fbpx
Wikipedia

Cheikh Anta Diop

Cheikh Anta Diop (29 December 1923 – 7 February 1986) was a Senegalese historian, anthropologist, physicist, and politician who studied the human race's origins and pre-colonial African culture.[1] Diop's work is considered foundational to the theory of Afrocentricity, though he himself never described himself as an Afrocentrist.[2] The questions he posed about cultural bias in scientific research contributed greatly to the postcolonial turn in the study of African civilizations.[3][4][5]

Cheikh Anta Diop
Diop as a university student in Paris in the late 1940s
Born
Seex Anta Jóob (in Wolof)

(1923-12-29)29 December 1923
Died7 February 1986(1986-02-07) (aged 62)
NationalitySenegalese
Occupation(s)Historian, anthropologist, physicist, politician

Diop argued that there was a shared cultural continuity across African people that was more important than the varied development of different ethnic groups shown by differences among languages and cultures over time.[6] Some of his ideas have been criticized as based upon outdated sources and an outdated conception of race.[7][8] Other scholars have defended his work from what they see as widespread misrepresentation.[9][10][11][12]

Cheikh Anta Diop University (formerly known as the University of Dakar), in Dakar, Senegal, is named after him.[13][14]

Early life edit

 
Diop at high school in Dakar

Born in Thieytou, Diourbel Region, Senegal, Diop belonged to an aristocratic Muslim Wolof family in Senegal where he was educated in a traditional Islamic school. Diop's family was part of the Mouride brotherhood, the only independent Muslim fraternity in Africa according to Diop.[15] He obtained the colonial equivalent of the metropolitan French baccalauréat in Senegal before moving to Paris to study for a degree.[16]

Studies in Paris edit

In 1946, at the age of 23, Diop went to Paris to study. He initially enrolled to study higher mathematics[citation needed], but then enrolled to study philosophy [citation needed] in the Faculty of Arts of the University of Paris. He gained his first degree (licence) in philosophy in 1948[citation needed], then enrolled in the Faculty of Sciences, receiving two diplomas in chemistry in 1950[citation needed].

In 1948 Diop edited with Madeleine Rousseau, a professor of art history[citation needed], a special edition of the journal Musée vivant[citation needed], published by the Association populaire des amis des musées (APAM). APAM had been set up in 1936 by people on the political left wing to bring culture to wider audiences[citation needed]. The special edition of the journal was on the occasion of the centenary of the abolition of slavery in the French colonies and aimed to present an overview of issues in contemporary African culture and society. Diop contributed an article to the journal: "Quand pourra-t-on parler d'une renaissance africaine" (When we will be able to speak of an African Renaissance?). He examined various fields of artistic creation, with a discussion of African languages, which, he said, would be the sources of regeneration in African culture. He proposed that African culture should be rebuilt on the basis of ancient Egypt, in the same way that European culture was built upon the legacies of ancient Greece and Rome.[17]

In 1949, Diop registered a proposed title for a Doctor of Letters thesis, "The Cultural Future of African thought," under the direction of Professor Gaston Bachelard [citation needed]. In 1951 he registered a second thesis title "Who were the pre-dynastic Egyptians" under Professor Marcel Griaule[citation needed].

In 1953, he first met Frédéric Joliot-Curie, Marie Curie's son-in-law [citation needed], and in 1957 Diop began specializing in nuclear physics [citation needed] at the Laboratory of Nuclear Chemistry of the College de France which Frederic Joliot-Curie ran until his death in 1958 [citation needed], and the Institut Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris. He ultimately translated parts of Einstein's Theory of Relativity into his native Wolof.[citation needed]

According to Diop's own account, his education in Paris included History, Egyptology, Physics, Linguistics, Anthropology, Economics, and Sociology.[18][19] In Paris, Diop studied under André Aymard [citation needed], professor of History and later Dean of the Faculty of Letters at the University of Paris and he said that he had "gained an understanding of the Greco-Latin world as a student of Gaston Bachelard, Frédéric Joliot-Curie, André Leroi-Gourhan, and others".[20]

In his 1954 thesis, Diop argued that ancient Egypt had been populated by Black people. He specified that he used the terms "negro", "black", "white" and "race" as "immediate givens" in the Bergsonian sense, and went on to suggest operational definitions of these terms.[21] He said that the Egyptian language and culture had later been spread to West Africa. When he published many of his ideas as the book Nations nègres et culture (Negro Nations and Culture), it made him one of the most controversial historians of his time.

In 1956 he re-registered a new proposed thesis for Doctor of Letters with the title "The areas of matriarchy and patriarchy in ancient times." From 1956, he taught physics and chemistry in two Paris lycees as an assistant master, before moving to the College de France. In 1957 he registered his new thesis title "Comparative study of political and social systems of Europe and Africa, from Antiquity to the formation of modern states." The new topics did not relate to ancient Egypt but were concerned with the forms of organisation of African and European societies and how they evolved. He obtained his doctorate in 1960.[16]

Career edit

Diop served as a member of the UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa in 1971 and wrote the opening chapter about the origins of the ancient Egyptians in the UNESCO General History of Africa.[22] In this chapter, he presented anthropological and historical evidence in support of his hypothesis that Ancient Egyptians had a close genetic affinity with Sub-Saharan African ethnic groups, including a shared B blood group between modern Egyptians and West Africans, "negroid"[22] bodily proportions in ancient Egyptian art and mummies, microscopic analysis of melanin levels in mummies from the laboratory of the Musée de L'Homme in Paris, primary accounts of Greek historians, and shared cultural linkages between Egypt and Africa in areas of totemism and cosmology.[22] At the symposium Diop's conclusions were met with an array of responses, from strong objections to enthusiastic support.[23][24]

Reception edit

Diop's work has been both extensively praised and extensively criticized by a variety of scholars.[25]

Positive reception edit

African-American historian John Henrik Clarke called Diop "one of the greatest historians to emerge in the African world in the twentieth century", noting that his theoretical approach derived from various disciplines, including the "hard sciences". Clarke further added that his work, The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality, challenged contemporary attitudes "about the place of African people in scholarly circles around the world" and relied upon "historical, archaeological and anthropological evidence to support his thesis". He later summarised that Diop contributed to a new "concept of African history" among African and African-American historians.[26]

S.O.Y. Keita (né J.D. Walker), a biological anthropologist, contended that "his views, or some of them, have been seriously misrepresented" and he argued that there was linguistic, anthropological and archaeological evidence which supported the views of Diop. The author also stated "Diop, though he did not express it clearly, thought in terms of biogeography and biohistory for his definitions. He also defined populations in an ethnic or ethnogeographical fashion. Nile Valley populations absorbed "foreign genes", but this did not change their Africanity".[27]

Stuart Tyson Smith, Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California, Santa Barbara regarded his work, The African Origin of Civilization, published in 1974 as "A highly influential work that rightly points out the African origins of Egyptian civilization, but reinforces the methodological and theoretical foundations of colonialist theories of history, embracing racialist thinking and simply reversing the flow of diffusionist models".[28]

