[Abstract in English]. This article investigates the possibility of long-term causation in the political history of the Central African Republic. It does so by looking at the biography of Barthélémy Boganda (1910-1959). It argues that the upheavals of European colonisation at the beginning of the twentieth century – as experienced by Boganda as a child – exercised an enduring influence on his persona and remained relevant for his life and work throughout the later part of the colonial era. Second, the article investigates the persistent relevance of cultural repertoires as ingrained in the religious cosmologies in the region in pre-colonial times for the nature of Boganda’s political leadership. It argues that his charisma was articulated...
This paper starts from a very specific ethnographic context – the carnivalesque world of electoral ...
This paper examines the complex engagements between what it calls the “posts” – poststructuralism, p...
“This is our continent, not yours!” This article explores the apparent and on-going backlash of Afri...
À partir du cas particulier du Sénégal, ce texte s’attache à présenter une approche alternative aux ...
The vision of the role of natural resources in the development process has changed over the last thi...
Depuis des siècles, la représentation au quotidien des origines africaines des Africains-Américains ...
This study attempts to present the novelist Kourouma as a historian. An attempt is therefore made to...
Depuis des siècles, la représentation au quotidien des origines africaines des Africains-Américains ...
Il s’agit de présenter une étude critique et comparative des romans No Longer at Ease (1960) et A Ma...
La longue expérience africaniste de l’auteur le conduit à constater l’absence de toute tradition ins...
The proliferation of fools in independent African nations’ capitals and major cities should have ent...
Rooted in the historical and political realities of their native country, Cameroon, and yet deeply i...
Abstract Rooted in the historical and political realities of their native country, Cameroon, and yet...
Text in FrenchMember of the union of black workers in the port of Marseille, in France, and an eyewi...
À l’heure de la (re)construction d’Afrique, Présence Africaine a occupé un lieu au-delà de la rencon...
This paper starts from a very specific ethnographic context – the carnivalesque world of electoral ...
This paper examines the complex engagements between what it calls the “posts” – poststructuralism, p...
“This is our continent, not yours!” This article explores the apparent and on-going backlash of Afri...
À partir du cas particulier du Sénégal, ce texte s’attache à présenter une approche alternative aux ...
The vision of the role of natural resources in the development process has changed over the last thi...
Depuis des siècles, la représentation au quotidien des origines africaines des Africains-Américains ...
This study attempts to present the novelist Kourouma as a historian. An attempt is therefore made to...
Depuis des siècles, la représentation au quotidien des origines africaines des Africains-Américains ...
Il s’agit de présenter une étude critique et comparative des romans No Longer at Ease (1960) et A Ma...
La longue expérience africaniste de l’auteur le conduit à constater l’absence de toute tradition ins...
The proliferation of fools in independent African nations’ capitals and major cities should have ent...
Rooted in the historical and political realities of their native country, Cameroon, and yet deeply i...
Abstract Rooted in the historical and political realities of their native country, Cameroon, and yet...
Text in FrenchMember of the union of black workers in the port of Marseille, in France, and an eyewi...
À l’heure de la (re)construction d’Afrique, Présence Africaine a occupé un lieu au-delà de la rencon...
This paper starts from a very specific ethnographic context – the carnivalesque world of electoral ...
This paper examines the complex engagements between what it calls the “posts” – poststructuralism, p...
“This is our continent, not yours!” This article explores the apparent and on-going backlash of Afri...