Description (en)
This article looks at the rich history of Pan-Africanism considering
its many twists and turns and ambiguities in order to provide an
original frame for tackling the writing of its unfolding – both in
the sense of the Pan-African concept`s development and its
realisation in history. Therefore, it contains an extensive treatment
and a critical discussion of Pan-Africanism`s historiography from
Geiss (1968) to Adi (2018).The article hints at some crucial aspects
so far missing or being underrepresented in prevailing accounts,
regarding convincing readings of the entanglements between
global, colonial and metropolitan levels in the historiography of
Pan-Africanism. It is argued, in particular, that more attention
should be paid to existing global histories of nationalism and of
global racial discourses, and to the interplay between modern
(European) political categories and modern (African) Pan-African
ways of reasoning. Moreover, the ambiguities and diversity of
colonial situations should be taken into account in a more
sophisticated manner than is the case. The article sketches how such a slightly different account of Pan-Africanism`s history in the
20th century could look like.