Guyanese educator and novelist Oscar Dathrone credits Diop as a "unique unifier" in countering the "built-in prejudices of the scholars of his time" and presenting a more comprehensive view of African historical development.[29]

Bethwell Allan Ogot, a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5, stated that "Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history".[30]

Esperanza Brizuela Garcia, professor of history, wrote that he "was most persuasive among intellectuals of African descent in the diaspora" and among Afrocentric scholars who had criticised the omission of Africa in the works of world historians. Garcia also added that his work, The African Origin of Civilization, best represented "Afrocentric critique" but "it does so without a serious engagement with the diversity and complexity of the African experience and offers only a limited challenge to the Eurocentric values it aims to dislodge".[31]

Toyin Falola, a Nigerian historian, called Diop's work "passionate, combative, and revisionist" and "demonstrated the black origins of Egyptian civilisation" in his view.[32]

Firinne Ni Chreachain, an academic in African literature, described him as "one of the most profoundly revolutionary thinkers francophone Africa had produced" in the twentieth century and his radio-carbon techniques had "enabled him to prove, on the contrary to the claims of European Egyptologists, many of the ruling class of ancient Egypt whose achievements Europeans revered had been black Africans".[33]

Helen Tilley, Associate professor of history at Northwestern University, noted that the academic debates over "The African Origin of Civilizations" still continued but that the "more general points that Cheikh Anta Diop" sought to establish "have become commonplace" and "no one should assume a pure lineage" can be attributed to "any intellectual genealogy because entanglements, appropriations, mutations and dislocations have been the norm, not the exception".[34]

Dawne Y. Curry, Associate Professor of History and Ethnic Studies stated that "Diop's greatest contribution to scholarly endeavours lies in his tireless search for physiological and genetic evidence to support his thesis. Using mummies, bone measurements and blood types to determine age and evolution, Diop revolutionized scientific enquiry" but she noted that his message was not initially well-received but "more and more scholarship began to support Diop's conclusions, earning him international acclaim".[35]

Josep Cervello Autuori, Associate Professor and Lecturer of Egyptology assessed the cultural tradition established by Diop and noted that "the West had failed to consider its contributions, sometimes ignoring them completely, and sometimes considering them as the fruits of the socio-political excitement in the era of African independence". Autuori argued that the academic contributions of Diop should be recognised as "a recontextualisation and a rethinking of the Pharaonic civilisation from an African perspective" due to the continued parallels between Egypt and Africa.[36]

Diop was awarded the joint prize of most influential African intellectual along with W.E.B. Du Bois at the first World Festival of Black Arts in 1966.[37] He was awarded the Grand prix de la mémoire of the GPLA 2015. The Cheikh Anta Diop University (formerly known as the University of Dakar), in Dakar, Senegal, is named in his honor.[13][14]

Negative reception edit

According to Andrew Francis Clark, Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington and Lucie Colvin Phillips, Professor of African Studies in the University of Maryland, "although Diop's work has been influential, it has generally been discredited by historians".[38]

Robert O. Collins, a former history professor at University of California, Santa Barbara, and James M. Burns, a professor in history at Clemson University, have both characterized Diop's writings on Ancient Egypt as "revisionist".[39]

Diop's book Civilization or Barbarism was described as Afrocentric pseudohistory by professor of philosophy and author Robert Todd Carroll.[40] According to Marnie Hughes-Warrington, Diop's works were criticised by leading French Africanists who opposed the radical movements of African organizations against imperialism, but they (and later critics) noted the value of his works for the generation of a propaganda program that would promote African unity.[41] Likewise, Santiago Juan-Navarro, a professor of Spanish at Florida International University described Diop as having "undertaken the task of supporting this Afrocentric view of history from an equally radical and 'mythic' point of view".[42]

Historian Robin Derricourt, in summarizing Diop's legacy, states that his work "increased francophone black pride, though trapped within dated models of racial classification".[8] Stephen Howe, professor of the history of colonialism in Bristol University, writes that Diop's work is built mostly upon disagreements with Victorian-era thinkers like J.J. Bachofen, Lewis Henry Morgan and Friedrich Engels, and criticizes him for "failing to take modern research into account."[7]

Kevin MacDonald, a doctor of archeology,[43] was critical of what he saw as Diop's "cavalier attitude" in making "amateur, non-statistical comparison of languages" between West Africa and Egypt.[44] MacDonald also felt that such attitude showed "a disrespect for the discipline" and for the "methodology of linguistics".[44] He did however state that Diop had asked "appropriate and relevant questions" regarding possible relations between Egypt and the African continent beyond Nubia.[45]

Historian Clarence E. Walker criticizes Diop's claim that Ramses II was black, as being without qualification, a futile exercise and "probably the single most unsuccessful effort on the part of a scholar to determine the racial origins of an Egyptian notable".[46]

Mary Lefkowitz, scholar of Classics, accuses Diop of supplying his readers only with selected and, to some extent, distorted information. She criticizes his methodology, stating that his writing allows him to disregard historical evidence, especially if it comes from European sources.[47]

Historian and classicist Frank M. Snowden Jr. states that Diop misinterprets the classical usage of color words, distorts classical sources and omits Greek and Roman authors, whom he claimed, make a clear distinction between Egyptians and Ethiopians.[48]

