
Critique Of Political Decolonization Is An Antinormative And Critical Refutation Of The Decolonial Accomplishment Of Political Independence Or Self-determination In Ghana. It Challenges What, In Normative Scholarship, Has Become A Persistent Conflation Of Two Different Concepts: Political Decolonization And Political Independence. Whereas Political Decolonization Refers To The Ontological/conceptual Framework In Which The Political Dismantling Of The Colonial Is Fully Explicated, Political Independence Is At Best An Ontic Referent/representation Of Such Decolonial Political Conditions, In Which Case Colonial Territorial Dissolution Constitutes Only One Such Decolonial Political Manifestation. Both Conceptually And Etymologically, Then, These Concepts Are Distinct Since An Ontic Referent Cannot Fully Elaborate The Ontological Framework Of Which It Is Merely A Part. Thus, The Book Draws Our Attention To The Fact That Political Independence (the End Of Colonial Territorial Occupation) Is Insufficiently A Decolonial Claim Because It Is Framed Within The Context Of A Country (such As Ghana As A Non-settler Colonial Arrangement) Where A Permanent Colonial Settlement Was Never Deemed Necessary For The Consolidation Of Future Colonial Political Obligations/control. Political Independence In Ghana, Then, Fails To Rise To The Level Of An Ontic Referent Of Decolonization If Colonialism Includes The Inevitability Of Colonial Territorial Dissolution. Thus, Political Independence, Even If It Is An Important Political Act, Is At Best Tautological Or Speculative Given That The Perpetuity Of The Colonial Includes The Accomplishment Of The Very Act Of Political Independence. So, While Territorial Dissolution Was Politically Engineered By Ghanaians, The Colonial Merely Reconstitutes Itself In Different Legal And Ideological Forms
This work investigates the conceptual distinction between political independence and political decolonization, arguing that the former is often conflated with the latter to the detriment of true decolonial progress. Bernard Forjwuor, drawing on rigorous philosophical and political analysis, challenges the normative assumption that the end of colonial territorial occupation in Ghana equates to the dismantling of colonial structures. He posits that political independence is merely an ontic referent that fails to address the deeper ontological framework of colonial control, which persists even after territorial dissolution.
What You Will Find
Scholars in postcolonial theory and political philosophy identify this text as a rigorous challenge to established narratives regarding African independence movements. Readers frequently note the high level of academic density and the sophisticated philosophical vocabulary employed throughout the analysis.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
2023-01-01
ISBN-10:
0198871856
ISBN-13:
9780198871859
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