Don C. Ohadike: The Man, his Intellectual Legacy and African Historiography |
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Authors: | Raphael Chijioke Njoku |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of History, The University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292, USA;(2) Department of Pan African Studies, The University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292, USA |
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Abstract: | It is difficult to completely understand the life history of an intellectual excluding an understanding of his family upbringing and formative years. Family upbringing and childhood environment, often the less known part of a life history, play crucial roles in shaping the ideas and values individuals espouse in their adult life. Notwithstanding, this paper is not concerned with Don C. Ohadike’s childhood. It rather focuses on the professional career of our able historian – that is the part of his life as revealed by his most outstanding published writings. Ohadike’s published works contain a wellspring of idioms that tell much about his values, quality of mind, and his mission as an African historian. Ohadike was a humanist, an African patriot, and a nationalist crusader. His entire philosophy centered on safeguarding his African identity in an emergent world of cultural imperialism. The funds for this research were provided by a NEH-funded fellowship at the Schomburg Center, New York in the Spring of 2007. I owe a lot of gratitude to Professor John McLeod and Dean Blaine Hudson for granting me the extra incentives to pursue my research in New York. While all errors and misinterpretations are mine, I wish to thank the editors and anonymous reviewers for Journal of Dialectical Anthropology for their perspective comments and suggestions on earlier drafts of this paper. |
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Keywords: | African historiography African resistance movements biography Don C.␣ Ohadike Igbo history local history of Anioma music and dance Pan-Africanism |
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