continent’s history of exploitation and oppression. The other way blames Africans themselves for failing to rise above poisonous national prejudices and resentments. But patronizing caricatures that reduce Africans to either victims or slackers do not get us very far in understanding the complexities and paradoxes of Africa today.A searching, often searing, meditation on ways of living in modern Africa, Nihilism and Negritude dispels the stereotypes that cloud how outsiders view the continent—and how Africans sometimes view themselves. In the role of a traveler-philosopher, Monga seeks to register “the picturesque absurdity of daily life” in his native Cameroon and across the continent. Whether navigating the chaotic choreography of street traffic or discoursing on the philosophy of café menus, he illuminates the patterns of reasoning behind everyday behaviors and offers new interpretations of what some observers have misunderstood as Africans’ resigned acceptance of suffering and violence.Monga does not wish to revive Negritude, the once-influential movement that sought to identify and celebrate allegedly unique African values. Rather, he seeks to show how daily life and thought—witnessed in dance and music, sensual pleasure and bodily experience, faith and mourning—reflect a form of nihilism developed to cope with chaos, poverty, and oppression. This is not the nihilism of despair, Monga insists, but the determination to find meaning and even joy in a life that would otherwise seem absurd UR - https://doi.org/10.4159/9780674972568 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780674972568 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780674972568/original ER -