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Does Africa Need Interdisciplinary Humanities? Editorial


Yamikani Ndasauka

Abstract

This editorial explores the value and viability of interdisciplinary approaches within African humanities scholarship. It argues that  complex contemporary issues require perspectives spanning traditional disciplines. However, African humanities faculties remain largely siloed in colonial-legacy models limiting theoretical synergy. Pursuing meaningful interdisciplinarity has the potential to dismantle  ideological constraints, better comprehend multidimensional African realities, restore epistemological cohesion severed through Western  knowledge fracturing, and develop contextual, analytical tools. However, the paper cautions against superficial  interdisciplinarity lacking methodological rigor or merely signalling trendiness. It stresses retaining a disciplinary base while leveraging  scoping reviews to chart relevance for other fields in addressing complex questions. Harnessing interdisciplinarity’s potential requires  institutional structures and incentives to facilitate humanities scholars to cross boundaries without abandoning specialisation. This  editorial seeks to continue the debate on pursuing deliberate, purposedriven interconnection.  


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2948-0094
print ISSN: 1016-0728