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The recent grand opening of the Du Bois Institute’s new location marked
a milestone in the development of Harvard’s incipient African and
African American Studies (AAAS) program. For many, the new office space
also reflects new optimism for the program’s future, which has been in
question for the past couple of years. Yet while AAAS’s prospects are
bright indeed, the conventional wisdom about the vicissitudes of the
program’s fortunes and how to make it flourish has been all wrong.
As the orthodoxy goes, AAAS has never been the same since the
departure of its star, Fletcher University Professor Cornel R. West to
the bucolic refuge of Princeton. With him went a peerless academic
mind, an architect of intricate and novel theories on the politics and
sociology of race that revolutionized our understanding of American
society. It is said AAAS will be lucky if it ever recovers from the
loss.
Fortunately this is not the case. West’s departure liberated,
rather than doomed AAAS; its scholarship has progressed not in spite
of, but precisely because of his absence. West is a virtuoso indeed—in
every pursuit (film acting, political consulting, autobiographical
writing, musical recording) but serious research and analysis. Far from
providing the AAAS clout, West stifled its real scholastic
accomplishments with the oversize presence of a top-notch showman.
With Du Bois Professor of the Humanities Henry Louis “Skip”
Gates, Jr. at AAAS’s helm and West out of the picture, the fledgling
program’s potential is more apparent. However, the prevailing belief
that African American Studies must constitute the heart of AAAS is
erroneous. The real future lies in African Studies. While African
American Studies is a nebulous subject that dubiously stands by itself,
African Studies is a bona fide and coherent field of regional study
akin to East Asian or Near Eastern Studies. As such, it is a weighty
area of inquiry that sadly has not received adequate attention,
especially since it addresses urgent issues currently affecting
humanity and the planet.
Gates is investing increased resources in building up African
Studies. This greater focus on Africa is long overdue. It is difficult
to imagine how the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and AAAS could
prioritize the study of a roughly 40 million-strong demographic group,
however important, within a single country over the study of the second
largest continent in the world, with 54 sovereign states and over 800
million people, a seventh of the total world population. Africa
contains a multitude of different cultures and peoples living in a
land-mass of great climactic, topological, ecological diversity. It
boasts the longest human history in the world, featuring several proud
and vibrant civilizations.
Unfortunately, Africa also recently has been the scene of
severest forms of misfortune and suffering—communal conflict including
genocide, authoritarian and kleptocratic rule, political upheaval and
anarchy, poverty, unemployment, malnutrition, disease, economic
underdevelopment, and environment degradation. Yet, while it may be
more distressing and less profitable to deal with Africa than with
other regions or issues, it must not be ignored. Africa’s problems are
precisely the reason to hone in on the continent—both for the moral
cause of helping fellow humans, and for the self-interested rationale
of preventing Africa’s plights from spreading or arising elsewhere.
Gates seeks to develop the vitally important study of Africa
by first constructing an extensive program in African languages. Though
a respectable endeavor, given the enormous dearth of common knowledge
on Africa and the urgency of gaining a deep and nuanced understanding
of it, focus on language is misplaced for two reasons. First of all,
while language sheds light on culture, fundamentally it is just a
communication tool. One semester in African political systems or
African history will provide a much more broad and profound knowledge
of Africa than learning basic grammar and vocabulary in Yoruba. It is
far more important for the vast majority who know very little about
Africa to learn about its particularities, and quickly, which is most
easily done in one’s own language.
Secondly, the vast continent of Africa teems with over 1,000
languages of varying currencies. A choice of four, even if they are
among the most widely spoken, is incomplete, arbitrary, and of limited
utility. Studying one of these languages means that at an early stage
in his intellectual journey a student would be confined to
concentrating on the narrow region where this language is used. It
makes much more sense for a student of Africa to satisfy himself with
his knowledge of English or French—two of the continent’s much more
far-reaching lingua franca. This notion is liable to be criticized as
colonialist and directed exclusively at communicating with
Western-educated African elites. However, it is only reasonable to
choose to undergo African language education once one is far enough
along in the study of Africa to know to a degree of certainty which
locality one wants to focus on.
The African Studies program should emphasize study that
facilitates deeply understanding the challenges of African countries
and working to practically meet them. Such knowledge includes history,
political science, sociology, anthropology, (development) economics,
public health, and environmental studies. Study of African culture and
arts is of secondary importance, but is also desirable to deepen
appreciation for Africa and dispel the pervasive stereotype of Africa
as a primitive backwater. Reality and morality require a deep and
nuanced study a troubled but not hopeless continent. This endeavor
would not only confer upon Harvard further academic notability, but
civic and humanitarian distinction as well.
Taro Tsuda ’07 is a government concentrator in Pforzheimer House.
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