Dr Abidemi Babatunde Babalola - Africa and the discourse of inventiveness
Extracted from Description: “Dr Abidemi Babatunde Babalola - Africa and the discourse of inventiveness: Deep Historical and Archaeological Perspectives. This talk was given on 15 October 2020 as part of the Garrod Research seminar series of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge. Dr Babalola is the Smuts Research Fellow in African Studies, Centre of African Studies, University of Cambridge and a Fellow of McDonald Institute. Abstract: The view of backward Africa incapable of creativity is still being peddled even within academia. Scholars who promote such erroneous views define innovation and invention as grand phenomena restricted to a particular group of people from some regions of the globe, which exclude Africa. This narrative fails to recognize and appreciate innovation and its adaptive nature at the micro societal/regional level. In this presentation, I will first discuss the genesis of the discriminatory notion of a dark Africa that lacks creativeness and how this idea has been sustained and pervaded in contemporary time. Did Africans create or invent sophisticated technology? Using the example of early indigenous glass production and other high-temperature technologies in sub-Saharan, the lecture provides insight into this question. It argues that significant attention needs to be directed toward understanding the intricacies of early African technologies, especially at the micro societal/regional scale, to provide a new interpretation and narrative that showcases African's creativity and inventiveness.”