Cape Times

UCT makes Ugandan academic honorary professor to mark Africa Day

- Thami Nkwanyane

IN MARKING Africa Day, the Centre for African Studies (CAS) at the University of Cape Town has announced the appointmen­t of Ugandan Professor Mahmood Mamdani as honorary professor.

The appointmen­t is part of UCT’s path towards decolonisi­ng the institutio­n, and comes almost 20 years after Mamdani left UCT following a fallout with his faculty on the implementa­tion of a foundation course on Africa that he had developed. The faculty rejected the course.

Mamdani returned to UCT to deliver the TB Davie Memorial Lecture on August 22 last year. This was a historic occasion for both CAS and UCT. His lecture – titled “Decolonisi­ng the Post-Colonial University” and delivered to an engaged audience of hundreds of students, staff and workers – brought to the public space debates that are currently intensely reverberat­ing across South Africa’s higher education institutio­ns.

Professor Lungisile Ntsebeza, director for the CAS, said: “This appointmen­t is particular­ly exciting and profoundly significan­t in light of the pressure from the student movements since March 2015 for UCT to be decolonise­d and to fundamenta­lly transform its curricula, with numerous references by student leaders to the relevant scholarshi­p of Mamdani.”

The well-documented historic, controvers­ial and famously dubbed “Mamdani affair” (1996–99) resonates with the previous infamous “Mafeje affair’ of 1968 at UCT, when Archie Mafeje applied for the AC Jordan Chair but, despite his 1968 appointmen­t, was denied the position. During his previous tenure at UCT, Mamdani served as the first AC Jordan Chair in 1996, and later as director of the CAS.

Said Ntsebeza: “However, once in the position, Mamdani met with considerab­le institutio­nal opposition to implement relevant scholarshi­p in Africa. The major public fallout with Mamdani in African Studies at UCT (1996–99) was over a foundation course on Africa that he had developed which was then rejected by the white-dominated faculty.

This led to Mamdani’s public critique that UCT was promoting ‘Bantu Studies’ and ‘South African exceptiona­lism’ as ‘African Studies’. The appointmen­t of Mamdani as honorary professor in CAS is therefore nothing less than institutio­nally historic.”

Almost two decades later, after the institutio­nal fallout, one of the core African Studies courses he argued should be introduced, “Problemati­sing the Study of Africa”, was successful­ly implemente­d as a core course at post-graduate level in African Studies, “and many of the themes within his scholarshi­p have been introduced in the highly successful foundation­al African Studies major first rolled out in 2017”, said Ntsebeza.

Once voted the world’s ninth most important public intellectu­al by the US’s Foreign Policy and the UK’s Prospect magazines, Mamdani is director and Professor of the Makerere Institute of Social Research at Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda, and Herbert Lehman Professor of Government in the department­s of anthropolo­gy, Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies and political science, and the School of Internatio­nal and Public Affairs at Columbia University, New York, where he was also director of the Institute of African Studies from 1999 to 2004.

Mamdani received his PhD from Harvard University and taught at the University of Dar-es-Salaam.

He is the founding director of the Centre for Basic Research in Kampala, Uganda (1987–96). Mamdani was president of the Council for the Developmen­t of Social Research in Africa from 1999 to 2002.

He is the author of widely cited African Studies classics such as When Victims Become Killers: Colonialis­m, nativism and genocide in Rwanda (Princeton 2001); and Citizen and Subject: Contempora­ry Africa and the legacy of late colonialis­m (Princeton 1996), which was awarded the Herskovitz Prize of the African Studies Associatio­n and named one of Africa’s greatest books of the 20th century.

His texts have been core readings for undergradu­ate and post-graduate studies at UCT and far beyond in the major debates on the study of African history and politics, exploring the intersecti­on between politics and culture, comparativ­e studies of colonialis­m, civil wars and the state, and genocide in Africa.

Nkwanyane is media liaison and monitoring officer in the communicat­ion and marketing department at the University of Cape Town.

 ?? Picture: Independen­t Media Archives ?? APPOINTED: Mahmood Mamdani is now an honorary professor.
Picture: Independen­t Media Archives APPOINTED: Mahmood Mamdani is now an honorary professor.

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