fbpx
Wikipedia

Black studies

Black studies, or Africana studies (with nationally specific terms, such as African American studies and Black Canadian studies), is an interdisciplinary academic field that primarily focuses on the study of the history, culture, and politics of the peoples of the African diaspora and Africa. The field includes scholars of African-American, Afro-Canadian, Afro-Caribbean, Afro-Latino, Afro-European, Afro-Asian, African Australian, and African literature, history, politics, and religion as well as those from disciplines, such as sociology, anthropology, cultural studies, psychology, education, and many other disciplines within the humanities and social sciences. The field also uses various types of research methods.[1]

Map of Africa and the African diaspora throughout the world

Intensive academic efforts to reconstruct African-American history began in the late 19th century (W. E. B. Du Bois, The Suppression of the African Slave-trade to the United States of America, 1896). Among the pioneers in the first half of the 20th century were Carter G. Woodson,[2] Herbert Aptheker, Melville Herskovits, and Lorenzo Dow Turner.[3][4]

Programs and departments of Black studies in the United States were first created in the 1960s and 1970s as a result of inter-ethnic student and faculty activism at many universities, sparked by a five-month strike for Black studies at San Francisco State University. In February 1968, San Francisco State hired sociologist Nathan Hare to coordinate the first Black studies program and write a proposal for the first Department of Black Studies; the department was created in September 1968 and gained official status at the end of the five-month strike in the spring of 1969. The creation of programs and departments in Black studies was a common demand of protests and sit-ins by minority students and their allies, who felt that their cultures and interests were underserved by the traditional academic structures.[citation needed]

Black studies departments, programs, and courses were also created in the United Kingdom,[5][6] the Caribbean,[7] Brazil,[8] Canada,[9] Colombia,[10][11] Ecuador,[12] and Venezuela.[13]

Names of the academic discipline Edit

The academic discipline is known by various names.[24] Mazama (2009) expounds:

In the appendix to their recently published Handbook of Black Studies, Asante and Karenga note that "the naming of the discipline" remains "unsettled" (Asante & Karenga, 2006, p. 421). This remark came as a result of an extensive survey of existing Black Studies programs, which led to the editors identifying a multiplicity of names for the discipline: Africana Studies, African and African Diaspora Studies, African/Black World Studies, Pan-African Studies, Africology, African and New World Studies, African Studies–Major, Black World Studies, Latin American Studies, Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Black and Hispanic Studies, Africana and Latin American Studies, African and African-American Studies, Black and Hispanic Studies, African American Studies, Afro-American Studies, African American Education Program, Afro-Ethnic Studies, American Ethnic Studies, American Studies–African-American Emphasis, Black Studies, Comparative American Cultures, Ethnic Studies Programs, Race and Ethnic Studies.[25]

Okafor (2014) clarifies:

What appears to drive these distinctive names is a combination of factors: the composite expertise of their faculty, their faculty's areas of specialization, and the worldviews of the faculty that make up each unit. By worldview, I am referring to the question of whether the constituent faculty in a given setting manifests any or a combination of the following visions of our project:

  • a domestic vision of black studies that sees it as focusing exclusively on the affairs of only United States African Americans who descended from the generation of enslaved Africans
  • a diasporic vision of black studies that is inclusive of the affairs of all of African descendants in the New World—that is, the Americas: North America, South America and the Caribbean
  • a globalistic vision of the black studies—that is, a viewpoint that thinks in terms of an African world—a world encompassing African-origin communities that are scattered across the globe and the continent of Africa itself.[26]

History Edit

Americas Edit

North America Edit

Canada Edit

In 1991, the national chair for Black Canadian Studies, which was named after James Robinson Johnston, was created at Dalhousie University for the purpose of advancing the development and presence of Black studies in Canada.[9] Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin was studied by the Black Canadian Studies chairman, John Barnstead.[9]

Mexico Edit

Through development of the publication, The black population in Mexico (1946), Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán made way for the development of Afro-Mexican studies.[27]

