2003
DOI: 10.2307/1514979
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Legacies of Engagement: Scholarship Informed by Political Commitment

Abstract: : Scholar-activists, by virtue of their critical engagement in the central issues of the day and their role in the production and dissemination of knowledge, have a unique opportunity to challenge the inherited orthodoxies in the academy and in the larger world in which we live. Within the field of African studies they have served as powerful critics and have broken new substantive, conceptual, methodological, and epistemological ground. To sustain this thesis, this essay explores three interrelated issues. Fi… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…4.See, esp., Greene (1999); Isaacman (2003); Robinson (2008); Zeleza (2010); and Pritchett (2014). Though not their presidential lectures, see Zeleza (1997) and Robinson (2007).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4.See, esp., Greene (1999); Isaacman (2003); Robinson (2008); Zeleza (2010); and Pritchett (2014). Though not their presidential lectures, see Zeleza (1997) and Robinson (2007).…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, faculty members used CES as a strategy to achieve their role of public intellectuals who hold the fluid and hybrid positions of the subject, critic and expert of social and medical life (Hale, 2008;Isaacman, 2003;Boyer, 1996;Harstock, 1983). Faculty members exercised self-moderation and self-critique by, for example, problematizing the cultural practice that uses untested medical herbs to induce labor.…”
Section: Dr Dziko: Lecturer Orthopedicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5.My theme engages with, and indeed is inspired by, some of the concerns raised by Sandra Greene (1999) and Allen Isaacman (2003) in their Presidential lectures regarding the need for African Studies to be more inclusive, more engaged in policy debates, and more politically active. I complement their approaches by examining the discourses, spaces, styles, and technologies of activism employed by Africans to derive lessons for contemporary politics in the U.S.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%