Why did you choose to study a PhD in African Studies?
My undergraduate academic experience at Harvard College was an inter-disciplinary problem solving centred education, in which I did not acquire knowledge in the abstract, but learned with synthesis and practical application at the forefront. This originated from two courses that changed my life. One was the introduction to African and African-American studies, where we examined canonical texts of the African American intellectual tradition and explored a wide range of scholars including Du Bois, Baldwin, Walker, Douglass, Morrison, Malcolm X and Wilson. I had the opportunity to explore key texts and issues in African American studies from a range of disciplinary perspectives with various faculty and guest speakers giving lectures.
The second course was the introduction to African languages. In this amazing course, I learned about how Africans use language not just as a means of communicating with one another, but as a medium to organize and transmit indigenous knowledge from one generation to another. Thus, language serves as a lens to understanding how social, political and economic institutions and processes develop.
Inspired by this multi-disciplinary approach to learning, I switched my major from Economics to African Studies, where I could integrate my love for history, economics, literature, and even science, to focus on the development of the continent I so deeply love. So, in many ways, getting a PhD in African Studies is a natural return to my academic home.