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Patrick Chabal (1951–2014)

Author of Africa Works: Disorder As Political Instrument

12+ Works 183 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Patrick Chabal is professor of Lusophone African Studies at King's College, London

Includes the name: Patrick Chabal

Works by Patrick Chabal

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1951-04-29
Date of death
2014-01-16
Gender
male
Occupations
professor
Organizations
King's College London

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Reviews

5 reviews
In this radical new book, Patrick Chabal reveals how the future of the West is now inextricably linked to that of the non-West. The rise of the economic power of China and other Asian countries as well as urgent environmental issues, now force the West to think in new ways about how to best face the future. This is an issue which runs far deeper than present debates on the decline of the West might suggest. The book argues that the postcolonial challenge from regions such as Asia, Africa, show more Latin America and the Middle East as well as the influence of citizens of non-Western origins now living in the West, have combined to expose the limits of Western rationality - that is, the theories and concepts we currently use to understand and act upon the world.

Discussing such provocative questions as 'is it a good idea to build mosques in Europe?' or 'is Beckham the new black icon?', Chabal explores the growing failure of Western social thought to explain many of our most pressing domestic social and economic issues. He also discusses contentious issues in international relations, such as the spread of democracy and the protection of human rights. He concludes that, ultimately, what the West needs is not more and better theory but an entirely new way of thinking - one that will put an end to its current deep-seated conceit.
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A fascinating, if occasionally extremely dry, portrait of one of Africa’s foremost anti-colonial revolutionaries, Amilcar Cabral, the founder and leader of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde.

Knowing little about the anti-colonial struggle of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde, I was really surprised at how successful Cabral was, especially vis-à-vis similar movements in Mozambique and Angola. According to the author, the Portuguese devoted proportionally more troops show more and resources against Cabral’s movement in Guinea-Bissau than they did in the far larger and more developed Portuguese colonies of Angola and Mozambique.

The best chapter in my opinion was Chapter 7, “People’s Wars in Lusophone Africa: A Comparative Perspective”, wherein the author compares the success and failures of Cabral’s PAIGC, Mozambique’s FRELIMO, and Angola’s MPLA.

A really good book! I enjoyed it!
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Haven't read this book yet but it was recommended by a colleague as a good representation of a more optimistic perspective on political issues in contemporary Africa. Possibly useful in countering the patronizing mode of much Euro-American discourse about Africa.

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Statistics

Works
12
Also by
1
Members
183
Popularity
#118,258
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
5
ISBNs
49
Languages
2

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