ABSTRACT

In this book, Oluwatoyin Oduntan offers a critical intervention in the scholarly fields of Nigerian, and West African history, as well as towards understanding the intellectual ideas by which modern African society was formed, and how it functions.

The book traces the shifting dynamics between various segments of the African elite by critically analyzing existing historical accounts, traditions and archival documents. First, it explores the lost world of native intellectual thoughts as the perspective through which Africans experienced the colonial encounter. It thereby makes Africans central to contemporary debates about the meanings and legitimacy of colonial empires, and about the African cultural experience. It shows that the resettlement of liberated and Westernized Africans in Abeokuta and after them, European missionaries, merchants and colonial agents from the 1840s, did not dismantle preexisting power structures and social relations. Rather, educated Africans and Europeans entered into and added their voices to ongoing processes of defining culture and power.

By rendering a continuing narrative of change and adaptation which connects the pre-colonial to the post-colonial, Power, Culture and Modernity in Nigeria leads Africanist scholarship in new directions to rethink colonial impact and uncover the total creative sites of changes by which African societies were formed.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

Colonialism and the African Modern

chapter 1|22 pages

Before the Modern

The Burden of Origins and Traditions

chapter 2|25 pages

Incipient Order

Settlers and Returnees Making the Nation, 1850–1880

chapter 3|26 pages

Making Monarchy

Political Centralization on the Colonial Margin, 1893–1914

chapter 4|25 pages

Making the Nation

Identity and Modernity on a Colonial Margin, 1918–1940

chapter 5|21 pages

Elites Know Their Boundaries

Power in Medical Discourses, 1937–1950

chapter 6|18 pages

A Nation Unfulfilled

Global Ideas, Nigerian Nationalism and the Reorientation of Elite Power in Abeokuta, 1930–1950

chapter |9 pages

Conclusion