The Caliphate, the Black Writer, and a World in Revolution, 1957–69

IF 1 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
M. Thiam
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In 1965, William Allen Brown (1934–2007) landed in Mali, a young socialist republic and former French colony that had become independent just five years prior. Brown was a doctoral student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and had come to conduct fieldwork for his dissertation on the Caliphate of H amdullāhi, a nineteenth century theocratic state that had once stood in Mali’s Mopti region. Born in North Carolina, Brown attended school in Manhattan and the Bronx. After a stint in the US Air Force, he enrolled at Kentucky State College, the state’s oldest Historically Black College, and graduated in 1959 with a degree in History and Government, and French. He then attended the Sorbonne University in Paris on a Fulbright scholarship. In 1960, he started graduate school at UW-Madison, where he studied history and African Studies, and obtained his MA (1964) and PhD (1969). What was it like to conduct fieldwork in mid-1960s Mali? Specifically, what could have been the experience of an African-American graduate student attuned to ongoing political struggles across the Black world? Which scholarly influences shaped Brown’s approach to dissertation research? And, which broader debates were occurring in Brown’s academic fields — African Studies, African history, and Black Studies — as he was crafting his dissertation? This essay provides preliminary thoughts on these questions through an exploration of the political and intellectual worlds that Brown inhabited during the years 1957–69, on both sides of the Atlantic. The 1960s were a tumultuous decade, a time of momentous intensity to be a student and rising scholar. Following the threads of the civil rights movement in the United States, decolonization and Cold War in Mali, the study of Islam in precolonial West Africa, and the place of Black scholars in academic fields concerned with the study of Africa and Africans, one finds them tightly entangled in William Allen Brown’s graduate experience. The circuits of knowledge Brown traveled through crisscrossed the Atlantic and the Sahel, as he made his way through Kentucky, Madison, Bamako, Mopti, and Timbuktu. He may have crossed paths with Martin Luther King, Jr., and he
哈里发、黑人作家和革命中的世界,1957-69
1965年,威廉·艾伦·布朗(1934–2007)在马里登陆,马里是一个年轻的社会主义共和国,曾是法国殖民地,五年前刚刚独立。布朗是威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校的一名博士生,他来这里为自己关于H哈里发的论文进行实地调查 amdullāhi,一个19世纪的神权国家,曾经位于马里的莫普提地区。布朗出生于北卡罗来纳州,曾在曼哈顿和布朗克斯上学。在美国空军服役一段时间后,他进入肯塔基州立学院,这是该州历史上最古老的黑人学院,并于1959年毕业,获得历史与政府和法语学位。随后,他获得富布赖特奖学金进入巴黎索邦大学学习。1960年,他在华盛顿大学麦迪逊分校开始研究生院学习历史和非洲研究,并获得了文学硕士(1964年)和博士(1969年)。在20世纪60年代中期的马里进行实地调查是什么感觉?具体来说,一个适应黑人世界正在进行的政治斗争的非裔美国研究生会有什么经历?哪些学术影响影响了布朗的论文研究方法?在布朗撰写论文的过程中,在他的学术领域——非洲研究、非洲历史和黑人研究——发生了哪些更广泛的争论?本文通过对布朗在1957-69年间居住在大西洋两岸的政治和知识世界的探索,对这些问题提供了初步的思考。20世纪60年代是一个动荡的十年,对于一名学生和一名冉冉升起的学者来说,这是一个非常紧张的时期。根据美国的民权运动、马里的非殖民化和冷战、殖民前西非的伊斯兰教研究,以及黑人学者在关注非洲和非洲人研究的学术领域中的地位,人们发现他们与威廉·艾伦·布朗的研究生经历紧密相连。布朗在穿越肯塔基州、麦迪逊、巴马科、莫普提和廷巴克图的过程中,穿越了大西洋和萨赫勒地区。他可能与马丁·路德·金有过交集
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
18.20%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: The Journal of African History publishes articles and book reviews ranging widely over the African past, from the late Stone Age to the present. In recent years increasing prominence has been given to economic, cultural and social history and several articles have explored themes which are also of growing interest to historians of other regions such as: gender roles, demography, health and hygiene, propaganda, legal ideology, labour histories, nationalism and resistance, environmental history, the construction of ethnicity, slavery and the slave trade, and photographs as historical sources. Contributions dealing with pre-colonial historical relationships between Africa and the African diaspora are especially welcome, as are historical approaches to the post-colonial period.
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