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Silences in African History:

Jacques Depelchin

Dr. Jacques Depelchin is a committed intellectual, academic, and activist for peace, democracy, transparency and pro-people politics in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

He was born i...

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Silences in African History:
Between the Syndromes of Discovery and Abolition

Jacques Depelchin


'Among those who have suffered enslavement, colonisation, steady and relentless economic exploitation, cultural asphyxiation, religious persecution, gender, race and class discrimination and political repression, silences should be seen as facts, because silences are indeed facts which have not been accorded the status of facts.'

So states Jacques Depelchin in this powerful and elegant discussion, which encompasses an examination of dominant theories - political, social, economic, cultural and ideological - on Africa. The author analyses the influence of capitalism on the continent in relation to historical events over centuries. He castigates those who envision Africa solely through the eyes of colonialism. He systematically erodes misconceptions about Africa and the nature of the 'black man', which have assumed historical status. Ibrahim Abdullah, who contributes the preface, remarks about the book:

'this is a book about academic violence; collective intellectual denial; culpable erasure and deliberate omission. But it is also about emancipation and liberation; for it explores the complex linkages between historical knowledge and collective freedom'.


African Books Collective, Oxford

Published by Mkuki na Nyota Publishers, Tanzania
North American Distribution
284 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 2005
Paper, $34.95,

9-976973-73-X
978-9-976973-73-X

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