On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment

As human behaviour, practices, and needs evolve in Africa, there is doubt regarding the continued application of Afro-communitarianism as an explanatory model. This doubt could be resolved by classifying Afro-communitarianism into dissimilar kinds to capture the divergent interests of traditional an...

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Main Author: Tosin ADEATE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Conversational Society of Philosophy (CSP) 2024-12-01
Series:Arụmarụka
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author Tosin ADEATE
author_facet Tosin ADEATE
author_sort Tosin ADEATE
collection DOAJ
description As human behaviour, practices, and needs evolve in Africa, there is doubt regarding the continued application of Afro-communitarianism as an explanatory model. This doubt could be resolved by classifying Afro-communitarianism into dissimilar kinds to capture the divergent interests of traditional and modern African societies. In this article, I argue for a more nuanced distinction between traditional and modern Afro-communitarianism and locate Bernand Matolino’s limited communitarianism in the latter. I show that by establishing this more nuanced distinction between traditional and modern Afro-communitarianism, we come to a better understanding of how Afro-communitarianism might be useful to African societies, in so far as it is contextualised. So, while traditional Afro-communitarianism might explain the realities of small monolithic African societies, modern Afro-communitarianism, such as Matolino’s limited communitarianism, reflects and fits into the realities of modern Africa and also reflect the thoughts required to capture those current realities about persons and society. Also, with this nuanced distinction, I demonstrate that traditional Afro-communitarianism poses the problem of humiliation, in which an individual’s selfhood and agency are delimited by communal ways of life. To overcome this problem, I draw from Matolino’s limited communitarianism to propose the de-essentialisation of African thought to accommodate plural conceptions of personhood.
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spelling doaj-art-f668de97b4564096a9b2ccbdd09981712025-01-06T13:34:11ZengConversational Society of Philosophy (CSP)Arụmarụka2788-79282024-12-0142724https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ajct.v4i2.2On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s CommitmentTosin ADEATE0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9864-0345Graduate School of Business Leadership, University of South AfricaAs human behaviour, practices, and needs evolve in Africa, there is doubt regarding the continued application of Afro-communitarianism as an explanatory model. This doubt could be resolved by classifying Afro-communitarianism into dissimilar kinds to capture the divergent interests of traditional and modern African societies. In this article, I argue for a more nuanced distinction between traditional and modern Afro-communitarianism and locate Bernand Matolino’s limited communitarianism in the latter. I show that by establishing this more nuanced distinction between traditional and modern Afro-communitarianism, we come to a better understanding of how Afro-communitarianism might be useful to African societies, in so far as it is contextualised. So, while traditional Afro-communitarianism might explain the realities of small monolithic African societies, modern Afro-communitarianism, such as Matolino’s limited communitarianism, reflects and fits into the realities of modern Africa and also reflect the thoughts required to capture those current realities about persons and society. Also, with this nuanced distinction, I demonstrate that traditional Afro-communitarianism poses the problem of humiliation, in which an individual’s selfhood and agency are delimited by communal ways of life. To overcome this problem, I draw from Matolino’s limited communitarianism to propose the de-essentialisation of African thought to accommodate plural conceptions of personhood.afro-communitarianismbernard matolinolimited communitarianismpersonhoodcommunityhumiliation
spellingShingle Tosin ADEATE
On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
Arụmarụka
afro-communitarianism
bernard matolino
limited communitarianism
personhood
community
humiliation
title On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
title_full On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
title_fullStr On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
title_full_unstemmed On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
title_short On Modern Afro-Communitarianism and Matolino’s Commitment
title_sort on modern afro communitarianism and matolino s commitment
topic afro-communitarianism
bernard matolino
limited communitarianism
personhood
community
humiliation
work_keys_str_mv AT tosinadeate onmodernafrocommunitarianismandmatolinoscommitment