麦昆418号厅
Telephone: 617-552-8984
电子邮件: 电子杂志.magubane@rockmark.net
SOCY1039 - Africa in World Perspective
SOCY5513 - Postcolonial Studies
SOCY3304 - Race, Ethnicity, and Popular Culture
社会理论, sociology of post-coloniality, 种族和民族, 全球化, race and popular culture, gender and sexuality, and the sociology of 非洲 societies.
In 1908 Emile Durkheim wrote: “So far as I know there is no sociology worthy of the name which does not possess a historical character.” A few years later, W.E.B. DuBois opened his essay, “The 非洲 Roots of War,” with the Latin phrase: “Semper novi quid ex Africa,” roughly translated as “out of Africa, always something new.” As an 非洲ist and an historical sociologist, my goal has been to craft an historical sociology that challenges the preposterous, yet curiously persistent myth that Africa and people of 非洲 descent lie (as Hegel famously put it) “beyond the day of self-conscious history.” I aim to change how we understand sociology’s past, in particular its relationship to Africa and the diaspora, in order to reorient what we do as global and transnational sociologists do in the future. My work uses the tools of historical sociology to examine the role of colonialism in the production of social scientific knowledge and inquiry. I focus specifically on the history of sociology, demonstrating how a number of sociology’s key conceptual presuppositions have been informed by the legacies of slavery and colonialism. I show how slavery and colonialism, events that have until recently been relegated to the margins of history, were central to the making of the modern world and, 因此, became central to the development of sociology, a discipline that is “intimately entwined with modernity, both as lived and theorized.” The work I have done on this topic has appeared in Political Power and Social Theory, 当前社会学, and Critical 社会学, and 非洲 and Black Diaspora: An International Journal.
As an historical sociologist and an 非洲ist, my aim has been to show that because the development of sociology has always been so closely connected with the colonization of Africa, sociology has always been ‘global’. It has also, 然而, produced knowledge in the service of colonial power. The connections between the history of sociology and the practice of colonial rule are, 然而, 不太出名. My work aims to change this. Much of my work is oriented around demonstrating that the frustrations that sociologists are currently experiencing about the limited abilities of our theories and methods to meet the challenge of studying global and transnational social processes are the results of this particular aspect of sociology’s disciplinary history having been occluded. The inadequacy of many of the normative presuppositions that underlie sociology’s core interpretive premises are, 我认为, are the logical outcome of the elision of this key aspect of our disciplinary history.
Past Chair of ASA 全球 and Transnational Section (2020-2021)
WINNER 2021: ESS Robin Williams Junior Distinguished Lecture for contributions to the discipline in the realm of sociological theory
WINNER Smith Fellow (2021) The Roxbury Latin School
“Decolonizing the Pre-历史 of 非洲 and 非洲 American Studies: Confronting Racism in the American Episteme.” In From Ivory Towers to Ebony Towers: Transforming Humanities Curricula in South Africa, 非洲, and 非洲 American Studies, edited by OluwasenTella. (Johannesburg: University of Witwatersrand Press, 2021): 329-341.
“The Inter-onnected Histories of South 非洲 and American 社会学: Knowledge in the Service of Colonial Violence.” In Cultural Violence and the Destruction of Human Communities: New Theoretical Perspectives, edited by Fatma Müge Göçek and Fiona Greenland. (New York: Routledge, 2021): 77-95.
“Stuart Hall: The Making of a Postcolonial Sociologist.” In The Pan 非洲 Pantheon: Prophets, Poets, and Philosophers, edited by Adekeye Adebajo. (Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 2021): 335-350.