
New Books in Critical Theory Bernard Forjwuor, "Critique of Political Decolonization" (Oxford UP, 2023)
Dec 31, 2025
Bernard Forjwuor, an Assistant Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Notre Dame, challenges conventional thinking about political decolonization in his latest work. He questions the meaning of political independence and its sufficiency as a decolonial claim, particularly through the lens of Ghana's history. Forjwuor connects IMF policies to political instability and introduces innovative methodologies to analyze colonialism’s complex legacy. His arguments extend beyond Ghana, offering insights into broader post-colonial contexts, making a case for how colonialism persists today.
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Independence Isn't Full Decolonization
- Bernard Forjwuor argues that Ghana's political independence did not eliminate colonialism because external institutions continued to shape its policies.
- He frames political independence and political decolonization as distinct concepts requiring different evaluations.
A Broader Ontology Of Colonialism
- Forjwuor expands colonialism into multiple forms including settler, exploitative, and mixed varieties.
- He stresses direct and indirect expressions of colonial power to show colonialism's complexity.
Theater Sparked Performativity Idea
- Forjwuor recounts seeing a play, A Land of Million Magicians, which critiqued IMF and World Bank impacts in Nima.
- The play inspired his use of performativity to analyze how declarations enact political reality.