Publications edit

  • Rousseau, Madeleine and Cheikh Anta Diop (1948), "1848 Abolition de l'esclavage – 1948 evidence de la culture nègre", Le musée vivant, issue 36–37. Special issue of journal "consacré aux problèmes culturels de l'Afrique noire a été établi par Madeleine Rousseaux et Cheikh Anta Diop". Paris: APAM, 1948.
  • (1954) Nations nègres et culture, Paris: Éditions Africaines. Second edition (1955), Nations nègres et culture: de l'antiquité nègre-égyptienne aux problèmes culturels de l'Afrique noire d'aujourd'hui, Paris: Éditions Africaines. Third edition (1973), Paris: Présence Africaine, ISBN 978-2-7087-0363-6, ISBN 978-2-7087-0362-9. Fourth edition (1979), ISBN 978-2-7087-0688-0.
  • (1959) L'unité culturelle de l'Afrique noire: domaines du patriarcat et du matriarcat dans l'antiquité classique, Paris: Présence Africaine. Second edition (c. 1982), Paris: Présence Africaine, ISBN 978-2-7087-0406-0, ISBN 978-2-7087-0406-0. English edition (1959), The Cultural Unity of Negro Africa Paris. Subsequent English edition (c. 1962), Paris: Présence Africaine. English edition (1978), The Cultural Unity of Black Africa: the domains of patriarchy and of matriarchy in classical antiquity, Chicago: Third World Press, ISBN 978-0-88378-049-7. Subsequent English edition (1989) London: Karnak House, ISBN 978-0-907015-44-4.
  • (1960) L' Afrique noire pré-coloniale. Étude comparée des systèmes politiques et sociaux de l'Europe et de l'Afrique noire, de l'antiquité à la formation des états modernes, Paris: Présence africaine. Second edition (1987), ISBN 978-2-7087-0479-4. (1987), Precolonial Black Africa: a comparative study of the political and social systems of Europe and Black Africa, from antiquity to the formation of modern states. Translated by Harold J. Salemson. Westport, Conn.: L. Hill, ISBN 978-0-88208-187-8, ISBN 978-0-88208-188-5, ISBN 978-0-88208-187-8, ISBN 978-0-88208-188-5.
  • (1960) Les Fondements culturels, techniques et industriels d'un futur état fédéral d'Afrique noire, Paris. Second revised and corrected edition (1974), Les Fondements économiques et culturels d'un état fédéral d'Afrique noire, Paris: Présence Africaine.
  • (1967) Antériorité des civilisations nègres: mythe ou vérité historique? Series: Collection Préhistoire-antiquité négro-africaine, Paris: Présence Africaine. Second edition (c. 1993), ISBN 978-2-7087-0562-3, ISBN 978-2-7087-0562-3.
  • (1968) Le laboratoire de radiocarbone de l'IFAN. Series: Catalogues et documents, Institut Français d'Afrique Noire No. 21.
  • (1974) The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality (translation of sections of Antériorité des civilisations négres and Nations nègres et culture). Translated from the French by Mercer Cook. New York: L. Hill, ISBN 978-0-88208-021-5, ISBN 978-0-88208-022-2
  • (1974) Physique nucléaire et chronologie absolue. Dakar: IFAN. Initiations et études Africaines no. 31.
  • (1977) Parenté génétique de l'égyptien pharaonique et des langues négro-africaines: processus de sémitisation, Ifan-Dakar: Les Nouvelles Éditions Africaines, ISBN 978-2-7236-0162-7.
  • (1978) Black Africa: the economic and cultural basis for a federated state. Translation by Harold Salemson of Fondements économiques et culturels d'un état fédéral d'Afrique noire. Westport, Conn.: Lawrence Hill & Co, ISBN 978-0-88208-096-3, ISBN 978-1-55652-061-7. New expanded edition (1987) ISBN 978-0-86543-058-7 (Africa World Press), ISBN 978-0-88208-223-3.
  • UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of Meroitic Script. Cheikh Anta Diop (ed.) (1978), The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script: proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974, UNESCO. Subsequent edition (1997), London: Karnak House, ISBN 978-0-907015-99-4.
  • (c. 1981) Civilisation ou barbarie: anthropologie sans complaisance, Présence Africaine, ISBN 978-2-7087-0394-0, ISBN 978-2-7087-0394-0. English edition (c. 1991), Civilization or Barbarism: an authentic anthropology Translated from the French by Yaa-Lengi Meema Ngemi, edited by Harold J. Salemson and Marjolijn de Jager. Brooklyn, NY: Lawrence Hill Books, c1991. ISBN 978-1-55652-048-8, ISBN 978-1-55652-048-8, ISBN 978-1-55652-049-5.
  • (1989) Nouvelles recherches sur l'égyptien ancien et les langues négro-africaines modernes, Paris: Présence Africaine, ISBN 978-2-7087-0507-4.
  • (1989) Egypte ancienne et Afrique Noire. Reprint of article in Bulletin de l'IFAN, vol. XXIV, series B, no. 3–4, 1962, pp. 449 à 574. Université de Dakar. Dakar: IFAN.
  • (c. 1990) Alerte sous les tropiques: articles 1946–1960: culture et développement en Afrique noire, Paris: Présence africaine, ISBN 978-2-7087-0548-7. English edition (1996), Towards the African renaissance: essays in African culture & development, 1946–1960. Translated by Egbuna P. Modum. London: Karnak House, ISBN 978-0-907015-80-2, ISBN 978-0-907015-85-7.
  • Joseph-Marie Essomba (ed.) (1996), Cheikh Anta Diop: son dernier message à l'Afrique et au monde. Series: Sciences et connaissance. Yaoundé, Cameroun: Editions AMA/COE.
  • (2006) Articles: publiés dans le bulletin de l'IFAN, Institut fondamental d'Afrique noire (1962–1977). Series: Nouvelles du sud; no 35–36. Yaoundé: Silex. ISBN 978-2-912717-15-3, ISBN 978-2-912717-15-3, ISBN 978-9956-444-12-0, ISBN 978-9956-444-12-0.

Bibliography edit

  • Présence Africaine (ed.) (1989), Hommage à Cheikh Anta Diop – Homage to Cheikh Anta Diop, Paris: Special Présence Africaine, New Bilingual Series N° 149–150.
  • Prince Dika-Akwa nya Bonambéla (ed.) (2006), Hommage du Cameroun au professeur Cheikh Anta Diop, Dakar: Panafrika. Dakar: Nouvelles du Sud. ISBN 978-2-912717-35-1, ISBN 978-2-912717-35-1.

