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Debating the Contesting Memories of Slavery Between the Continental Africans and the Africans of the Diaspora

This book analyzes the sentimental attachments to historical injury of slavery between continental Africans and diaspora slave descendants. It argues that there is memory décalage resulting from how slavery is lived, experienced, learned and taught across the Atlantic. This memory décalage is engendered mostly by the politics and processes of blackwashing and whitewashing which hide […]

ISBN: 978-1-63902-432-2

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Weight 0.12 kg
Author

Ousseynou SY

ISBN

978-1-63902-432-2

Language

Number of pages

60

Publisher

Publication year

Description

This book analyzes the sentimental attachments to historical injury of slavery between continental Africans and diaspora slave descendants. It argues that there is memory décalage resulting from how slavery is lived, experienced, learned and taught across the Atlantic. This memory décalage is engendered mostly by the politics and processes of blackwashing and whitewashing which hide various historical and ideological agendas. The author’s claim is that the silences of history have to be unmuted for the sake of ‘devoir de mémoire’ and also for the need of engaging a sincere international dialogue on shared responsibility in healing the wounds of slavery. The author contends also that the only history that can be viewed as tragic or shameful is the one muted since it runs the risk of repeating itself in one way or another. A glimpse at contemporary post-colonial African literature shows that Africa has, in many respects, unlearned many of the lessons of that tragedy.