Chapter 1: How Tradition made way for the Modern—The Search for the Native Universal and an Inclusive Notion of the Modern
Chapter 2: Kwasi Wiredu—Traditional Communitarianism
Chapter 3: Kwame Gyekye—Moderate Communitarianism
Chapter 4: The Liberty Limits of Communitarianism—A Critique of Gyekye’s Alternative to Wiredu
Chapter 5: Paulin Hountondji—Marx, Individualism and Pluralism, and the Critical Celebration of Nkrumah’s socialism
Chapter 6: How McClendon’s African American Idea of Race might have primed Hountondji’s attack on Colonial Exploitation—An Appreciation of the limits of Hountondji’s Lament with Special Reference to South Africa
Chapter 7: Kwame Anthony Appiah—Liberal Cosmopolitanism
Chapter 8: Ato Sekyi-Otu’s Left Universalism and Mogobe Ramose: Rethinking the Post-Apartheid state—Outline of an Alternative to Appiah’s Cosmopolitan Solution
Chapter 9: The Return of the Communitarians