African Journal of Philosophy and Religious Studies

ISSN 2756-3405

African Journal of Philosophy and Religious Studies ISSN 1621-4587 Vol. 4 (1), pp. 001-009, January, 2018. © International Scholars Journals

Review

Globalization and the future of African culture

Obioha Uwaezuoke Precious

Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts, Olabisi Onabanjo University, P. M. B. 2002 Ago-iwoye, Ogun State Nigeria. E-mail: [email protected]. Tel: 08033950443, 08029490559.

Accepted 16 December, 2017

Abstract

No man is an island to himself. In the same logic, no nation is an island to herself. In the process of international interactions, there is an interaction of cultures and thus, a borrowing and diffusion of cultures amongst nations. This is in itself not unusual. But unusual and unfortunate is the domination of one culture over the other. This is an evil, an evil of forced acculturation. This is true of globalization which has generated a lot of controversy with regards to the rise of a global culture. In the rise of a global culture, Western norms and practices are gradually being transported across the globe as the standard and acceptable way of behavior. Africa is the hardest hit in this regard. The hitherto rich, cherished and dynamic African culture has been diluted if not totally eclipsed. This paper, therefore, is an attempt to outline and critically assess the impact of globalization on African culture. In its analysis, the paper concludes that, Africa is fast running the risk of cultural atrophy consequent of the current logic of globalization. Thereafter, the paper proposes strategies for stemming the tide of cultural atrophy of the African culture in the midst of the purported rise of a global culture.

Key word: African culture, globalization, global culture, cultural atrophy, Western norms.