The Caribbean Philosophical Association

Portal Project affiliate Adom Getachew is awarded Fanon Outstanding Book Award for World Making After Empire

The Caribbean Philosophical Association’s 2021 Award Winners

Black Issues in Philosophy Heading

The Caribbean Philosophical Association is pleased to announce the 2021 recipients of the association’s awards for contributions to philosophical thought, literature, and mentorship:

The Frantz Fanon Lifetime Achievement Award

Hussein Bulhan 

Silvia Frederici 

Rita Laura Segato

Nicolás Cristóbal Guillén Batista Lifetime Achievement Award

Rozena Maart

Firoze Manji

Stuart Hall Outstanding Mentorship Award

Florentina da Silva Souza

Frantz Fanon Outstanding Book 

Adom Getachew’s Worldmaking After Empire (Princeton University Press)

Nicolás Cristóbal Guillén Batista Outstanding Book Award

Chandramohan S., “Love After Babel” and Other Poems  (Daraja Press) 

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The selection of awardees is made annually by the Caribbean Philosophical Association’s Awards Committee, which consists of all prior recipients of the Frantz Fanon, the Nicolás Guillén, and the Stuart Hall Awards and an appointed senior scholar and an appointed junior scholar. For more information, please consult: 

The Award Ceremony will take place virtually this year because of the COVID-19 Pandemic. The ceremony will commemorate the 2021 and 2020 laureates because of the cancellation of the 2020 meeting.  The date of the 2021 Award Ceremony will be posted on the Caribbean Philosophical Association’s website by March 15, 2021.

Each recipient is being acknowledged for the importance of their work for the Caribbean Philosophical Association’s ongoing project of shifting the geography of reason. In the words of 2014’s Guillén Lifetime Achievement Laureate Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o: 

[We] celebrate the  new recipients of the awards; sisi kwa sisi, (we for us/for one another/from us to us) we used to say in Kiswahili.

The Frantz Fanon Lifetime Achievement Award

Hussein Bulhan

Hussein Bulhan is the author of Fanon and the Psychology of Oppression. He founded clinics for treating Blacks and other communities of color in the United States and in his native country of Somalia, where he is the founder of the Frantz Fanon University. His TedX talk is available here. The Awards Committee celebrates Dr. Bulhan not only for the political and theoretical richness and importance of his writings but also because of the crucial role he has played over four decades as an institution-builder in education, communications, and clinical institutions.

Silvia Federici

Silvia Federici is a world-renown political theorist who formerly directed the Frantz Fanon Institute in Milan, Italy. This is the Wikipedia page on her. Her influential writings include Caliban and the Witch. The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research devoted an entire seminar to that work. The Awards Committee celebrates Professor Federici for the political and theoretical richness of her writing and her political activism in Italy, Nigeria, the United States, and many other countries across the globe.

Rita Laura Segato

Rita Laura Segato is a world renown Argentinian-Brazilian anthropologist and bioethicist on feminism and Indigenous rights. Here is the Wikipedia page on her.  Her accolades are many, as she reaches across generations and institutions ranging from academic to community centers. Her impact is across generations, as this forum in which she engages an audience of adolescents attests. The Awards Committee celebrates Professor Segato for her profound, transformative impact on the lives of those who are, in the words Enrique Dussel, the first Laureate of this award, “the underside of [Euro]modernity.”

Nicolás Cristóbal Guillén Batista Lifetime Achievement Award

Rozena Maart

Rozena Maart is a philosopher, poet, novelist, and longtime activist against antiracism and sexual violence and a champion for the flourishing of Africana thought in her native South Africa and other countries such as Canada, Colombia, the UK, the United States (especially through Philosophy Born of Struggle), and across the globe through the Caribbean Philosophical Association and other organizations such as the St. Croix Literary Festival. Here is a link to a lecture she gave at the University of Cape Town in 2020 before the pandemic lockdowns, and here is the Wikipedia page on her. The Award Committee celebrates Professor Maart for the philosophical, political, and literary richness of her writings and her contributions as an institution-builder in education and her work as a psychoanalyst and social worker.

