The history of post-colonial African studies is marked by enduring cultural conflicts between the cultures of the colonizers (typically Caucasoid Europeans) and those of the colonized. Today, this tension is associated with resentment, bias, identity crises, and underdevelopment. Unfortunately, many post-colonial African researchers tend to overlook this issue, making little or no effort to explore it further. Perhaps they simply follow in the footsteps of earlier nationalist African scholars and thought leaders who focused primarily on decolonization and political independence. Given that the decolonization movement has been ongoing for nearly a century in many regions, it is worthwhile to examine the dynamics of these cultural conflicts and develop a normative theoretical approach for more effective and constructive engagement. This paper aims to promote cultural integration within African societies. We draw on our novel concept of epistemic suicide as a theoretical tool for analysing cultural conflicts in post-colonial African contexts. The research findings suggest that many of these conflicts are unnecessary, as they are often epistemologically constructed through an over-rationalization of the African colonial experience from a victim-centric perspective. This paper contributes to a deeper understanding of the prerequisites for African development and the foundational conditions for cultural reconstruction.
Cultural Conflicts, Decolonization, and the Epistemological Framework of Cultural Integration in Africa
Published 2025 in Cultural Conflict and Integration
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- Publication year
2025
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Cultural Conflict and Integration
- Publication date
2025-05-12
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