Listen "Work-in-Progress talk: "De Anima: L. S. Senghor's Force Ontology and Animism""
Episode Synopsis
Beata Stawarska, Philosophy and 2024–25 Oregon Humanities Center Faculty Research Fellow
My project engages with the untranslated and relatively unknown theoretical writings by L. S. Senghor, the first president of independent Senegal, a poet, and a philosopher. I will translate selected essays and author an article dealing with the topic of vital force in Senghor’s philosophy. I will argue that Senghor’s ideas are rooted in the traditional West African culture, especially Serer animism, wherein life and death, bodies and spirits, are interdependent rather than mutually opposed. Senghor’s philosophy indicates therefore a departure from European efforts to articulate an African ontology of life force.
My project engages with the untranslated and relatively unknown theoretical writings by L. S. Senghor, the first president of independent Senegal, a poet, and a philosopher. I will translate selected essays and author an article dealing with the topic of vital force in Senghor’s philosophy. I will argue that Senghor’s ideas are rooted in the traditional West African culture, especially Serer animism, wherein life and death, bodies and spirits, are interdependent rather than mutually opposed. Senghor’s philosophy indicates therefore a departure from European efforts to articulate an African ontology of life force.
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