United States Edit
 
Carter G. Woodson, United States

A specific aim and objective of this interdisciplinary field of study is to help students broaden their knowledge of the worldwide human experience by presenting an aspect of that experience—the Black Experience—which has traditionally been neglected or distorted by educational institutions. Additionally, this course of study strives to introduce an Afro-centric perspective, including phenomena related to the culture. According to Robert Harris Jr, an emeritus professor of history at the Africana Studies Research Center at Cornell, there have been four stages in the development of Africana studies: from the 1890s until the Second World War, numerous organizations developed to analyze the culture and history of African peoples. In the second stage, the focus turned to African Americans. In the third stage, a bevy of newly conceived academic programs were established as Black studies.[28]

In the United States, the 1960s is rightfully known as the "Turbulent Sixties." During this time period, the nation experienced great social unrest, as residents challenged the social order in radical ways. Many movements took place in the United States during this time period, including women's rights movement, labor rights movement, and the civil rights movement.[29]

The students at the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) were witnesses to the Civil Rights Movement, and by 1964, they were thrust into activism.[30] On October 1, 1964, Jack Weinberg, a former graduate student, was sitting at a table where the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) was distributing literature encouraging students to protest against institutional racism. Police asked Weinberg to produce his ID to confirm that he was a student, but he refused to do so and was, therefore, arrested. In support of Weinberg, 3,000 students surrounded the police vehicle, and even used the car as a podium, from where they spoke about their right to engage in political protest on campus.[31] This impromptu demonstration was the first of many protests, culminating in the institutionalization of Black studies.

Two months later, students at UC Berkeley organized a sit-in at the Sproul Hall Administration building to protest an unfair rule that prohibited all political clubs from fundraising, excluding the democrat and republican clubs.[30] Police arrested 800 students. Students formed a "freedom of speech movement" and Mario Savio became its poetic leader, stating that "freedom of speech was something that represents the very dignity of what a human is."[31] The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), a well-connected and organized club, hosted a conference entitled "Black Power and its Challenges."[30] Black leaders, who were directly tied to then ongoing civil rights movements, spoke to a predominantly white audience about their respective goals and challenges. These leaders included Stokely Carmichael of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).

Educational conferences, like that of the SDS, forced the university to take some measures to correct the most obvious racial issue on campus—the sparse black student population.[32] In 1966, the school held its first official racial and ethnic survey, in which it was discovered that the "American Negro" represented 1.02% of the university population.[33] In 1968, the university instituted its Educational Opportunity Program (EOP), facilitated the increased minority student enrollment, and offered financial aid to minority students with high potential.[32] By 1970, there were 1,400 EOP students. As the minority student population increased, tension between activists clubs and minorities rose because minorities wanted the reigns of the movement that affected them directly. One student asserted that it was "backward to educate white people about Black Power when many black people are still uneducated on the matter.[34] "The members of the Afro-American Student Union (AASU) proposed an academic department called "Black Studies" in April 1968.[30] "We demand a program of 'Black Studies', a program that will be of and for black people. We demand to be educated realistically and that no form of education which attempts to lie to us, or otherwise mis-educate us will be accepted."[35]

AASU members asserted: "The young people of America are the inheritors of what is undoubtedly one of the most challenging, and threatening set of social circumstances that has ever fallen upon a generation of young people in history."[35] Everyone learns differently and teaching only one way is a cause for students to not want to learn, which eventually leads to dropping out. All students have their specialties, but teachers don't use that to help them in their learning community. Instead, they use a broad way of teaching just to get the information out.[36] AASU used these claims to gain ground on their proposal to create a Black studies department. Nathan Hare, a sociology professor at San Francisco State University, created what was known as the "A Conceptual Proposal for Black Studies" and AASU used Hare's framework to create a set of criteria.[37] A Black studies program was implemented by the UC Berkeley administration on January 13, 1969. In 1969, St. Clair Drake was named the first chair of the degree granting, Program in African and Afro-American Studies at Stanford University.[38] Many Black studies programs and departments and programs around the nation were created in subsequent years.[citation needed]

