Emmanuel Konde is Professor of History at Albany State University (ASU) in Georgia. Prior to joining the faculty of ASU, Konde taught at Tuskegee University, Morris Brown College, ...показать большеEmmanuel Konde is Professor of History at Albany State University (ASU) in Georgia. Prior to joining the faculty of ASU, Konde taught at Tuskegee University, Morris Brown College, Morehouse College, Spelman College, Clark Atlanta College, and Knoxville College. Emmanuel received the United States Senior Fulbright Scholar award for teaching and research in Sub-Saharan Africa for the 1998-1999 academic year, and spent his Fulbright year abroad teaching and researching at the University of Buea in Cameroon. Born in Cameroon, West-Central Africa, Emmanuel moved to the United States in 1978 to pursue postsecondary education. He earned the B.A. in Political Economy from Hillsdale College in 1982, the M.A. in Political Science in 1984, from Northeastern University, and the B.A./M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in History in 1985 and 1991, respectively, from Boston University. Konde is the author of six book length monographs: The Bassa of Cameroon (1917, 1998); European Invention of African Slavery (2005); African Women and Politics: Knowledge, Gender, and Power in Male-Dominated Cameroon (2005); Bassa Antiquity in Contemporary Limbe (2010); African nationalism in Cold War Politics (2012); and The New African Diaspora: Anatomy of the Rise of Cameroon’s Bushfallers (2012). Emmanuel has contributed several articles to scholarly journals but his most cited are two specialized working papers in African Studies: “The Use and Abuse of Women in African Nationalist Politics: The 1958 “Anlu” In Cameroon” (1990), and “Reconstructing the Political Roles of African Women: A Postrevisionist Paradigm” (1992).показать меньше