Description
Contemporary Bali Nyonga is a rapidly growing town of over 80,000 in habitants, sixteen kilometres southwest of Bamenda, the capital of the North West region, Cameroon. If Cameroon has been aptly referred to in many circles as Africa in miniature, then Bali Nyonga, since its founding in the mid 19th century is emblematic of this so-called ‘multicultural’ region. This book is about change in Bali Nyonga, but it is also about change in a typical postcolonial African setting grappling with a challenging new world reality. It aims to provide cutting-edge analyses of cultural change in Bali as well as inspire a new kind of scholarship in the Cameroon Grasslands – championed by indigenous intellectuals. The contributors to this volume come from diverse academic backgrounds and as will be evident in the various chapters, their disciplinary perspectives have largely shaped their approaches to the topics under study. Hence, this book draws on anthropological, theological, literary and media studies perspective.
Praise for Society and Change in Bali Nyonga
“This book does an excellent job of analyzing certain facets of crucial developments in Bali and by extension, contemporary Africa. It crystallizes and presents its findings in persuasive essays, metaphysical reflections and insightful commentaries.”
Dr Jerry Komia Domatob, Alcorn State University, USA
“If ever there was a need for a people to establish their claim in the only way that modern day realities have imposed, namely that authorship is the only real and veritable statement of ownership, then this publication has fulfilled that need, and in resounding fashion. For a people that have been imagined, represented, possessed, and spoken for largely by curious ‘expatriates’ however well-intentioned, this is a refreshing statement of reclaiming and re-owning that which is intrinsic to their cosmology…. This publication rejects the much cliched and facile grain of ‘protest’ or even ‘contest’ declarations; rather, it stands on its own merit, its own coherency, and its own ethos and compels others to take notice.”
Dr Pascal P. Buma, University of Akron, USA
“There is ample truth in the cliche that those who ignore their cultural values are adrift, but it is also true that uninspired and slavish adherence to age-old values in an increasingly inter-connected world stifles creativity and progress. This is about change in Bali Nyonga, but is also about change in a typical postcolonial African setting grappling with a challenging new world reality. The profundity of the scholarship points to the core umbilical connection to the motherland and the understanding that only devoted and genuinely concerned researchers are able to share with such novelty and forthrightness. Anyone who reads this book taps into a reservoir of knowledge about a society facing its challenges with unbridled fortitude.”
Dr Victor N. Gomia, Kentucky State University, USA.
Ngam-ndab –
If you really love your culture ❤️ then this is your chance…. I’m just so happy that we still have some patriotic citizen… thanks Ni