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(1987) African philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer.
Old Gods, new worlds
some recent work in the philosophy of African traditional religion
Kwame Akroma , Ampim Kusi Appiah
pp. 207-234
It would be hard to think of a single intellectual project in post-colonial Africa1 more central than modernisation. Some Africans would, I think, claim that decolonisation was itself a central project, and this is true. The decolonisation of the mind is a necessary process; and, despite many asseverations to the contrary, it has only just begun. But if decolonisation is important, it is as part of the project of modernisation; and those who regard intellectual decolonisation as a return to a pristine, traditonalist Eden, a return to the lares and penates of those shady beings we are in the habit of calling "the ancestors', are sentimentalists: dangerous, some of them, like many sentimentalists, but sentimentalists nevertheless.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-3517-4_9
Full citation:
Akroma, K. , Kusi Appiah, A. (1987)., Old Gods, new worlds: some recent work in the philosophy of African traditional religion, in , African philosophy, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 207-234.
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