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Article
el-Malik_Reading Imaginative Futures Across Historical Moments.pdf
Contexto (2016)
  • Shiera S el-Malik
Abstract
Léopold Sédar Senghor’s 1961 Speech at Oxford University is a provocative and critical intervention during what is generally considered to be a decolonisation period. It is a speech that en- gages across eras, and one from which we can glean insights on how to nourish ideas and modes of thinking that may be needed in this historical moment. With it, Senghor illustrates the importance of humanism for interlocutory dialogue, which is necessary to transcend delimiting and violent kinds of relations. is article deploys the idea of surreptitious speech to examine how Senghor makes these arguments in a crevice moment. I present a homologous reading of Senghor’s speech using the lecture itself as a base with its three sections: ‘Negritude as a Form of Humanism’, ‘e African Mode of Socialism’, and ‘Conclusion’. Atop the speech, this essay develops in ve sections that mirror the re-imagining and the future imagining that Senghor accomplishes with his words. I suggest that this speech represents a vision of a humanistic, decolonial future that keeps alive the idea and the hope of a more universal universalism. 
Keywords
  • Negritude,
  • Humanism,
  • Imagination,
  • Dialogue,
  • Experience,
  • Culture,
  • Dehumanisation
Publication Date
Fall December, 2016
Citation Information
Shiera S el-Malik. "el-Malik_Reading Imaginative Futures Across Historical Moments.pdf" Contexto (2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/shiera_malik/12/