References edit

  1. ^ Gates, Henry Louis Jr.; Appiah, Kwame Anthony, eds. (2010). "Diop, Cheikh Anta". Encyclopedia of Africa. University of Oxford Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533770-9.
  2. ^ Molefi Kete Asante, "Cheikh Anta Diop: An Intellectual Portrait" (Univ of Sankore Press: December 30, 2007)
  3. ^ Nyamnjoh, Francis B.; Devisch, René (2011). The Postcolonial Turn: Re-Imagining Anthropology and Africa. Leiden: Langaa. p. 17. ISBN 978-9956-726-81-3.
  4. ^ Gwiyani-Nkhoma, Bryson (2006). "Towards an African historical thought: Cheikh Anta Diop's contribution". Journal of Humanities. 20 (1): 107–123.
  5. ^ Dunstan, Sarah C. (2023), Manela, Erez; Streets-Salter, Heather (eds.), "Cheikh Anta Diop's Recovery of Egypt: African History as Anticolonial Practice", The Anticolonial Transnational: Imaginaries, Mobilities, and Networks in the Struggle against Empire, Cambridge University Press, pp. 135–161, doi:10.1017/9781009359115.009, ISBN 978-1-009-35912-2
  6. ^ Cheikh, Anta Diop, The Cultural Unity of Negro Africa (Paris: Présence Africaine, 1963), English translation: The Cultural Unity of Black Africa: The Domains of Patriarchy and of Matriarchy in Classical Antiquity (London: Karnak House: 1989), pp. 53–111.
  7. ^ a b Howe, Stephen (1999). Afrocentrism: Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes. Verso. pp. 167–168. ISBN 978-1-85984-228-7.
  8. ^ a b Derricourt, Robin (June 2012). "Pseudoarchaeology: the concept and its limitations". Antiquity. 86 (332): 524–531. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00062918. S2CID 162643326.
  9. ^ Walker, J. D. (1995). "The Misrepresentation of Diop's Views". Journal of Black Studies. 26 (1): 77–85. doi:10.1177/002193479502600106. ISSN 0021-9347. JSTOR 2784711. S2CID 144667194.
  10. ^ MOITT, Bernard (1989). "Cheikh Anta Diop and the African Diaspora: Historical Continuity And Socio-Cultural Symbolism". Présence Africaine. 149–150 (149/150): 347–360. doi:10.3917/presa.149.0347. ISSN 0032-7638. JSTOR 24351996.
  11. ^ Verharen, Charles C. (1997). "In and Out of Africa Misreading Afrocentrism". Présence Africaine. 156 (2): 163–185. doi:10.3917/presa.156.0163. ISSN 0032-7638. JSTOR 24351662.
  12. ^ Momoh, Abubakar (2003). "Does Pan-Africanism Have a Future in Africa? In Search of the Ideational Basis of Afro-Pessimism". African Journal of Political Science / Revue Africaine de Science Politique. 8 (1): 31–57. ISSN 1027-0353. JSTOR 23493340.
  13. ^ a b Touré, Maelenn-Kégni, "Cheikh Anta Diop University (1957--)", BlackPast.org.
  14. ^ a b "University Cheikh Anta Diop", Encyclopædia Britannica.
  15. ^ S. Ademola Ajayi, "Cheikh Anta Diop" in Kevin Shillington (ed.), Encyclopedia of African History.
  16. ^ a b "ANKH: Egyptologie et Civilisations Africaines". Cheikhantadiop.net. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  17. ^ Danielle Maurice (June 2007). "Le musée vivant et le centenaire de l'abolition de l'esclavage: pour une reconnaissance des cultures africaines". Conserveries Mémorielles. Revue Transdisciplinaire (#3). Conserveries mémorielles, revue transdisciplinaire de jeunes chercheurs. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  18. ^ John G. Jackson and Runoko Rashidi, Introduction To African Civilizations (Citadel: 2001), ISBN 978-0-8065-2189-3, pp. 13–175.
  19. ^ Chris Gray, Conceptions of History in the Works of Cheikh Anta Diop and Theophile Obenga (Karnak House:1989) 11-155,
  20. ^ Diop, C. A., The African Origin of Civilization—Myth or Reality: Chicago, IL: Lawrence Hill Books, 1974. pp. ix.
  21. ^ Bulletin de l'IFAN, Vol. XXIV, pp. 3–4, 1962.
  22. ^ a b c General History of Africa volume 2: Ancient Civilizations of Africa: Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 (Unesco General History of Africa (Abridged ed.). London [England]: J. Currey. 1990. pp. 15–32. ISBN 978-0-85255-092-2.
  23. ^ General History of Africa volume 2: Ancient Civilizations of Africa: Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 (Unesco General History of Africa (Abridged ed.). London [England]: J. Currey. 1990. pp. 32–55. ISBN 978-0-85255-092-2.
  24. ^ Ancient civilizations of Africa (Abridged ed.). London [England]: J. Currey. 1990. pp. 31–55. ISBN 978-0-85255-092-2.
  25. ^ Gwiyani-Nkhoma, Bryson (2006). "Towards an African historical thought: Cheikh Anta Diop's contribution". Journal of Humanities. 20 (1): 107–123. doi:10.4314/jh.v20i1 (inactive 31 January 2024). ISSN 1016-0728.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of January 2024 (link)
  26. ^ CLARKE, John Henrik (1989). "The Historical Legacy of Cheikh Anta Diop: His Contributions To A New Concept of African History". Présence Africaine. 149–150 (149/150): 110–120. doi:10.3917/presa.149.0110. ISSN 0032-7638. JSTOR 24351980.
  27. ^ Walker, J. D. (1995). "The Misrepresentation of Diop's Views". Journal of Black Studies. 26 (1): 77–85. doi:10.1177/002193479502600106. ISSN 0021-9347. JSTOR 2784711. S2CID 144667194.
  28. ^ Smith, Stuart Tyson (2001). "Race". Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Vol. 3. p. 115.
  29. ^ DATHORNE, O.R. (1989). "Africa as Ancestor: Diop as Unifier". Présence Africaine. 149–150 (149/150): 121–133. doi:10.3917/presa.149.0121. ISSN 0032-7638. JSTOR 24351981.
  30. ^ Ogot, Bethwell (2011). AFRICAN Historiography: From colonial historiography to UNESCO's general history of Africa. p. 72. S2CID 55617551.
  31. ^ Brizuela-Garcia, Esperanza (20 November 2018). "Africa in the World: History and Historiography". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.296. ISBN 978-0-19-027773-4.
  32. ^ Toyin Falola (2004). Nationalism and African Intellectuals. University Rochester Press. p. 224.
  33. ^ France, Peter (1995). The new Oxford companion to literature in French. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 248. ISBN 978-0-19-866125-2.
  34. ^ Tilley, Helen (20 November 2018). "The History and Historiography of Science". Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.353. ISBN 978-0-19-027773-4.
  35. ^ Dawne Y. Curry. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought. Oxford University Press. pp. 309–312. ISBN 978-0-19-533473-9.
  36. ^ Autuori, Josep. ""Egypt, Africa and the Ancient World" In 1998, Eyre, C.J. (ed.). Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Egyptologists. Cambridge, 3-9 September 1995".
  37. ^ Beatty, Mario H. (1 January 2016). "W.E.B. Du Bois and Cheikh Anta Diop on the origins and race of the Ancient Egyptians: some comparative notes". African Journal of Rhetoric. 8 (1): 45–67. hdl:10520/EJC195692.
  38. ^ Clark, Andrew Francis; Phillips, Lucie Colvin (1994). Historical Dictionary of Senegal. Scarecrow Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0-8108-2747-9.
  39. ^ Robert O. Collins; James M. Burns (8 February 2007). A History of Sub-Saharan Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-521-68708-9.
  40. ^ Robert Carroll (11 January 2011). The Skeptic's Dictionary: A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions. John Wiley & Sons. p. 8. ISBN 978-1-118-04563-3.
  41. ^ Hughes-Warrington, Marnie (2007-10-31). Fifty Key Thinkers on History. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-21249-1.
  42. ^ Santiago Juan-Navarro. Archival Reflections: Postmodern Fiction of the Americas (self-reflexivity, Historical Revisionism, Utopia). Bucknell University Press. p. 151.
  43. ^ O' Conner, David; Andrew, Reid, eds. (2003). Ancient Egypt in Africa. London: UCL Press. p. ix. ISBN 978-1-84472-000-2.
  44. ^ a b MacDonald, Kevin (2003). "Chapter 7: Cheikh Anta Diop and Ancient Egypt in Africa". In O' Conner, David; Andrew, Reid (eds.). Ancient Egypt in Africa. London: UCL Press. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-84472-000-2.
  45. ^ MacDonald, Kevin (2003). "Chapter 7: Cheikh Anta Diop and Ancient Egypt in Africa". In O' Conner, David; Andrew, Reid (eds.). Ancient Egypt in Africa. London: UCL Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-1-84472-000-2.
  46. ^ Walker, Clarence E. (2001-06-14). We Can't Go Home Again: An Argument About Afrocentrism. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-19-509571-5.
  47. ^ Lefkowitz, M. (1997). Not Out of Africa. Ripol Classic. pp. 22, 160. ISBN 978-5-87296-504-6.
  48. ^ Snowden, Frank M. (1997). "Misconceptions about African Blacks in the Ancient Mediterranean World: Specialists and Afrocentrists". Arion: A Journal of Humanities and the Classics. 4 (3): 28–50. ISSN 0095-5809. JSTOR 20163634.

