Understanding African Philosophy: A Cross-cultural Approach to Classical and Contemporary Issues"Designed for communication/media educators and graduate students, Teaching Communication and Media Studies is a practical guide to teaching university courses in communication and media studies. Relying on her extensive experience instructing grad students on the ins and outs of teaching, Jan Fernback discusses conceptual and applied topics central to contemporary mediated communication instruction, offering instructors at all levels strategies they can use to create a successful classroom experience. Fernback also considers the logic, design and delivery of courses in communication and media studies, while encouraging readers to reflect on their own strategic pedagogical decisions. Supplemented with interviews of successful communication instructors and sample exercises, this book is a must-have resource for all those teaching communication and media studies courses, regardless of level of experience"-- |
Contents
1 Understanding Another Culture | 1 |
2 Foundations of Modern African Philosophy | 21 |
3 Liberation and Postcolonial African Philosophy | 36 |
4 African Moral Philosophy I Community and Justice | 58 |
5 African Moral Philosophy II Truth and Reconciliation | 83 |
6 Narrative in African Philosophy Orality and Icons | 106 |
7 Some Concluding Remarks | 132 |
notes | 136 |
171 | |
181 | |
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Common terms and phrases
Abiola Irele aesthetic consciousness African context African humanism African music African Philosophy African socialism African thought African World amnesty another’s Antjie Krog apartheid Appiah Bantu Philosophy Bessie Head Boraine called chapter colonial communitarian concept contemporary critical cross-cultural debate dialogue discourse discussion essay ethical ethnophilosophy example expression Fanon Father’s Gagiano Gyekye Hallen Hountondji iconic forms important individual injustice Irele issues kind Krog Kwasi Wiredu language literature lives Mahmood Mamdani Mamdani meaning moral negritude Nkrumah non-African notion Odera Oruka one’s oppression oral Oxford palaver particular person philoso philosophical reflection political postcolonial Postcolonial African poverty Quayson race Reconciliation Commission restorative justice Sage Philosophy says Senghor sense Simone Simone Weil society Socrates South Africa stories struggle suffering Tempels texts thinking tion tive traditional translation TRC process Truth and Reconciliation Tutu ubuntu understanding African philosophy University Press values Verwoerd victims voice Western Winch Wittgenstein Wole Soyinka writes Yoruba