Philosophy In An African Place

Hardcover
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Author: Bruce B. Janz

ISBN-10: 0739136682

ISBN-13: 9780739136683

Category: General & Miscellaneous Philosophy

Over the past few decades, there has been much effort put forth by philosophers to answer the question, "Is there an African philosophy?" Bruce B. Janz boldly changes this central question to "What is it to do philosophy in this (African) place?" in Philosophy in an African Place. Janz argues that African philosophy has spent a lot of time trying to define what African philosophy is, and in doing so has ironically been unable to properly conceptualize African lived experience. He goes on to...

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Philosophy in an African Place shifts the central question of African philosophy from _Is there an African philosophy?_ to _What is it to do philosophy in this (African) place?_ This book both opens up new questions within the field and also establishes _philosophy-in-place_, a mode of philosophy which begins from the places in which concepts have currency and shows how a truly creative philosophy can emerge from focusing on questioning, listening, and attention to difference.

Acknowledgments ix1 Introduction: Philosophy-in-Place 12 Tradition in the Periphery 373 Questioning Reason 634 "Wisdom Is Actually Thought" 995 Culture and the Problem of Universality 1216 Listening to Language 1557 Practicality: African Philosophy's Debts and Duties 1858 Locating African Philosophy 213Bibliography 253Index 265

\ V.Y. MudimbeClear and systematic, empathetic and well thought out, this is, without doubt, one of the best introductions to a contemporary African practice of Philosophy.\ \ \ \ \ CHOICE, June 2010\ - C.D. Kay\ Janz urges a questioning of traditional philosophical questions about reason, culture, ethics, and language in an effort to reposition philosophy—and African philosophy in particular—without he limits assumed by current philosophical practice....This is an ambitious and potentially significant work....Recommended.\ \ \ Robert BernasconiFor at least half a century the question of what constitutes African Philosophy has provoked some of the most profound reflections on the nature of philosophy in general. Bruce B. Janz makes a major contribution to that debate. This book deserves to be widely read by philosophers and non-philosophers alike, and can be profitably studied even by those who to their shame have not yet given the question of African philosophy a second thought.\ \