Further reading edit

  • Cheikh Anta Diop (1989), The African Origin of Civilization: Myth Or Reality, Chicago Review Press, ISBN 978-1-61374-736-0
  • François-Xavier Fauvelle (1996), L'Afrique de Cheikh Anta Diop: histoire et idéologie, Karthala Editions (in French)

External links edit

  • Cheikh Anta Diop at Africa Within
  • A Brief Biography of an African Champion at Raceandhistory.com
  • Summary of Cheikh Anta Diop's Work (in French) at Ankhonline.com
  • Université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar Cheikh Anta Diop University of Dakar
  • Cheikh Anta Diop, The Pharaoh of Knowledge
  • at Rufisque News

cheikh, anta, diop, december, 1923, february, 1986, senegalese, historian, anthropologist, physicist, politician, studied, human, race, origins, colonial, african, culture, diop, work, considered, foundational, theory, afrocentricity, though, himself, never, d. Cheikh Anta Diop 29 December 1923 7 February 1986 was a Senegalese historian anthropologist physicist and politician who studied the human race s origins and pre colonial African culture 1 Diop s work is considered foundational to the theory of Afrocentricity though he himself never described himself as an Afrocentrist 2 The questions he posed about cultural bias in scientific research contributed greatly to the postcolonial turn in the study of African civilizations 3 4 5 Cheikh Anta DiopDiop as a university student in Paris in the late 1940sBornSeex Anta Joob in Wolof 1923 12 29 29 December 1923Diourbel Region SenegalDied7 February 1986 1986 02 07 aged 62 Dakar SenegalNationalitySenegaleseOccupation s Historian anthropologist physicist politician Diop argued that there was a shared cultural continuity across African people that was more important than the varied development of different ethnic groups shown by differences among languages and cultures over time 6 Some of his ideas have been criticized as based upon outdated sources and an outdated conception of race 7 8 Other scholars have defended his work from what they see as widespread misrepresentation 9 10 11 12 Cheikh Anta Diop University formerly known as the University of Dakar in Dakar Senegal is named after him 13 14 Contents 1 Early life 2 Studies in Paris 3 Career 4 Reception 4 1 Positive reception 4 2 Negative reception 5 Publications 5 1 Bibliography 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Diop at high school in Dakar Born in Thieytou Diourbel Region Senegal Diop belonged to an aristocratic Muslim Wolof family in Senegal where he was educated in a traditional Islamic school Diop s family was part of the Mouride brotherhood the only independent Muslim fraternity in Africa according to Diop 15 He obtained the colonial equivalent of the metropolitan French baccalaureat in Senegal before moving to Paris to study for a degree 16 Studies in Paris editIn 1946 at the age of 23 Diop went to Paris to study He initially enrolled to study higher mathematics citation needed but then enrolled to study philosophy citation needed in the Faculty of Arts of the University of Paris He gained his first degree licence in philosophy in 1948 citation needed then enrolled in the Faculty of Sciences receiving two diplomas in chemistry in 1950 citation needed In 1948 Diop edited with Madeleine Rousseau a professor of art history citation needed a special edition of the journal Musee vivant citation needed published by the Association populaire des amis des musees APAM APAM had been set up in 1936 by people on the political left wing to bring culture to wider audiences citation needed The special edition of the journal was on the occasion of the centenary of the abolition of slavery in the French colonies and aimed to present an overview of issues in contemporary African culture and society Diop contributed an article to the journal Quand pourra t on parler d une renaissance africaine When we will be able to speak of an African Renaissance He examined various fields of artistic creation with a discussion of African languages which he said would be the sources of regeneration in African culture He proposed that African culture should be rebuilt on the basis of ancient Egypt in the same way that European culture was built upon the legacies of ancient Greece and Rome 17 In 1949 Diop registered a proposed title for a Doctor of Letters thesis The Cultural Future of African thought under the direction of Professor Gaston Bachelard citation needed In 1951 he registered a second thesis title Who were the pre dynastic Egyptians under Professor Marcel Griaule citation needed In 1953 he first met Frederic Joliot Curie Marie Curie s son in law citation needed and in 1957 Diop began specializing in nuclear physics citation needed at the Laboratory of Nuclear Chemistry of the College de France which Frederic Joliot Curie ran until his death in 1958 citation needed and the Institut Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris He ultimately translated parts of Einstein s Theory of Relativity into his native Wolof citation needed According to Diop s own account his education in Paris included History Egyptology Physics Linguistics Anthropology Economics and Sociology 18 19 In Paris Diop studied under Andre Aymard citation needed professor of History and later Dean of the Faculty of Letters at the University of Paris and he said that he had gained an understanding of the Greco Latin world as a student of Gaston Bachelard Frederic Joliot Curie Andre Leroi Gourhan and others 20 In his 1954 thesis Diop argued that ancient Egypt had been populated by Black people He specified that he used the terms negro black white and race as immediate givens in the Bergsonian sense and went on to suggest operational definitions of these terms 21 He said that the Egyptian language and culture had later been spread to West Africa When he published many of his ideas as the book Nations negres et culture Negro Nations and Culture it made him one of the most controversial historians of his time In 1956 he re registered a new proposed thesis for Doctor of Letters with the title The areas of matriarchy and patriarchy in ancient times From 1956 he taught physics and chemistry in two Paris lycees as an assistant master before moving to the College de France In 1957 he registered his new thesis title Comparative study of political and social systems of Europe and Africa from Antiquity to the formation of modern states The new topics did not relate to ancient Egypt but were concerned with the forms of organisation of African and European societies and how they evolved He obtained his doctorate in 1960 16 Career editDiop served as a member of the UNESCO International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of Africa in 1971 and wrote the opening chapter about the origins of the ancient Egyptians in the UNESCO General History of Africa 22 In this chapter he presented anthropological and historical evidence in support of his hypothesis that Ancient Egyptians had a close genetic affinity with Sub Saharan African ethnic groups including a shared B blood group between modern Egyptians and West Africans negroid 22 bodily proportions in ancient Egyptian art and mummies microscopic analysis of melanin levels in mummies from the laboratory of the Musee de L Homme in Paris primary accounts of Greek historians and