François Ngoa Kodena’s book is a daring epistemological intervention that places African thought, especially the intellectual legacy of Cheikh Anta Diop, at the center of a worldwide civilizational renaissance. In addition to being a homage, Kodena’s book serves as an Afro-utopian roadmap and philosophical interpretation for what he refers to as a “planetary civilization of human reconciliation with itself” (30). Kodena argues for a return to a historically informed, nonhegemonic, and spiritually integrated epistemology that challenges dominant Western conceptions of knowledge using a method he refers to as Afrosofia. One of the book’s main accomplishments is the development of what Kodena calls the unitive blueprint. Afrosofian epistemology offers an ontological and scientific vision of human unity rooted in African antiquity, not simply a critique of Eurocentric systems. Kodena urges a genuine engagement with a cosmic model grounded in maa, advocating the removal of colonial epistemologies and inviting us to attune to the world’s dynamic language and its natural, interconnected consequences. Echoing E. Bruce Bynum’s assertion that “the deep and shared memory of all peoples is rooted in our genetic and DNA inheritance,” Kodena emphasizes our shared origins, stating that all of us are variations of the original Homo sapiens; the African ancestor of our species.
The Afrosofian concept exceeds cultural particularity, offering a universalist perspective rooted in Africa’s foundational role from both cosmological and scientific standpoints. Kodena’s appeal to decolonize academic practice is particularly persuasive. He challenges academics to consider their “epistemic motives” and criticizes the persistent “cultural alienation” experienced globally. Diop’s corpus is viewed as a “shining lamp around which humanity can gather, each person speaking its own language, thinking in its concepts, and yet dialoguing with others” (30), rather than just as historical knowledge. This dialogical stance reflects Kodena’s vision of a heterogeneous epistemic community committed to ecological equity, intellectual humility, and historical truth.
In deepening this meditation on epistemic healing, Kodena examines Diop’s vision in the face of persistent neocolonial aggression. He raises urgent and reflective questions, such as: “When shall we experience an era of lasting peace and shared prosperity among peoples and nations in this world?” (75). He introduces prophetic voices like Fanon, Obenga, and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, encouraging readers to see the “creator” within each of us capable of founding a new civilization (76). This vision, which Kodena terms a “‘Mvettean’ realistic utopia,” sees reconciliation as a historical necessity. While acknowledging obstacles—“corporate scavengers” and “imperial octopuses” (75)—he argues that the Afrosofian model, based on historical accountability and truth-telling, provides an alternative. Here, the eschatological (a reconciled future) and the archeological (our shared beginnings), are united; Kodena contends that scholars can only achieve epistemic clarity by abandoning the Eurocentric paradigm. He critiques Afrikanist historiography for its “intentional distortion of the Afrikan source in human history,” calling it “cultural poison” instilled from early childhood in the West (77). Citing Théophile Obenga’s demand to abolish the “Africanist lie,” he links this to Foucault’s concept of parrēsia, the courageous act of truth-telling (77). Kodena affirms that while truth-telling in academia is dangerous, “truth is stubborn and cannot be concealed ad aeternum.” Kodena’s nuanced reading of the pronoun “notre” (“our”) in Diop’s work identifies its dual potential both as exclusive and as a “communal receptive ‘our,’” one that invites “all humans of good will” to take part in the rehumanizing effort of Afrosofian knowledge (78). Kodena also built on V. Y. Mudimbe’s work on Diop to trace how sofia, the love of wisdom, transforms into afrosofia, a uniquely African way of knowing. For Kodena, sofia symbolizes the deep wisdom and radiant potential that can shine through in everyday life. He argues that our task, especially as scholars and thinking beings, is to root our knowledge systems and lives in sofis, a metaphor for the life-giving, sun-like force within human intelligence.
Consequently, Kodena’s book is more than just a philosophical dissertation; it is a powerful invocation that serves as a reminder of what it means to be Femina/Homo sapiens sapiens in a world that is verging between barbarism and rebirth. Kodena’s call for Afrosofian consciousness is revolutionary rather than sentimental. It is a call to reclaim our sapient identity through militant optimism, cosmic purpose, and ethical remembering. His vision aligns with the emancipatory humanism of Biko, Fanon, and Diop: a world united by dignity, memory, and justice. Kodena does not merely theorize this future; he enacts it through his methodology and his call to become soso, radiant and life-giving in thought, action, and being. This is a book by us, about us, and for us. It serves as both a roadmap for transformation and an invitation to create a more compassionate and enlightened global community based on the abundance of our shared humanity.
Kodena’s Afrosofian Knowledge and Cheikh Anta Diop is both critical and visionary. It offers an Afrocentric alternative based on unity, truth-telling, and historical justice while challenging readers to reevaluate the epistemological foundations of modernity. While Kodena’s vision may be viewed as utopian, it is precisely this Diopian realism, this radical hope, that renders the book indispensable. It deserves to be read widely, taught rigorously, and discussed across disciplines committed to liberating African thought from colonial shadows.