Speaker: Jibril Gabid (Department of African Cultural Studies)
Talk Description
The twenty-first century is witnessing a naḥḍah (renaissance) of Arabic scholarship, emerging in the wake of the intellectual crisis produced by colonialism and its policies on Islamic and Arabic education. What distinguishes this period is an epistemic shift that has given rise to new textual genres and a new audience “equipped with new sensibilities, expectations, and worldly interests.” Yet, despite these significant developments, West African Arabic literature continues to be either neglected or studied in relative isolation, largely due to the persistent exclusion of Arabic from the broader critical discourse on sub-Saharan Africa. Such exclusion, I argue, amounts to the erasure of an entire literary tradition and its aesthetic values. This presentation seeks to reposition West African Arabophone literature within both the African literary studies and the wider field of global modern Arabic literature.
Speaker’s Bio
Jibril Gabid is a doctoral candidate and Arabic instructor in the Department of African Cultural Studies. His research seeks to explore ways of (re)imagining Islamic West Africa, foregrounding West Africa Muslim scholarship by shifting the gaze of Islamic knowledge production from an Arabo-centric one to one that privileges and affirms the contributions of Black West African Muslim intellectuals. Jibril received a bachelor’s degree in Arabic and Psychology from the University of Ghana and a master’s degree in Arabic Language and Literature from the American University in Cairo.