Critical Social Inquiry 0147 - African Narratives: Epics, Literatures, Philosophies and Culture

African Narratives

Spring
2026
1
4.00
Nathalie Arnold

02:30PM-03:50PM TU;02:30PM-03:50PM TH

Hampshire College
341907
Franklin Patterson Hall 105;Franklin Patterson Hall 105
naIA@hampshire.edu
The peoples, philosophies, arts, and cultural resources of Africa have made and continue to make fundamental contributions to every society on earth - particularly to visionings of humanity, justice, liberation, and community. Yet, from the imperial United States, Africa is often the least considered continent, its diverse peoples and realities obscured by racist stereotypes rooted in the long and ongoing history of European colonialisms and empire. This introduction to African narratives, focused on key historical, modern and contemporary African texts of different genres, unfolds in three parts. Through early epic poems, we encounter precolonial African kingdoms; next, we engage anti-colonial texts and confront European imperialism in Africa; we end the semester by engaging contemporary fictions and philosophy. Works we may consider include: Sundiata, Fanon, Diop, Kenyatta, p'Bitek, Lumumba, wa Thion'go, Achebe, Ba, Biko, el Sadawi, Rugero,Tadjo and Sarr. Keywords:Africa, literature, culture, decolonisation

In/Justice Students should expect to spend 6-8 hours weekly on work and preparation outside of class time

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.