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Journal ArticleDOI

African renaissance and spirituality

Allan Aubrey Boesak
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 1, Iss: 1, pp 175-183
TLDR
The African Renaissance is now more than just an idea as mentioned in this paper... In South Africa itself, ten years of democracy have ripened our discussions and deepened our insights; we are less starry-eyed and euphoric, and more cautious; less optimistic but more hopeful.
Abstract
The African Renaissance is now more than just an idea . . . In South Africa itself, ten years of democracy have ripened our discussions and deepened our insights. We are less starry‐eyed and euphoric, and more cautious; less optimistic but more hopeful. We are beginning to understand much better just how much South Africa is part of Africa, as we are beginning to understand that ‘Africa’ is much more than a geographical connotation. Africa is its mountains and rivers, its valleys and high places; its sweeping savannas and its dense forests; its rich soil and its intimidating deserts. But Africa is Africa mostly in her children wherever they may dwell: in the wisdom of her elders and the courage of her youth, the strength of her mothers and the dedication of her fathers. Being an African is not simply a question of sharing the land, it is sharing the fate of Africa. We have come to understand Africa not just as a place, but as a manifestation of a vision; not just the land that we come from, but t...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Denigrating the local, glorifying the foreign: Malawian language policies in the era of African Renaissance

TL;DR: Malawi's Vision 2020 document, a national document that serves as a vehicle to project a future for a more developed, secure and democratically mature nation, laments the tendency of Malawians to denigrade local products and glorify all things foreign as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Commodification of transformation discourses and post-apartheid institutional identities at three South African universities

TL;DR: This paper explored how three universities have rematerialised prior discourses to rebrand their identities as dictated by contemporary national and global aspirations, and concluded that the universities have reconstructed distinct and recognisable identities which speak to a segregated past, but with a post-apartheid voice of equity and redress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shona philosophy of Unhu/Hunhu and its onomastics in selected fictional narratives

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define and discuss Shona philosophy of Unhu/hunhu and Shona onomastics, both rooted in the land and its traditions, and examine the land developments in post-2000 Zimbabwe.
Dissertation

Land and identity in Zimbabwean fiction writings in English from 2000 to 2010: a critical analysis

TL;DR: This article used African-centred frameworks to critically analyse how selected black and white Zimbabwean-authored fictional narratives published between 2000 and 2010 against the backdrop of Zimbabweans' post-2000 land redistribution processes depict and project issues of land and identity in the post-independence phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hearing the Politics of Peace in Ephesians: A Proposal from an African Postcolonial Perspective:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the African renaissance at the heart of which is the persistent call for a developmentenhancing and durable peace in what is still a largely marginalized continent.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

How Europe Underdeveloped Africa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the role of the European slave trade in African underdevelopment and its role in the development of the African economy from the pre-colonial period up to the early 20th century.
Book

The Tenderness of Conscience: African Renaissance and the Spirituality of Politics

TL;DR: Boesak, A.A. as mentioned in this paper, The tenderness of conscience : African renaissance and the spirituality of politics. Stellenbosch: SUN PRESS, 2005, as mentioned in this paper.