Page 68 - CONSCIENCISM By Kwame Nkrumah_Neat
P. 68

62                    CONSCIENCISM                                                       SOCIETY  AND  IDEOLOGY                 63

                 ofcolleagues; the sneer, the snub and countless other devices, these     and we had to be encumbered with tutelage. And this tutelage, it
                 are  all  non-statutory  instruments  by  means  of which  societies     was  thought,  could only be  implemented if we were fmt sub­
                 exert coercion, by means ofwhich they achieve and preserve unity.       jugated politically.
                   'Coercion' could unfortunately be rather painful, but it is signally         history of a nation is,  unfortunately, too easily written as
                 effective in ensuring that individual  behaviour does  not become           history ofits dominant class. But if the history ofa nation, or a
                 dangerously irresponsible. The individual is not an anarchic unit.       people, cannot be found in the history of a class,  how much less
                 He lives in orderly surroundings, and                                    can the history of a continent be found in what is not even a part
                 surroundings calls for methods                                           ofit - Europe. Africa cannot be validly treated merely as the space
                   One of these  subtle methods is  to be found in the account  of        in which Europe swelled  up.  If African history is  interpreted in
                 history. The history ofAfrica, as presented by European scholars,        terms of the interests of European merchandise and capital, mis­
                     been encumbered with malicious  myths. It was  even denied           sionaries and administrators, it is no wonder that African national­
                     we were a historical people.  It was  said  that whereas  other      ism  is  in the  forms  it  takes  regarded  as  a  perversion  and  neo­
                               shaped history,  and determined its  course,  Africa       colonialism as a virtue.
                 had stood still, held down by inertia; that Africa was only propelled      In the new African renaissance, we place great emphasis on
                     history by the European contact. African history was therefore       presentation  of history.  Our history  needs  to  be written as
                 presented as  an extension of European history. Hegel's authority        history of our society,  not as  the  story of European adventures.
                 was lent to this a-historical hypothesis concerning Africa, which he     African society must be treated as enjoying its own integrity;
                 himself unhappily helped to promote. And apologists ofcolonial­          history must be a mirror ofthat society, and the European contact
                 ism lost little time in seizing upon it and writing wildly thereon.      must fmd its place in this history only as  an African eXlDerlell.ce.
                 In presenting the history ofAfrica as the history of the collapse of     even ifas a crucial one. That is to say, the European contact needs
                 our traditional societies in the  presence of the European advent,       to be assessed and judged from the point ofview ofthe principles
                 colonialism  and imperialism employed their account  of African          animating  African  society,  and  from  the  point  of view  of the
                 history  and  anthropology  as  an  instrument   oppressive              harmony and progress of this society.
                 ideology.                                                                  When history is  presented in this  way,  it  can become not an
                   Earlier on, such disparaging accounts had     ofAfrican                account of how those  African  students  referred  to  in the intro­
                 <"""'A.nand culture as to appear to justify slavery,   slavery, posed    duction became more europeanized than others; it can become a
                              accounts,  seemed  a  positive  deliverance  of our         map ofthe growing tragedy and the fmal triumph of our society.
                 ancestors.  When the  slave  trade  and  slavery  became illegal,  the   In this way, African history can come to guide and direct African
                 pVlnpr1-<  on Africa yielded to the new wind of change,  and now         action. African history can thus become a pointer at the ideology
                       to  present  African  culture  and  society  as  being  so  rudi­  which should guide and direct African reconstruction.
                 mentary and primitive that colonialism was a duty ofChristianity           This  connection  between  an  ideological  standpoint  and  the
                 and civilization. Even ifwe were no longer, on the evidence ofthe        writing of history is a perennial one. A check on the work
                 shape ofour skulls, regarded as the missing link, unblessed with the     great  historians,  including  Herodotus  and
                 arts ofgood government, material and spiritual progress, we were         exposes their passionate concern with ideology.
                 still regarded as representing the infancy of mankind. Our highly        moral,  political and sociological comments are  particular mani­
                 sophisticated cnlture was said to be simple and paralysed by inertia,    festations of more e:eneral ideological standpoints. Classically. the
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