cover image Not Out of Africa: How ""Afrocentrism"" Became an Excuse to Teach Myth as History

Not Out of Africa: How ""Afrocentrism"" Became an Excuse to Teach Myth as History

Mary Lefkowitz. Basic Books, $24 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-465-09837-8

``I am defending academic standards,'' declares Wellesley College classics professor Lefkowitz, expanding on a New Republic article that brought her praise from historians and criticism from Afro-centrists. Her methodical study, moderate in tone, does not survey the full flower of Afro-centrism in American curricula but takes potent aim at some of the basic claims of leading proponents of Afro-centrism. For example, she shows that influential Senegalese scholar Cheikh Anta Diop asserted the Greeks' African heritage based on a single, highly dubious source. Similarly, she explains how claims tracing Greek religion and philosophy to Egyptian origins are based on clearly suspect Greek sources. Moreover, she shows how those Afro-centrists who say the Greeks borrowed an ``Egyptian Mystery System'' from Africa are actually relying on an 18th-century French novel. This book is a sobering rebuttal of those academics too spineless to challenge teachings based more on identity politics than on solid scholarship. (Feb.)