At University of California, Santa Barbara, similarly, student activism led to the establishment of a Black studies department, amidst great targeting and discrimination of student leaders of color on the University of California campuses. In the Autumn season of 1968, black students from UCSB joined the national civil rights movement to end racial segregation and exclusion of Black history and studies from college campuses. Triggered by the insensitivity of the administration and general campus life, they occupied North Hall and presented the administration with a set of demands. Such efforts led to the eventual creation of the Black studies department and the Center for Black Studies.[39]

Similar activism was happening outside of California. At Yale University, a committee, headed by political scientist, Robert Dahl, recommended establishing an undergraduate major in African-American culture, one of the first of such at an American university.[40]

When Ernie Davis, who was from Syracuse University, became the first African American to win the Heisman Trophy in college football, it renewed debates about race on college campuses in the country. Inspired by the Davis win, civil rights movement, and nationwide student activism, in 1969, black and white students, led by the Student African American Society (SAS), at Syracuse University, marched in front of the building at Newhouse and demanded for Black studies to be taught at Syracuse.[41] It existed as an independent, underfunded non-degree offering program from 1971 until 1979.[42] In 1979, the program became the Department of African American Studies, offering degrees within the College of Arts and Sciences.[42]

Unlike the other stages, Black studies grew out of mass rebellions of black college students and faculty in search of a scholarship of change. The fourth stage, the new name "Africana studies" involved a theoretical elaboration of the discipline of Black studies according to African cultural reclamation and disparate tenets in the historical and cultural issues of Africanity within a professorial interpretation of the interactions between these fields and college administrations.[28]

Thus, Africana studies reflected the mellowing and institutionalization of the Black studies movement in the course of its integration into the mainstream academic curriculum. Black studies and Africana studies differ primarily in that Africana studies focuses on Africanity and the historical and cultural issues of Africa and its descendants, while Black studies was designed to deal with the uplift and development of the black (African-American) community in relationship to education and its "relevance" to the black community. The adaptation of the term, "Africana studies", appears to have derived from the encyclopedic work of W. E. B. Du Bois and Carter G. Woodson. James Turner, who was recruited from graduate school at Northwestern on the heels of the student rebellions of 1969, first used the term to describe a global approach to Black studies and name the "Africana Studies and Research Center" at Cornell, where he acted as the founding director.[43]

Studia Africana, subtitled "An International Journal of Africana Studies", was published by the Department for African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati in a single issue in 1977 (an unrelated journal called Studia Africana is published by the Centro de Estudios Africanos, in Barcelona, since 1990). The International Journal of Africana Studies (ISSN 1056-8689) has been appearing since 1992, published by the National Council for Black Studies.

Africana philosophy is a part of and developed within the field of Africana studies.[44][45]

In 1988 and 1990, publications on African-American studies were funded by the Ford Foundation, and the African-American academics who produced the publications used traditional disciplinary orthodoxies, from outside of African-American studies, to analyze and evaluate the boundaries, structure, and legitimacy of African-American studies.[46] To the detriment of the field, an abundance of research on African American studies has been developed by academics who are not within the discipline of African American studies.[46] Rather, the academics, and the scholarship they have produced about African American studies, has been characterized as bearing an "Aryan hegemonic worldview."[46] Due to a staffing shortage in the field of African American studies, academics in the field, who are trained in traditional fields, carry with them presumptions of the primacy of their field of training's viewpoints, which tends to result in the marginalization of the African phenomena that are the subjects of study and even the field of African American studies at-large.[46] Consequently, matters of development of theory as well as the development of historical and African consciousness frequently go overlooked.[46] As the focus of African American studies is the study of the African diaspora and Africa, including the problems of the African diaspora and Africa, this makes the theory of Afrocentricity increasingly relevant.[46]

The National Council for Black Studies has also recognized the problem of academics, who have been trained in fields such as education, economics, history, philosophy, political science, psychology, and sociology – fields outside of African American studies – and are committed to their disciplinary training, yet are not able to recognize the shortcomings of their training, as it relates to the field of African American studies that they are entering into.[46] Furthermore, such academics, who would also recognize themselves as experts in the discipline of African American studies, would also attempt to assess the legitimacy of Africology – done so, through analysis based on critical rhetoric rather than based on pensive research.[46]

