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Marimba Ani

Marimba Ani (born Dona Richards) is an anthropologist and African Studies scholar best known for her work Yurugu, a comprehensive critique of European thought and culture, and her coining of the term "Maafa" for the African holocaust.

Marimba Ani completed her BA degree at the University of Chicago, and holds MA and Ph.D. degrees in anthropology from the Graduate Faculty of the New School University. In 1964, during Freedom Summer, she served as an SNCC field secretary, and married civil-rights activist Bob Moses; they divorced in 1966. She has taught as a professor of African Studies in the Department of Black and Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College in New York City, and is credited with introducing the term Maafa to describe the African Holocaust.

Ani's 1994 work, Yurugu: An Afrikan-Centered Critique of European Cultural Thought and Behavior, examines the influence of European culture on the formation of modern institutional frameworks, through colonialism and imperialism, from an African perspective. Described by the author as an "intentionally aggressive polemic," the book derives its title from a Dogon legend of an incomplete and destructive being rejected by its creator.

Examining the causes of global white supremacy, Ani argues that European thought implicitly believes in its own superiority, stating: "European culture is unique in the assertion of political interest."

In Yurugu, Ani proposes a tripartite conceptualization of culture, based on the concepts of

The terms Ani uses in this framework are based on Swahili. Asili is a Swahili word meaning "origin" or "essence"; utamawazo and utamaroho are neologisms created by Ani, based on the Swahili words utamaduni ("civilisation"), wazo ("thought") and roho ("spirit life"). The utamawazo and utamaroho are not viewed as separate from the asili, but as its manifestations, which are "born out of the asili and, in turn, affirm it."

Ani characterizes the asili of European culture as dominated by the concepts of separation and control, with separation establishing dichotomies like "man" and "nature"; "the European" and "the other"; "thought" and "emotion." Ani writes that "the use of abstract 'universal' formulations in the European experience has been to control people, to impress them, and to intimidate them."

According to Ani's model, the utamawazo of European culture "is structured by ideology and bio-cultural experience," and its utamaroho or vital force is domination, reflected in all European-based structures and the imposition of Western values and civilization on peoples around the world, destroying cultures and languages in the name of progress.

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