Yellow-golden peacock on my coat evokes Yoruba river goddess Oshun, whose spirit animal is this bird - the fact I learned from the book I’m reviewing. Its author Minna Salami, a Londoner of Nigerian and Finnish origin, well versed in Yoruba culture, created a bridge between Europatriarchal knowledge and sensuous knowledge. Her “Sensuous Knowledge: A Black Feminist Approach for Everyone” sheds light on the biased narrative Westerners have been fed for centuries.
From notions of masculinity and femininity, racism, beauty, sisterhood to decolonisation and power, Salami lets her reader open their eyes to a more global perspective and how we can become more aware of factors contributing to our perception of ourselves, others and, ultimately, the world. Her point of view is that of an Africa-centred black feminist, which is much more holistic than that of white and Western feminists: “Black feminists have always stressed that feminist discourses need to be anticapitalist and anti-imperialist, capitalism being a profit-centred system and imperialism the means through which the obsession with growth and profit is satisfied. There is no point in “smashing the patriarchy”, as many Western feminisms claim to do, without fighting imperialism and capitalism”.
What is sensuous knowledge in the first place? It is an approach which is all-encompassing, which combines knowledge based on reasoning, logic, quantifiable information with that based on feeling, intuition, imagination. Only by nurturing our mind, heart and soul equally can we become well-rounded beings and develop our societies ethically, with respect and empathy.
“The truly hard problem is that the fragmented knowledge system in use today is unable to deal with the real issues confronting humanity because it neglects the experienced side of reality. Our educational systems are stale; they teach how to transform the brain but not the psyche; they explain how to design evolved societies but not how to be evolved citizens of them; they claim that emotions - central as they are to life - are incapable of explaining existence”. The fragmented knowledge system Salami has in mind is the rigid, rule-bound Europatriarchal knowledge, “a hierarchy-fixated construct of knowledge that was initiated by elite European men as propaganda to solidify their world views on a massive scale”. The world view based on this kind of knowledge perpetuates suffering, inequality, the belief in conflict as a raison d’être. There is no space here for non-binary concepts, for the abstract, for emotional experience, for coexistence and respectful relationship with nature. Salami argues that in the world we live in there is a need for a balanced approach, with decolonisation and abolishing of the established power structures in mind, if we want to create a sustainable living for all of us.
I found the book extremely readable and well structured, perfectly balanced when it comes to conveying the message. Salami succeeded in avoiding repetitions, being very focused and eloquent without her tone being preachy, patronising or dismissive. Her superb, clear explanations truly showed me where to look. I had a feeling she reached me completely with this book, that the pace was ideal for me to stay concentrated on every single page. This is exactly the book of a kind I appreciate deeply. The book which takes my understanding deeper, which guides me in my growth, pushing me gently but not forcefully. At this stage in my life “Sensuous Knowledge” was exactly the book I needed to read.