Following the Black studies movement and Africana studies movement, Molefi Kete Asante identifies the Africological movement as a subsequent academic movement.[47] Asante authored the book Afrocentricity, in 1980.[47] Within the book, Asante used the term "Afrology" as the name for the interdisciplinary field of Black studies, and defined it as "the Afrocentric study of African phenomena."[47] Later, Winston Van Horne changed Asante's use of the term "Afrology" to "Africology."[47] Asante then went on to use his earlier definition for "Afrology" as the definition for his newly adopted term, "Africology".[47] Systematic Africology,[46][1] which is a research method in the field of Black studies that was developed by Asante,[1] utilizes the theory of Afrocentricity to analyze and evaluate African phenomena.[46] In an effort to shift Black studies away from its interdisciplinary status toward disciplinary status, Asante recommended that Afrocentricity should be the meta-paradigm for Black studies and that the new name for Black studies should be Africology; this is intended to shift Black studies away from having a "topical definition" of studying African peoples, which is shared with other disciplines, toward having a "perspectival definition" that is unique in how African peoples are studied – that is, the study of African peoples, through a centered perspective, which is rooted in and derives from the cultures and experiences of African peoples.[48] By doing so, as Ama Mazama indicates, this should increase how relevant Black studies is and strengthen its disciplinary presence.[48]

Caribbean Edit

Among English-speaking countries of the Caribbean, scholars educated in the United States and Britain added considerably to the development of Black studies.[7] Scholars, such as Fitzroy Baptiste, Richard Goodridge, Elsa Goveia, Allister Hinds, Rupert Lewis, Bernard Marshall, James Millette, and Alvin Thompson, added to the development of Black studies at the University of the West Indies campuses in Barbados, Jamaica, and Trinidad.[7]

Cuba Edit

During the early 1900s, Fernando Ortiz pioneered the emerging field of Afro-Cuban studies.[49] On January 16, 1937, the Society for Afro-Cuban Studies was established.[49] Afro-Cuban Studies (Estudios Afrocubanos) is the academic journal for the Society for Afro-Cuban Studies (SEAC/Sociedad de Estudios Afrocubanos).[49] In 1939, Rómulo Lachatañeré's academic work appeared in a volume of this journal.[49]

Dominican Republic Edit

In 1967, Carlos Larrazábal Blanco authored, Los Negros Y La Esclavitud En Santo Domingo, which is considered to be a foundational academic work in Afro-Dominican studies.[50] Even in areas of the Dominican Republic with many Afro-Dominicans and where Afro-Dominican culture is predominant, there has been an ongoing challenge in Afro-Dominican studies to find linguistic evidence of a remnant Afro-Dominican language.[51]

Haiti Edit

Lorimer Denis, Francois Duvalier, and Jean Price-Mars, as founders of the Bureau of Ethnology and leading figures in the Noirisme movement in Haiti, were also influential in the publishing of the foundational Afro-Haitian studies journal, Les Griots.[52] One of the most influential academics in Afro-Haitian studies is René Piquion.[53]

Puerto Rico Edit

As of 2019, Afro-Puerto Rican studies is not offered as a degree program by the University of Puerto Rico.[54] Numerous academic publications, such as Arrancando Mitos De Raiz: Guia Para La Ensenanza Antirracista De La Herencia Africana En Puerto Rico, were scholarly works that established Isar Godreau as a leading academic in Afro-Puerto Rican Studies.[55]

Central America Edit

Costa Rica Edit

The Executive branch created a law to establish a Committee for Afro-Costa Rican Studies, as one, among other laws, to increase the level of inclusion of Afro-Costa Ricans in Costa Rica.[56]

Guatemala Edit

Christopher H. Lutz authored, Santiago de Guatemala, 1541–1773, which is considered to be one of the foundational literatures of Afro-Guatemalan studies.[57]

Honduras Edit

Due to a history of scarce resources and anti-black racism, Afro-Hondurans have largely been excluded from academic publications about Honduras; consequently, Afro-Honduran studies has remained limited in its formal development.[58]

