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Characteristically, Africans in any Western country are asked so many different questions about “Africa,” as Westerners love to refer to the many countries that make up that huge continent, as if Africa were a single nation state. So one begins wondering why it is that Africans, on the other hand, do not refer to individual European countries as “Europe” simply, then the trends and consequences of stereotyping begin setting in just as one is getting used to being asked if Africa has a president, or if one can say something in African. It is some of these questions that Emmanuel Fru Doh has collected over the years and has attempted answering them in an effort to shed some light on a continent that is in many ways like the rest of the world, when not better, but which so many love to paint as dark, backward, chaotic, and pathetic. “This book deals with an interesting but also painful topic: the stereotyping of Africa in the West, notably in the United States of America. This is a laudable initiative… a timely and courageous effort to deal with long-standing stereotypes in the West.” Dr Piet Konings, Sociologist, African Studies Centre Leiden “This book is a must read as it addresses questions too often thought of, but afraid to ask by so many. Emmanuel Fru Doh’s writing is riveting as it opens the minds and hearts of men and women who truly are seeking an understanding of what ‘is’ African as interpreted by Africans. This work is honest, authentic and forthright in all of its accounts on how stereotypes of Africa have been applied; moreover, misapplied through excessive and purposeful distortions by the West.” Dr Alvin L. Killough, Cultural Ecological Psychologist, University of Minnesota “Stereotyping – the production and consumption of frozen and often negative images and representations of others – are a feature of every society and encounter. This meticulous and well documented compilation of Western stereotypes about Africa, brings to the fore the element of power that gives life, visibility and legitimacy to the prejudices of some over those of others.” Francis B. Nyamnjoh, Professor of Social Anthropology, University of Cape Town EmmanuelFruDoh, a native of Cameroon, holds a PhD from the University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria. He taught at the University of Yaounde (E.N.S. Bambili) for almost a decade—the ’90s—before leaving. He then had a brief stint as an Adjunct Professor at the University of Minnesota before joining the English Department at Century, a college within the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System. He is author of Africa’s Political Wastelands: The Bastardization of Cameroon. Langaa Research and Publishing Common Initiative Group PO Box 902 Mankon Bamenda North West Region Cameroon ...

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