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Time for the World to Learn from Africa: Hearing Others' Voices

Autor Ruth Finnegan
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 noi 2018
It is a common notion that Africa has, and indeed ought to have, learned much from the west. This is not wrong; all cultures rightly learn from each other. But less is said of what there is to learn from Africa: from her stories, myths, music, proverbs, insights - and more. Here an acclaimed African scholar steps into the gap by uncovering for us something of the great legacy of African thought and practice in ways that will astonish many. Written with verve and authority and directed above all to students and sixth formers, this book will also delight and often surprise those who know something of Africa as well as those hitherto ignorant. Ruth Finnegan OBE FBA is Emeritus Professor The Open University, Foreign Associate of the Finnish Literature Bureau, and International Fellow of the American Folklore Society. An anthropologist and multi-award author, she has published extensively, chiefly on Africa, musical practice, and English urban life. Recent books include How is Language?, Fiji's Music: Where Did It Come From?, her edited Entrancement: The Consciousness of Dreaming, Music and The World, and two prize-winning Africa-influenced novels Black Inked Pearl and Voyage of Pearl of the Seas.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781911221210
ISBN-10: 1911221213
Pagini: 226
Dimensiuni: 133 x 203 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.26 kg
Editura: Balestier Press
Colecția Hearing Others' Voices
Seria Hearing Others' Voices


Notă biografică

Ruth Finnegan FBA is an anthropologist and creative writer with interdisciplinary interests, especially in classical studies, literature, sociolinguistics, modes of thought, and cultural history. She is renowned as the scholar who has made a whole generation of Africanists realise the singular importance of oral literature. She is Emeritus and Research Professor at the Open University UK, a Fellow of the British Academy, and an Honorary Fellow of Somerville College Oxford. Born in Derry, Northern Ireland in 1933, she studied classics at Oxford, followed by social anthropology, then fieldwork and university teaching in Africa.