Panama Edit

In March 1980, along with the Panamanian government, the Afro-Panamanian Studies Center hosted the Second Congress on Black Culture in the Americas.[59]

South America Edit

Argentina Edit

Since the 1980s, Afro-Argentine studies has undergone renewed growth.[60]

Brazil Edit
 
Abdias Nascimento, Brazil

In 1980, Abdias Nascimento gave a presentation in Panama of his scholarship on Kilombismo at the 2nd Congress of Black Culture in the Americas.[8] His scholarship on Kilombismo detailed how the economic and political affairs of Africans throughout the Americas contributed to how they socially organized themselves.[61] Afterward, Nascimento went back to Brazil and began institutionalization of Africana studies in 1981.[8] While at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, Nascimento developed the Afro-Brazilian Studies and Research Institute (IPEAFRO).[8] A course for professors was provided by IPEAFRO between 1985 and 1995.[8]

Chile Edit

From the 1920s to the 1950s, publications that included the presence of Afro-Chileans were not systematized, and, from the 1960s to the 1980s, publications continued to group Afro-Chileans with other groups.[62] Since the 2000s, there has been increasing systematization and a more formal development of Afro-Chilean studies, along with a greater focus on Afro-Chileans and the recovery of Afro-Chilean cultural heritage.[62]

Colombia Edit

Scholars, such as Rogerio Velásquez, Aquiles Escalante, José Rafael Arboleda, and Thomas Price, were forerunners in the development of Afro-Colombian studies in the 1940s and 1950s.[63] In the 1960s, as social science programs became incorporated into university institutions, contributions from anthropologists and social scientists added to its emergence.[63] Following the promulgation of the Colombian Constitution, particularly Article 55, in 1991,[63] Law 70 in 1993,[63][10][11] and Decree 804 by the Ministry of Education in 1995,[10][11] the elements for Afro-Colombian studies began to come together,[63] and historic discrimination of Afro-Colombians was able to begin being addressed, with the development of national educational content about Afro-Colombians and Africa.[64][10][11] At the University City of Bogotá, of the National University of Colombia, the Afro-Colombian Studies Group developed and established a training program in Afro-Colombian studies for primary and secondary school teachers.[64] In February 2002, a continuing education diploma program in Afro-Colombian studies was developed and began to be offered at the University of Cauca in Belalcázar, Caldas.[65][66][67] At the Pontifical Xavierian University, there is a master's degree program in Afro-Colombian studies.[68][69] There is also a study abroad program for Afro-Colombian students and African-American students existing between the Afro-Colombian studies program at the Pontifical Xavierian University in Colombia and African-American studies programs at historically black colleges and universities in the United States.[69]

Ecuador Edit

Afro-Ecuadorians initiated the development of the Center of Afro-Ecuadorian Studies in the late 1970s, which served as a means of organizing academic questions relating to Afro-Ecuadorian identity and history.[12] Though it dissolved in the early 1980s, by the 1990s, organizations that followed in the example of the Center of Afro-Ecuadorian Studies ushered in the development of the Afro-Ecuadorian Etnoeducación program at the National High School, in Chota Valley, Ecuador, and a master's degree program in Afro-Andean Studies at the Simón Bolívar Andean University (UASB), in Quito, Ecuador.[12] With the promulgation of Article 84 of the 1998 Constitution of Ecuador, gave formal recognition was given to Afro-Ecuadorian Etnoeducación.[12] Juan Garcia, who was one of the founders of the Center of Afro-Ecuadorian Studies, is a leading scholar in Afro-Ecuadorian studies and has contributed considerably to the development of the programs in Chota Valley and Quito.[12]

Paraguay Edit

In 1971, Carvalho Neto authored, Afro-Paraguayan studies.[70]

Peru Edit

While the presence of Afro-Peruvian studies may not be strong in Peru,[10][11] the body of scholarship is undergoing growth.[71] There have been efforts to organize the elements of Afro-Peruvian studies in Peru, such as by LUNDU, which organized an international conference for Afro-Peruvian studies in Peru[72] on November 13, 2009.[73] During this LUNDU-organized conference, Luis Rocca, who co-founded the National Afro-Peruvian Museum, and is also a historian, presented on his research regarding Afro-Peruvians.[72] A university student group focused on Afro-Peruvian studies was also created near San Juan de Lurigancho, Lima, Peru.[74] Additionally, there has been some scholarship in Afro-Peruvian studies developed in the United States[75] and a panel on Afro-Peruvian studies at a conference hosted on December 11, 2019, by the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research in the United States.[76]