shared cultural linkages between Egypt and Africa in areas of totemism and cosmology 22 At the symposium Diop s conclusions were met with an array of responses from strong objections to enthusiastic support 23 24 Reception editDiop s work has been both extensively praised and extensively criticized by a variety of scholars 25 Positive reception edit African American historian John Henrik Clarke called Diop one of the greatest historians to emerge in the African world in the twentieth century noting that his theoretical approach derived from various disciplines including the hard sciences Clarke further added that his work The African Origin of Civilization Myth or Reality challenged contemporary attitudes about the place of African people in scholarly circles around the world and relied upon historical archaeological and anthropological evidence to support his thesis He later summarised that Diop contributed to a new concept of African history among African and African American historians 26 S O Y Keita ne J D Walker a biological anthropologist contended that his views or some of them have been seriously misrepresented and he argued that there was linguistic anthropological and archaeological evidence which supported the views of Diop The author also stated Diop though he did not express it clearly thought in terms of biogeography and biohistory for his definitions He also defined populations in an ethnic or ethnogeographical fashion Nile Valley populations absorbed foreign genes but this did not change their Africanity 27 Stuart Tyson Smith Egyptologist and professor of anthropology at University of California Santa Barbara regarded his work The African Origin of Civilization published in 1974 as A highly influential work that rightly points out the African origins of Egyptian civilization but reinforces the methodological and theoretical foundations of colonialist theories of history embracing racialist thinking and simply reversing the flow of diffusionist models 28 Guyanese educator and novelist Oscar Dathrone credits Diop as a unique unifier in countering the built in prejudices of the scholars of his time and presenting a more comprehensive view of African historical development 29 Bethwell Allan Ogot a Kenyan historian and editor of UNESCO General History of Africa Volume 5 stated that Cheikh Anta Diop wrested Egyptian civilization from the Egyptologists and restored it to the mainstream of African history 30 Esperanza Brizuela Garcia professor of history wrote that he was most persuasive among intellectuals of African descent in the diaspora and among Afrocentric scholars who had criticised the omission of Africa in the works of world historians Garcia also added that his work The African Origin of Civilization best represented Afrocentric critique but it does so without a serious engagement with the diversity and complexity of the African experience and offers only a limited challenge to the Eurocentric values it aims to dislodge 31 Toyin Falola a Nigerian historian called Diop s work passionate combative and revisionist and demonstrated the black origins of Egyptian civilisation in his view 32 Firinne Ni Chreachain an academic in African literature described him as one of the most profoundly revolutionary thinkers francophone Africa had produced in the twentieth century and his radio carbon techniques had enabled him to prove on the contrary to the claims of European Egyptologists many of the ruling class of ancient Egypt whose achievements Europeans revered had been black Africans 33 Helen Tilley Associate professor of history at Northwestern University noted that the academic debates over The African Origin of Civilizations still continued but that the more general points that Cheikh Anta Diop sought to establish have become commonplace and no one should assume a pure lineage can be attributed to any intellectual genealogy because entanglements appropriations mutations and dislocations have been the norm not the exception 34 Dawne Y Curry Associate Professor of History and Ethnic Studies stated that Diop s greatest contribution to scholarly endeavours lies in his tireless search for physiological and genetic evidence to support his thesis Using mummies bone measurements and blood types to determine age and evolution Diop revolutionized scientific enquiry but she noted that his message was not initially well received but more and more scholarship began to support Diop s conclusions earning him international acclaim 35 Josep Cervello Autuori Associate Professor and Lecturer of Egyptology assessed the cultural tradition established by Diop and noted that the West had failed to consider its contributions sometimes ignoring them completely and sometimes considering them as the fruits of the socio political excitement in the era of African independence Autuori argued that the academic contributions of Diop should be recognised as a recontextualisation and a rethinking of the Pharaonic civilisation from an African perspective due to the continued parallels between Egypt and Africa 36 Diop was awarded the joint prize of most influential African intellectual along with W E B Du Bois at the first World Festival of Black Arts in 1966 37 He was awarded the Grand prix de la memoire of the GPLA 2015 The Cheikh Anta Diop University formerly known as the University of Dakar in Dakar Senegal is named in his honor 13 14 Negative reception edit According to Andrew Francis Clark Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and Lucie Colvin Phillips Professor of African Studies in the University of Maryland although Diop s work has been influential it has generally been discredited by historians 38 Robert O Collins a former history professor at University of California Santa Barbara and James M Burns a professor in history at Clemson University have both characterized Diop s writings on Ancient Egypt as revisionist 39 Diop s book Civilization or Barbarism was described as Afrocentric pseudohistory by professor of philosophy and author Robert Todd Carroll 40 According to Marnie Hughes Warrington Diop s works were criticised by leading French Africanists who opposed the radical movements of African organizations against imperialism but they and later critics noted the value of his works for the generation of a propaganda program that would promote African unity 41 Likewise Santiago Juan Navarro a professor of Spanish at Florida International University described Diop as having undertaken the task of supporting this Afrocentric view of history from an equally radical and mythic point of view 42 Historian Robin Derricourt in summarizing Diop s legacy states that his work increased francophone black pride though trapped within dated models of racial classification 8 Stephen Howe professor of the history of colonialism in Bristol University writes that Diop s work is built mostly upon disagreements with Victorian era thinkers like J J Bachofen Lewis Henry Morgan and Friedrich Engels and criticizes him for failing to take modern research into account 7 Kevin MacDonald a doctor of archeology 43 was critical of what he saw as Diop s cavalier attitude in making amateur non statistical comparison of languages between West Africa and Egypt 44 MacDonald also felt that such attitude showed a disrespect for the discipline and for