Firoze Manji

Firoze Manji is a medical worker (dentistry) who has devoted his life to radical, liberatory politics through creating publishing outlets for writers across the Global South, in addition to writing books of his own and many articles as a journalist. He has also organized many multimedia forums presenting the work of intellectuals across the globe through a variety of organizations. All of this work has been done as he lived and worked not only in his native Kenya but also in Senegal, the UK, South Africa, and Canada, for organizations ranging from Amnesty Intellectual to CODESRIA and Tricontintal.  Here is an interview with him from summer 2020, and here is the Wikipedia page on him. The Awards Committee celebrates Dr. Manji for his years of dedicated work, which includes the founding of Daraja Press, publications on intellectuals of struggle ranging from Amílcar Lopes da Costa Cabral to Walter Rodney, and his ongoing global activism building of global networks devoted to the cultivation of dignity, freedom, and liberation.

Stuart Hall Outstanding Mentorship Award 

Florentina da Silva Souza

Dr. Florentina da Silva is Professor of Brazilian Literature at the Federal University of Bahia, Professor in the Graduate Program in Literature and Culture at ILUFBA and in the Postgraduate Program in Ethnic and African Studies (CEAO-UFBA). She is also the second vice president of the Brazilian Association of Black Researchers. A legendary mentor in Brazil, her students are among what the political scientist Evelyn Simien calls “historic firsts,” as they are among the first Black women to teach in their institutions in their areas of research. The letter of nomination, co-signed by several of her students, states: 

We would like to make it clear that [Professor da Silva Souza] is responsible for [generations of teachers] in Brazil and other countries, which makes a difference in the way they work in Basic Education and/or in Higher Education. . . . Without a doubt, Professor Florentina da Silva Souza, throughout her academic and intellectual trajectory, has built exemplarity and excellence in [her fields]. We are proud and grateful to have studied with her and regard her as our eternal. . . .

Frantz Fanon Outstanding Book Award

Adom GetachewWorldmaking After Empire (Princeton University Press)

The author, Dr. Adom Getachew, is the Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago. This already award-winning book continues to receive journal reviews and has been the subject of various podcasts and conference panels. Among the book’s many virtues is the author’s argument that anti-colonial nationalists from the Caribbean and Africa—for example, Nkrumah, Williams, Manley, Nyerere, and others—reworked sovereignty/self-determination into an innovative project of worldmaking.  

Nicolás Cristóbal Guillén Batista Outstanding Book Award

Chandramohan S.“Love After Babel” and Other Poems  (Daraja Press) 

Chandramohan S. is an Indian Dalit poet who is also a member of the P.K. Rosi foundation, a cultural collective, which is named after the great Dalit actress, devoted to the demarginalization of Dalit-Bahujans. According to three reviewers: 

Love after Babel is a brilliant new poetry collection by Dalit poet Chandramohan S, a highly charged political treatise. Chandramohan’s position as a Dalit writer illuminates his treatment of caste-based oppression, while also creating a sense of radical solidarity between various marginalized identities in contemporary Indian society through his focus on other forms of oppression, namely on experiences of Islamophobia, gender based violence and racism. It is an active political tool to counter multiple forms of oppression in India and across the world.

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Chandramohan’s poetry is an extraordinary combination of a strong individual voice, crying out against a deeply felt sense of personal abuse, and a sophisticated understanding of the long history and mythology of such abuse, in India but also in the world at large. The poems are by turns shocking, moving, and exhilarating.

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This is poetry—at its best.  No wonder then that, his poems have been published worldwide. He is perhaps now one of the very few, if not the only Indian poet in English to have taken the burden of social and political repression, as a distinct and livid political idiom. To read his poems is also painful, but the poetry is in the pain!

Original Article posted on The Caribbean Philosophical Association website.

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