Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze


Emmanuel Chukwudi Eze was a Nigerian-born American philosopher. Eze was a specialist in postcolonial philosophy. He wrote as well as edited influential postcolonial histories of philosophy in Africa, Europe, and the Americas. He brought Immanuel Kant's racism to light among Western thinkers in the 1990s, an area of Kant's life that Western philosophers often gloss over. Influences in his own work include Paulin Hountondji, Richard Rorty, David Hume, and Immanuel Kant.
Eze was most recently Associate Professor of Philosophy at DePaul University, where he also edited the journal Philosophia Africana . He died on December 30, 2007 in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania after a short illness.

Background

Eze was born to Nigerian parents, Daniel and Rebecca, in Agbokete, in what was Northern Region of Nigeria. Because of his parents' ethnicity and religion they fled the North during the Nigerian Civil War to Nsukka, in the eastern part of the country.

Education and teaching

Eze was educated by Jesuits in colleges in Benin City, Nigeria and Kimwenza, Zaire. He attended St. Patrick's Elementary School in Iheakpu-Awka from 1970 to 1976. In 1982 he graduated from Igbo-Eze Secondary School. From September of the same year he worked as Clerk at the Kaduna State Ministry of Agriculture in Funtua.
In 1983 Eze resigned the job and enrolled at St. Ignatius Jesuit Novitiate in Benin City. From 1985 to 1987 he studied at S. Pierre Canisius College in Kimwenza, in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He then taught French language at Bishop Kelly College in Benin City for an academic year before moving to New York. He received his Masters and Ph.D. from Fordham University. His doctoral thesis was on "Rationality and the Debates about African Philosophy."
Eze taught at Bucknell University and at Mount Holyoke College. In addition, he was a post-doctoral visiting scholar at Cambridge University, a visiting professor at the New School for Social Research and at the University of Cape Town.

Works

Books