the methodology of linguistics 44 He did however state that Diop had asked appropriate and relevant questions regarding possible relations between Egypt and the African continent beyond Nubia 45 Historian Clarence E Walker criticizes Diop s claim that Ramses II was black as being without qualification a futile exercise and probably the single most unsuccessful effort on the part of a scholar to determine the racial origins of an Egyptian notable 46 Mary Lefkowitz scholar of Classics accuses Diop of supplying his readers only with selected and to some extent distorted information She criticizes his methodology stating that his writing allows him to disregard historical evidence especially if it comes from European sources 47 Historian and classicist Frank M Snowden Jr states that Diop misinterprets the classical usage of color words distorts classical sources and omits Greek and Roman authors whom he claimed make a clear distinction between Egyptians and Ethiopians 48 Publications editRousseau Madeleine and Cheikh Anta Diop 1948 1848 Abolition de l esclavage 1948 evidence de la culture negre Le musee vivant issue 36 37 Special issue of journal consacre aux problemes culturels de l Afrique noire a ete etabli par Madeleine Rousseaux et Cheikh Anta Diop Paris APAM 1948 1954 Nations negres et culture Paris Editions Africaines Second edition 1955 Nations negres et culture de l antiquite negre egyptienne aux problemes culturels de l Afrique noire d aujourd hui Paris Editions Africaines Third edition 1973 Paris Presence Africaine ISBN 978 2 7087 0363 6 ISBN 978 2 7087 0362 9 Fourth edition 1979 ISBN 978 2 7087 0688 0 1959 L unite culturelle de l Afrique noire domaines du patriarcat et du matriarcat dans l antiquite classique Paris Presence Africaine Second edition c 1982 Paris Presence Africaine ISBN 978 2 7087 0406 0 ISBN 978 2 7087 0406 0 English edition 1959 The Cultural Unity of Negro Africa Paris Subsequent English edition c 1962 Paris Presence Africaine English edition 1978 The Cultural Unity of Black Africa the domains of patriarchy and of matriarchy in classical antiquity Chicago Third World Press ISBN 978 0 88378 049 7 Subsequent English edition 1989 London Karnak House ISBN 978 0 907015 44 4 1960 L Afrique noire pre coloniale Etude comparee des systemes politiques et sociaux de l Europe et de l Afrique noire de l antiquite a la formation des etats modernes Paris Presence africaine Second edition 1987 ISBN 978 2 7087 0479 4 1987 Precolonial Black Africa a comparative study of the political and social systems of Europe and Black Africa from antiquity to the formation of modern states Translated by Harold J Salemson Westport Conn L Hill ISBN 978 0 88208 187 8 ISBN 978 0 88208 188 5 ISBN 978 0 88208 187 8 ISBN 978 0 88208 188 5 1960 Les Fondements culturels techniques et industriels d un futur etat federal d Afrique noire Paris Second revised and corrected edition 1974 Les Fondements economiques et culturels d un etat federal d Afrique noire Paris Presence Africaine 1967 Anteriorite des civilisations negres mythe ou verite historique Series Collection Prehistoire antiquite negro africaine Paris Presence Africaine Second edition c 1993 ISBN 978 2 7087 0562 3 ISBN 978 2 7087 0562 3 1968 Le laboratoire de radiocarbone de l IFAN Series Catalogues et documents Institut Francais d Afrique Noire No 21 1974 The African Origin of Civilization Myth or Reality translation of sections of Anteriorite des civilisations negres and Nations negres et culture Translated from the French by Mercer Cook New York L Hill ISBN 978 0 88208 021 5 ISBN 978 0 88208 022 2 1974 Physique nucleaire et chronologie absolue Dakar IFAN Initiations et etudes Africaines no 31 1977 Parente genetique de l egyptien pharaonique et des langues negro africaines processus de semitisation Ifan Dakar Les Nouvelles Editions Africaines ISBN 978 2 7236 0162 7 1978 Black Africa the economic and cultural basis for a federated state Translation by Harold Salemson of Fondements economiques et culturels d un etat federal d Afrique noire Westport Conn Lawrence Hill amp Co ISBN 978 0 88208 096 3 ISBN 978 1 55652 061 7 New expanded edition 1987 ISBN 978 0 86543 058 7 Africa World Press ISBN 978 0 88208 223 3 UNESCO Symposium on the Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering of Meroitic Script Cheikh Anta Diop ed 1978 The peopling of ancient Egypt and the deciphering of Meroitic script proceedings of the symposium held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 UNESCO Subsequent edition 1997 London Karnak House ISBN 978 0 907015 99 4 c 1981 Civilisation ou barbarie anthropologie sans complaisance Presence Africaine ISBN 978 2 7087 0394 0 ISBN 978 2 7087 0394 0 English edition c 1991 Civilization or Barbarism an authentic anthropology Translated from the French by Yaa Lengi Meema Ngemi edited by Harold J Salemson and Marjolijn de Jager Brooklyn NY Lawrence Hill Books c1991 ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 ISBN 978 1 55652 048 8 ISBN 978 1 55652 049 5 1989 Nouvelles recherches sur l egyptien ancien et les langues negro africaines modernes Paris Presence Africaine ISBN 978 2 7087 0507 4 1989 Egypte ancienne et Afrique Noire Reprint of article in Bulletin de l IFAN vol XXIV series B no 3 4 1962 pp 449 a 574 Universite de Dakar Dakar IFAN c 1990 Alerte sous les tropiques articles 1946 1960 culture et developpement en Afrique noire Paris Presence africaine ISBN 978 2 7087 0548 7 English edition 1996 Towards the African renaissance essays in African culture amp development 1946 1960 Translated by Egbuna P Modum London Karnak House ISBN 978 0 907015 80 2 ISBN 978 0 907015 85 7 Joseph Marie Essomba ed 1996 Cheikh Anta Diop son dernier message a l Afrique et au monde Series Sciences et connaissance Yaounde Cameroun Editions AMA COE 2006 Articles publies dans le bulletin de l IFAN Institut fondamental d Afrique noire 1962 1977 Series Nouvelles du sud no 35 36 Yaounde Silex ISBN 978 2 912717 15 3 ISBN 978 2 912717 15 3 ISBN 978 9956 444 12 0 ISBN 978 9956 444 12 0 Bibliography edit Presence Africaine ed 1989 Hommage a Cheikh Anta Diop Homage to Cheikh Anta Diop Paris Special Presence Africaine New Bilingual Series N 149 150 Prince Dika Akwa nya Bonambela ed 2006 Hommage du Cameroun au professeur Cheikh Anta Diop Dakar Panafrika Dakar Nouvelles du Sud ISBN 978 2 912717 35 1 ISBN 978 2 912717 35 1 References edit Gates Henry Louis Jr Appiah Kwame Anthony eds 2010 Diop Cheikh Anta Encyclopedia of Africa University of Oxford Press ISBN 978 0 19 533770 9 Molefi Kete Asante Cheikh Anta Diop An Intellectual Portrait Univ of Sankore Press December 30 2007 Nyamnjoh Francis B Devisch Rene 2011 The Postcolonial Turn Re Imagining Anthropology and Africa Leiden Langaa p 17 ISBN 978 9956 726 81 3 Gwiyani Nkhoma Bryson 2006 Towards an African historical thought Cheikh Anta Diop s contribution Journal of Humanities 20 1 107 123 Dunstan Sarah C 2023 Manela Erez Streets Salter Heather eds Cheikh Anta Diop s Recovery of Egypt African History as Anticolonial Practice The Anticolonial Transnational Imaginaries Mobilities and Networks in the Struggle against Empire Cambridge University Press pp 135 161 doi 10 1017 9781009359115 009 ISBN 978 1 009 35912 2 Cheikh Anta Diop The Cultural Unity of Negro Africa Paris Presence Africaine 1963 English translation The Cultural