African Renaissance
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Books & Monographs
Molefi Kete Asante: Afrocentricity
Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press, 1991. >>>
Nnamdi Azikiwe: Renascent Africa
New York: Negro University Press, 1969. >>>
Leonard Barnes: African Renaissance
London: Victor Gollancz, 1969. >>>
Steve Bantu Biko: The Testimony of Steve Biko: Black Consciousness in South Africa
Edited by Arnold Millard. London and New York: Granada Publishing, 1979. >>>
Steve Bantu Biko: I Write What I Like: A Selection of His Writings
Edited by Aelred Stubbs C.R. London: Bowerdean Press, 1978; London: Heinemann, 1979. >>>
E.W. Blyden: The People of Africa
New York, 1871. >>>
E.W. Blyden: The Prospect of Africa
London, 1874. >>>
E.W. Blyden: Christianity, Islam and the Negro Race
2nd Edition, London, 1888. >>>
Amilcar Cabral: Return to the Sources: Selected Speeches
Africa Information Service. (3rd edition of Monthly Review Press, New York/London), p. 63, 1973. >>>
Amilcar Cabral: National Liberation and Struggle
Syracuse University, 1970. >>>
Fantu Cheru: African Renaissance - Roadmaps to the challenge of globalization
Zed Books/David Philips, 2003. >>>
Basil Davidson: Discovering Africa's Past
London, 1979. >>>
Basil Davidson: Modern Africa - A Social and Political History
Longman, 1994. >>>
Basil Davidson: The Black Man's Burden - Africa and the Curse of the Nation-State
London:James Currey, 1992. >>>
Basil Davidson: The African Slave Trade
By Davidson, Basil, 304 pp, James Currey Publ., UK, 1961/2004. New Edition. A clear, general account of the African Slave Trade describing the political and historical background of East and West Africa and the consequences of the trade on the development of each region. Includes a reading guide. First published in 1961 as Black Mother. >>>
Basil Davidson: Lost Cities of Africa
By Davidson, Basil, 366 pp, James Currey Publ., UK, 1959/2004. New Edition. A history of Africa south of the Sahara during the fifteen hundred years before the colonial period began, aiming to contribute to an understanding of the origins and background of Africa today. Davidson looks at the civilisations of Kush, Mali, Ethiopia and Great Zimbabwe amongst others. First published in 1959. >>>
Basil Davidson: The Search for Africa: A History in the Making
By Davidson, Basil, 373 pp, James Currey Publ., UK, 1994. A collection of essays and articles which explores both Davidson's own development and that of African historiography. >>>
Basil Davidson: African Civilization Revisited
By Basil Davidson, Africa World Press. >>>
Cheikh Anta Diop: The African origin of civilization: Myth or reality
New York: Lawrence Hill Books, 1974. >>>
Cheikh Anta Diop: The cultural unity of Black Africa: The domains of matriarchy & patriarchy in classical antiquity
London: Karnak House. >>>
Cheikh Anta Diop: Civilization or barbarism: An authentic anthropology
New York: Lawrence Hill Books, 1991. >>>
Cheikh Anta Diop: Precolonial Black Africa
New York: Lawrence Hill Books, 1987. >>>
Cheikh Anta Diop: Towards the African renaissance, essays in culture & development: 1946-1960
London: Karnak House, 1996. >>>
W.E.B. Du Bois: The Souls of Black Folk
... >>>
W.E.B. Du Bois: Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880
... >>>
Frantz Fanon: Black Skin, White Masks/Peau noire, masques blancs
New York: Grove Press Inc., 1967. >>>
Frantz Fanon: The Wretched of the Earth/Les damnés de la terre
trans. by C.L. Markmann, New York: Grove Press Inc., 1963, reprinted 1983, London: Penguin. >>>
Frantz Fanon: Pour la Revolution Africaine/Toward the African Revolution: Political Essays
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Richard A. Griggs: Boundaries, borders and peace-building in Southern Africa. The spatial implications of the “African renaissance”
Durham: International Boundaries Research Unit, 2000. - 30 S. >>>
M. W. Makgoba (ed.): African Renaissance : The New Struggle,
Mafube, Johannesburg, 1999. >>>
Eddy Maloka / Elizabeth le Roux: Problematising the African renaissance
Africa Institute research paper No. 62, Pretoria: The Africa Institute of South Africa, 2000. >>>
Ali A. Mazrui: The Africans: A Triple Heritage
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Ali A. Mazrui: The African Condition
Cambridge University Press, 1980.
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Mulemfo, Mukanda M.: Thabo Mbeki and the African renaissance
The emergence of a new African leadership. - 1st ed. - Pretoria : Actua Press, 2000. >>>
Ngugi wa Thiong'o: Decolonising the Mind: The Politics of Language in African Literature
London: James Currey with Heinemann, Kenya, 1986. One of the most important contemporary African novelists who argues that the politics of language in African literature is about national, democratic, and human liberation. The choice of language and the use to which it is put is central to people's definition of themselves in relation to the natural and social environment. Shows how language was used as a means of oppression under colonial rule, and calls for the search for the African novel and African drama as a way of liberating the people and expressing their lives in literature. >>>
Kwame Nkrumah: GHANA: The Autobiography of Kwame Nkrumah
309pp, UK, 2001. Originally published on the day Ghana became independent, Nkrumah's autobiography was recently selected as one of Africa's best books of the 20th century. >>>
Julius K. Nyerere: Freedom and Development: A Selection from Writings and Speeches 1968-73
Dar Es Salaam: Oxford University Press, 1973. This is the third major collection of former President Julius Nyerere's speeches and writings, from 1968 to 1973. As with the previous volumes (Freedom and Unity, and Freedom and Socialism), it is a representative sample of his views of such subjects as socialism, economic policy, human equality, African unity and liberation, and international relations. Nyerere emphasises that except where specifically mentioned, these statements are not a description of what existed, but rather of what was being attempted. >>>
UNESCO: General History of Africa, Vol. I-XIII
James Currey/California. >>>
David Walker: Appeal
1829, ... >>>
Chancellor Williams: Destruction of Black Civilization : Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C to 2000 A.D.
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