Abstract

One of Tejumola Olaniyan’s most significant contributions to the analysis of African social formation is his emphasis on approaching the African state as a fundamental “generative canvas” for cultural (re)production. This article engages his thesis in exploring how the state is not only a cultural practice and a site of culture but also a phenomenon that is generative of culture, particularly when culture is approached as central to the conception and practices of the political. I develop this argument through a re-engagement with and reinterpretation of Fela Anikulapo Kuti’s lyrics, which Olaniyan has interpreted in useful ways, as some of the most generative means of understanding the postcolonial state. I develop three perspectives extracted from Olaniyan’s work, that is, “hermeneutic horizon,” “ethics of attention,” and “reformative energies,” to explore Fela’s lyrical theorization of the state/power in postcolonial Africa.

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