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Epistemic Apartheid - How Eurocentric Scholarship Silenced Africa: Afrocentric Perspectives, #2
Coles
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Epistemic Apartheid - How Eurocentric Scholarship Silenced Africa: Afrocentric Perspectives, #2 in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $13.99


By None
Epistemic Apartheid - How Eurocentric Scholarship Silenced Africa: Afrocentric Perspectives, #2 in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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Epistemic Apartheid is a bold and uncompromising critique of Eurocentric scholarship and its centuries-long erasure of Africa's intellectual legacy. Chola Chandalala exposes how peer review systems, academic gatekeeping, and institutional biases have dismissed African oral traditions, philosophies, and cosmologies as "myth," while elevating European narratives as unquestionable truth.
From the wisdom of ancient Kemet and Ethiopia's sacred traditions to the sidelined work of Diop and Bernal, this book dismantles the myth of Europe as the sole cradle of civilization. It confronts the double standards that shield the Bible and Western canons from scrutiny while demanding impossible proofs from Afrocentric scholars.
A sequel to Echoes of Africa , Epistemic Apartheid is both a searing polemic and a liberation manifesto. It calls students, educators, and truth-seekers to decolonize knowledge and reclaim Africa's rightful place at the center of human history.
Epistemic Apartheid is a bold and uncompromising critique of Eurocentric scholarship and its centuries-long erasure of Africa's intellectual legacy. Chola Chandalala exposes how peer review systems, academic gatekeeping, and institutional biases have dismissed African oral traditions, philosophies, and cosmologies as "myth," while elevating European narratives as unquestionable truth.
From the wisdom of ancient Kemet and Ethiopia's sacred traditions to the sidelined work of Diop and Bernal, this book dismantles the myth of Europe as the sole cradle of civilization. It confronts the double standards that shield the Bible and Western canons from scrutiny while demanding impossible proofs from Afrocentric scholars.
A sequel to Echoes of Africa , Epistemic Apartheid is both a searing polemic and a liberation manifesto. It calls students, educators, and truth-seekers to decolonize knowledge and reclaim Africa's rightful place at the center of human history.

