Unity of Black Africa The Domains of Patriarchy and of Matriarchy in Classical Antiquity London Karnak House 1989 pp 53 111 a b Howe Stephen 1999 Afrocentrism Mythical Pasts and Imagined Homes Verso pp 167 168 ISBN 978 1 85984 228 7 a b Derricourt Robin June 2012 Pseudoarchaeology the concept and its limitations Antiquity 86 332 524 531 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00062918 S2CID 162643326 Walker J D 1995 The Misrepresentation of Diop s Views Journal of Black Studies 26 1 77 85 doi 10 1177 002193479502600106 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 2784711 S2CID 144667194 MOITT Bernard 1989 Cheikh Anta Diop and the African Diaspora Historical Continuity And Socio Cultural Symbolism Presence Africaine 149 150 149 150 347 360 doi 10 3917 presa 149 0347 ISSN 0032 7638 JSTOR 24351996 Verharen Charles C 1997 In and Out of Africa Misreading Afrocentrism Presence Africaine 156 2 163 185 doi 10 3917 presa 156 0163 ISSN 0032 7638 JSTOR 24351662 Momoh Abubakar 2003 Does Pan Africanism Have a Future in Africa In Search of the Ideational Basis of Afro Pessimism African Journal of Political Science Revue Africaine de Science Politique 8 1 31 57 ISSN 1027 0353 JSTOR 23493340 a b Toure Maelenn Kegni Cheikh Anta Diop University 1957 BlackPast org a b University Cheikh Anta Diop Encyclopaedia Britannica S Ademola Ajayi Cheikh Anta Diop in Kevin Shillington ed Encyclopedia of African History a b ANKH Egyptologie et Civilisations Africaines Cheikhantadiop net Retrieved 2017 05 31 Danielle Maurice June 2007 Le musee vivant et le centenaire de l abolition de l esclavage pour une reconnaissance des cultures africaines Conserveries Memorielles Revue Transdisciplinaire 3 Conserveries memorielles revue transdisciplinaire de jeunes chercheurs Retrieved 2017 05 31 John G Jackson and Runoko Rashidi Introduction To African Civilizations Citadel 2001 ISBN 978 0 8065 2189 3 pp 13 175 Chris Gray Conceptions of History in the Works of Cheikh Anta Diop and Theophile Obenga Karnak House 1989 11 155 Diop C A The African Origin of Civilization Myth or Reality Chicago IL Lawrence Hill Books 1974 pp ix Bulletin de l IFAN Vol XXIV pp 3 4 1962 a b c General History of Africa volume 2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 Unesco General History of Africa Abridged ed London England J Currey 1990 pp 15 32 ISBN 978 0 85255 092 2 General History of Africa volume 2 Ancient Civilizations of Africa Ancient Civilizations of Africa Vol 2 Unesco General History of Africa Abridged ed London England J Currey 1990 pp 32 55 ISBN 978 0 85255 092 2 Ancient civilizations of Africa Abridged ed London England J Currey 1990 pp 31 55 ISBN 978 0 85255 092 2 Gwiyani Nkhoma Bryson 2006 Towards an African historical thought Cheikh Anta Diop s contribution Journal of Humanities 20 1 107 123 doi 10 4314 jh v20i1 inactive 31 January 2024 ISSN 1016 0728 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of January 2024 link CLARKE John Henrik 1989 The Historical Legacy of Cheikh Anta Diop His Contributions To A New Concept of African History Presence Africaine 149 150 149 150 110 120 doi 10 3917 presa 149 0110 ISSN 0032 7638 JSTOR 24351980 Walker J D 1995 The Misrepresentation of Diop s Views Journal of Black Studies 26 1 77 85 doi 10 1177 002193479502600106 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 2784711 S2CID 144667194 Smith Stuart Tyson 2001 Race Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 3 p 115 DATHORNE O R 1989 Africa as Ancestor Diop as Unifier Presence Africaine 149 150 149 150 121 133 doi 10 3917 presa 149 0121 ISSN 0032 7638 JSTOR 24351981 Ogot Bethwell 2011 AFRICAN Historiography From colonial historiography to UNESCO s general history of Africa p 72 S2CID 55617551 Brizuela Garcia Esperanza 20 November 2018 Africa in the World History and Historiography Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190277734 013 296 ISBN 978 0 19 027773 4 Toyin Falola 2004 Nationalism and African Intellectuals University Rochester Press p 224 France Peter 1995 The new Oxford companion to literature in French Oxford Clarendon Press p 248 ISBN 978 0 19 866125 2 Tilley Helen 20 November 2018 The History and Historiography of Science Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190277734 013 353 ISBN 978 0 19 027773 4 Dawne Y Curry 2010 The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought Oxford University Press pp 309 312 ISBN 978 0 19 533473 9 Autuori Josep Egypt Africa and the Ancient World In 1998 Eyre C J ed Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Egyptologists Cambridge 3 9 September 1995 Beatty Mario H 1 January 2016 W E B Du Bois and Cheikh Anta Diop on the origins and race of the Ancient Egyptians some comparative notes African Journal of Rhetoric 8 1 45 67 hdl 10520 EJC195692 Clark Andrew Francis Phillips Lucie Colvin 1994 Historical Dictionary of Senegal Scarecrow Press p 111 ISBN 978 0 8108 2747 9 Robert O Collins James M Burns 8 February 2007 A History of Sub Saharan Africa Cambridge University Press p 28 ISBN 978 0 521 68708 9 Robert Carroll 11 January 2011 The Skeptic s Dictionary A Collection of Strange Beliefs Amusing Deceptions and Dangerous Delusions John Wiley amp Sons p 8 ISBN 978 1 118 04563 3 Hughes Warrington Marnie 2007 10 31 Fifty Key Thinkers on History Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 21249 1 Santiago Juan Navarro Archival Reflections Postmodern Fiction of the Americas self reflexivity Historical Revisionism Utopia Bucknell University Press p 151 O Conner David Andrew Reid eds 2003 Ancient Egypt in Africa London UCL Press p ix ISBN 978 1 84472 000 2 a b MacDonald Kevin 2003 Chapter 7 Cheikh Anta Diop and Ancient Egypt in Africa In O Conner David Andrew Reid eds Ancient Egypt in Africa London UCL Press p 95 ISBN 978 1 84472 000 2 MacDonald Kevin 2003 Chapter 7 Cheikh Anta Diop and Ancient Egypt in Africa In O Conner David Andrew Reid eds Ancient Egypt in Africa London UCL Press p 96 ISBN 978 1 84472 000 2 Walker Clarence E 2001 06 14 We Can t Go Home Again An Argument About Afrocentrism Oxford University Press USA p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 509571 5 Lefkowitz M 1997 Not Out of Africa Ripol Classic pp 22 160 ISBN 978 5 87296 504 6 Snowden Frank M 1997 Misconceptions about African Blacks in the Ancient Mediterranean World Specialists and Afrocentrists Arion A Journal of Humanities and the Classics 4 3 28 50 ISSN 0095 5809 JSTOR 20163634 Further reading editCheikh Anta Diop 1989 The African Origin of Civilization Myth Or Reality Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 61374 736 0 Francois Xavier Fauvelle 1996 L Afrique de Cheikh Anta Diop histoire et ideologie Karthala Editions in French External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Cheikh Anta Diop Cheikh Anta Diop Conference Cheikh Anta Diop at Africa Within A Brief Biography of an African Champion at Raceandhistory com Summary of Cheikh Anta Diop s Work in French at Ankhonline com Universite Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar Cheikh Anta Diop University of Dakar Cheikh Anta Diop The Pharaoh of Knowledge Listen to interviews with Cheikh Anta Diop in French at Rufisque News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cheikh Anta Diop amp oldid 1201829935, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.