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University of Calabar, Nigeria

Ada Agada, Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze, Akiode Olajumoke, Uduma O. Uduma, Oladele A. Balogun, Uchenna L. Ogbonnaya, Adeshina Lanre Afolayan, Leonhard Praeg, Michael Onyebuchi Eze, Bruce B. Janz, Mogobe B. Ramose, Victor C. A. Nweke, Edwin Etieyibo, and Jonathan O. Chimakonam
This collection is about composing thought at the level of modernism and decomposing it at the postmodern level where many cocks might crow with African philosophy as a focal point. It has two parts: part one is titled ‘The Journey of Reason in African Philosophy’, and part two is titled ‘African Philosophy and Postmodern Thinking’. There are seven chapters in both parts. Five of the essays are reprinted here as important selections while nine are completely new essays commissioned for this book. As their titles suggest, in part one, African philosophy is unfolded in the manifestation of reason as embedded in modern thought while in part two, it draws the effect of reason as implicated in the postmodern orientation. While part one strikes at what V. Y. Mudimbe calls the “colonising structure” or the Greco-European logo-phallo-euro-centricism in thought, part two bashes the excesses of modernism and partly valorises postmodernism. In some chapters, modernism is presented as an intellectual version of communalism characterised by the cliché: ‘our people say’. Our thinking is that the voice of reason is not the voice of the people but the voice of an individual. The idea of this book is to open new vistas for the discipline of African philosophy. African philosophy is thus presented as a disagreement discourse. Without rivalry of thoughts, Africa will settle for far less. This gives postmodernism an important place, perhaps deservedly more important than history of philosophy allocates to it. It is that philosophical moment that says ‘philosophers must cease speaking like gods in their hegemonic cultural shrines and begin to converse across borders with one another’. In this conversation, the goal for African philosophers must not be to find final answers but to sustain the conversation which alone can extend human reason to its furthermost reaches.

Views from Zimbabwean and Nigerian Philosophers
Fainos Mangena, Benjamin Gweru, Joyline Gwara, Tatenda Mataka, Victor C. A. Nweke, Chipo M. Hatendi, Clive Tendai Zimunya, Isaiah Munyiswa, Alex Munyonga, Christian Chukwuka Emedolu, Tarisayi Andrea Chimuka, Uduma Oji Uduma, Ngoni Makuvaza, Francis Machingura, Christopher Agulanna, Jonathan O. Chimakonam, and Adebayo Aina
This book is about an African philosophical examination of the death penalty debate. In a 21st century world where the notion of human right is primed, this book considers the question of the death penalty in two sub-Saharan African countries namely, Zimbabwe and Nigeria, notorious for their poor human right records. This edited collection comprises of 11 essays from Zimbabwean and Nigerian philosophers. As opinions continue to divide over the retention or abolition of the death penalty, these African philosophers attempt to localise this debate by raising the following questions: What is the meaning of life in the African place? Is it proper to take the human life under any guise at all? Who has the right to take the human life? Can the death penalty be justified on the bases of African cultures? Why should it be abolished? Why should it be retained? Indeed, this book is the first of its kind to engage the tumultuous issue of capital punishment in the postcolonial Africa and from the African philosophical point of view.