The development of Afrocentricity: A historical survey
Abstract
The origin of the Afrocentric philosophy cannot be established with certainty.
The most influential book advocating it was published in 1954. Marcus Garvey
was one of the most influential propagators of the ideology. Afrocentricity as an
idea and a philosophy gained momentum during the Civil Rights Movement
in the United States of America. It was in the Temple University School of
Scholars, frequently referred to as the Temple Circle, where the philosophy was
institutionalised. The abstract noun “Afrocentricity” dates to the 1970s and was
popularised by Asante during the 1980s, when he developed epistemological
and methodological foundations for an Afrocentric curriculum based on an
African perspective but aiming at global understanding.1
The approach proposes that blacks (at home and abroad) must look at knowledge
from an African perspective. It suggests looking at matters at hand from an African
viewpoint; that we misunderstand Africa when we use viewpoints and terms
other than that of the African to study Africa. When Africans view themselves as
centred and central in their own history, they see themselves as agents, actors, and
participants rather than as marginal and on the periphery of political or economic
experience. Although not the antithesis of Eurocentrism, Afrocentrism has become
the most explosive and controversial subject, with both black and white scholars
squaring off on its viability and non-viability. Mary Lefkowitz, Stanley Crouch,
and Anthony Appiah are some of the main opponents of the Afrocentric idea. The
Western dogma which contends that Greeks gave the world rationalism effectively
marginalises those who are not European and becomes the leading cause of the
disbelief about African achievements.
This paper traces the origin of Afrocentricity and describes the nature and
propositions put forward by Afrocentrists that challenge the traditional Eurocentric
perspective. This paper provides answers to the questions of why, when, where,
and who were the main people behind its emergence. The paper also aims at
outlining the main arguments why the approach should become part of academic
debates. Afrocentricity, however, like other approaches, is not without pitfalls; for
this reason the paper examines criticism levelled against it and responses thereto.