Brotherly Rejoinder

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Biko Agozino

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Nov 1, 2025, 7:20:16 AM (3 days ago) Nov 1
to Usaafricadialogue

Emeagwali, Gloria (History)

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Nov 1, 2025, 5:02:51 PM (3 days ago) Nov 1
to 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series
Great debate but my concern is that Greek settler
colonists  in Egypt,  and Indigenous Egyptians are 
merged seamlessly in this discussion with little 
regard to time and even space. 





Dr. Gloria Emeagwali
Professor of History/African Studies, CCSU
Chief Editor- "Africa Update"
https://sites.ccsu.edu/afstudy/archive.html
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries
www.vimeo.com/gloriaemeagwali
www.africahistory.net
Founding Coordinator, African Studies, CCSU


From: 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, October 31, 2025 8:33 PM
To: Usaafricadialogue <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Brotherly Rejoinder
 

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Biko Agozino

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Nov 2, 2025, 2:23:38 PM (2 days ago) Nov 2
to 'Emeagwali, Gloria (History)' via USA Africa Dialogue Series
Time and space contract when we travel as far back as we can to the genesis of human life in Africa, from where life spread to the other continents without visa requirements, immigration criminalization, nor armed national guard to break a few bones nor the navy to blow up fishing boats. 

All human beings are African, according to Diop, Marx called us the human race, Acholonu concluded that we lived before Adam and Eve, and Freud agreed that monotheism was invented by Moses, the Egyptian. We are all brothers and sisters, according to Ubuntu a la Tutu, Achebe identified this with Mbari sculptures, and Martin Luther King Jr said that we are all the children of a great author who left us a Great World House to share in a Beloved Community rather than fight and burn it down in chaos. 

Abdul Bangura, Horace Campbell, and Ron Eglash have since corrected MLK by pointing out that chaos is frequently a creative force and not always destructive. Sometimes, we take a look at grandpa's old house and we conclude that it is no longer fit for human habitation, Architects call it deconstruction. But the point is well made, there is enough space on earth for all opur needs but not for the greed of some..

Africans know this already, that is why we are open to learning from any source that is relevant to our needs. Eurocentrists continue trippingh because they fantasize that they are the only ones who have a written culture while the rest of us who invented writing supposedly make do with oral traditions. Marx was more Afrocentric than most lumpen bourgeois scholars.

Biko

Emeagwali, Gloria (History)

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2:16 AM (13 hours ago) 2:16 AM
to 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series
Brother you missed my point.

If you are studying ancient Egypt 
you have to recognize the timeline,
and in the interest of intellectual 
understanding, make a distinction
between the Old Kingdom, 
The New Kingdom, the periods of 
Internal chaos, and the periods of Greek,
Roman and Arab invasions and
colonization - among other
 important historical phases.
As scholars we must  recognize 
the timeline and the various forces 
associated with the writings
emanating from the region.

It is unfair to the Greeks to
appropriate their contributions 
and the same can be said of 
the Indigenous Egyptians and
the Romans and Arabs - so clarity is
important as to who wrote 
what and when.

To fully comprehend the relevance 
 of Marx’ doctoral thesis, to this 
issue, I would have to read it. 

Believe it or not,  I  had the great
pleasure of reading fifty three
Volumes of Marx in the 1980s
courtesy Progress Publishers,
but it never occurred to me that
I should read his doctoral thesis.

I have now added that to the
to-do list! I thank you for nudging
me in that direction.

Iweriebor in yesterday’s panel,
capitulated and renounced 
Marxist method and Marx.
Not me. I am yet to come across 
a more illuminating and 
insightful system of ideas about
our complicated world.




Dr. Gloria Emeagwali
Professor of History/African Studies, CCSU
Chief Editor- "Africa Update"
https://sites.ccsu.edu/afstudy/archive.html
Gloria Emeagwali's Documentaries
www.vimeo.com/gloriaemeagwali
www.africahistory.net
Founding Coordinator, African Studies, CCSU


From: 'Biko Agozino' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, November 2, 2025 11:16 AM
To: 'Emeagwali, Gloria (History)' via USA Africa Dialogue Series <usaafric...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Brotherly Rejoinder
 

Biko Agozino

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11:19 AM (3 hours ago) 11:19 AM
to 'Emeagwali, Gloria (History)' via USA Africa Dialogue Series
Sista Glo,

Timelines are fine for chronology but when it was the Greek philosophers themselves who testified that they were educated in ancient Egypt, who are we to disagree? It is not appropriation when Diop pointed out that a lot of the claims made by Greek philosophers were already known in the writings of Kemet philosophers for thousands of years before there was anybody known as Greek or Roman. Just setting the records straight.

You are not alone in recognizing the genius of Marx. BBC listeners voted him the most influential; philosopher. But Iweriebor is welcome to develop his own methods and theories without feeling that he is a rival to Marx as a thinker-activist. It is also welcome to critique Marx who would welcome even internal criticism as part of his methodology. That was the point that Cabral made in The Weapon of Theory, Rodney made similar points in the critique of the stages approach to history given that great leaps also hap[pen in history., and Stuart Hall critiqued the crude economism of the base-superstructure analogy - economy almighty determines everything in the final analysis - whereas there is no guarantee that a cultural trait, such as language, may not be the determinant factor in some conjunctures; no economy has been able to industrialize by relying on the language imposed by colonizers, for instance.

You are not alone in devouring those tomes from Progress Publishers but you did more than most of us by reading the complete collected works. The dissertation was not included perhaps because Stalinism saw it as pre-Marxist. Thanks to the AI technology of PDF, I find it easier to digest the work by attempting a discourse analysis of frequently occurring concepts. You can read the dissertation online in PDF. I was surprised that no previous commentator noticed that the research question was indeed Afrocentric until my modest strategic revisionism. Feel free to disagree with me.

Biko

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