Lecture Abstract
In May of 1924, the Muslim intellectual Shaykh Musa Kamara from colonial Senegal sent hundreds of unbound manuscript pages to be reviewed, edited, and translated for publication. After years of consulting Arabic manuscripts and collecting oral testimonies from griots, village chiefs, and others, Kamara hoped to see his reconstruction of West African history in print. He never would. This talk tells the story of this monumental text, Zuhur al-Basatin fi Tarikh al-Sawadin, or Flowers in the Gardens of the History of the Blacks, also known as Intisar al-Mawtur, or the Victory of the Wronged. The text, and Kamara's body of work in general, is pivotal to understanding the broader Islamic historiography of West Africa. In addition to narrating the reception of this work, Professor Marsh considers theoretical questions about what decolonization might mean and what its limits might be if we think from Muslim West Africa.