Review: Jonny Steinberg's Three Letter Plague.

Journal of Pan African StudiesVol. 2 Nbr. 6, September 2008

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Book review

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Review: Jonny Steinberg's Three Letter Plague.

Johannes Fabian, in "Time and the Emerging Other" (1983) analyzes the discursive implications of traditional, "western" anthropology within the context of Africa. His main objective is to outline how anthropology and its object of study was (re)produced through an ideological position founded on notions of difference or "othering." This world-view, for instance, fed the conception that Africa, in comparison to Europe, was "primitive." Fabian points out that early anthropological study of Africa and its inhabitants were framed through certain western prejudices about Africa, which simultaneously reinforced them. He focuses chiefly on the temporal logic of western anthropological discourse and how its conceptions of evolution and development placed its western observers "higher up" the evolutionary scale than the African "object." Fabian's project is incredibly interesting but one particular point stands out in relevance to this review: he mentions that one of the main ways in which a system of "othering"--typical of western discourse--was reinforced by anthropological study was through what he refers to as a lack of "coevalness." (i) It is this notion of coeva...

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