Uruguay Edit

Since 1996, the amount of scholarship of Afro-Uruguayan studies has increased as a result of increased global focus on Afro-Latin American studies.[77]

Venezuela Edit

The curriculum for Afro-Venezuelan studies was developed at Universidad Politécnica Territorial de Barlovento Argelia Laya (UPTBAL), in Higuerote, Barlovento, by Alejandro Correa.[13] In 2006, Afro-Epistemology and African Culture were formally developed as the initial courses for students in this curriculum.[13]

Europe Edit

United Kingdom Edit

 
Kehinde Andrews, United Kingdom

Following the rise and decline of Black British Cultural Studies between the early 1980s and late 1990s, Black studies in the United States reinvigorated Black Critical Thought in the United Kingdom.[78] Kehinde Andrews, who initiated the development of the Black Studies Association in the United Kingdom as well as the development of a course in Black studies at Birmingham City University,[78] continues to advocate for the advancement of the presence of Black studies in the United Kingdom.[5][6]

Research methods Edit

African Self-Consciousness Edit

Kobi K. K. Kambon developed a research method and psychological framework, known as African Self-Consciousness, which analyzes the states and changes of the African mind.[1]

Africana Womanism Edit

Delores P. Aldridge developed a research method, which analyzes from the viewpoint of black women, known as Africana Womanism.[1] Rather than the importance of the individual (e.g., needs, wants) being considered greater than the family unit, the importance of the family unit is regarded as greater than the individual.[1]

Afrocentricity Edit

 
Molefi Kete Asante, United States

Afrocentricity is an academic theory and approach to scholarship that seeks to center the experiences and peoples of Africa and the African diaspora within their own historical, cultural, and sociological contexts.[79][80][81][82] First developed as a systematized methodology by Molefi Kete Asante in 1980, he drew inspiration from a number of African and African diaspora intellectuals including Cheikh Anta Diop, George James, Harold Cruse, Ida B. Wells, Langston Hughes, Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey, and W. E. B. Du Bois.[79] The Temple Circle,[83][84] also known as the Temple School of Thought,[84] Temple Circle of Afrocentricity,[85] or Temple School of Afrocentricity,[86] was an early group of Africologists during the late 1980s and early 1990s that helped to further develop Afrocentricity, which is based on concepts of agency, centeredness, location, and orientation.[83]

Black Male Studies Edit

Black Male Studies primarily focuses on the study of Black men and boys.[87] Its research focus includes the study of Black manhood and Black masculinity, and it draws from disciplines such as history, philosophy, and sociology.[87] Black Male Studies uses a Black male-centered paradigm designed to critique past and present gender studies publications on Black males as well as centers and contends with the problem of anti-Black misandry ("disdain for Black men and boys").[88] Past and present gender studies publications tend to carry assumptions of Black men and boys being criminals and assailants of Black women and white women.[88] Consequently, past and present gender studies publications tend to contain paradigms, theories, and narratives that are grounded in anti-Black misandry, along with a theoretically constructed language of hypermasculinity, and tend to be ill-equipped at understanding Black males as victims.[88] The past and present vulnerability of Black males, ranging from rape, to sexual abuse, to death, which tends to be overlooked and downplayed by rhetoric about hypermasculinity, underscores the need to develop new language, narratives, and theories for understanding Black males.[88]

Blues Culture Edit

James B. Stewart developed the research method and methodological framework, known as Blues Culture, which examines the traits (e.g., versatility, vibration) of Africana culture utilizing various means from an assortment of disciplines (e.g., economics, history, sociology).[1]

Double Consciousness Edit

 
W. E. B. Du Bois, United States

W. E. B. DuBois developed the research method and conceptual framework, known as Double Consciousness, to analyze how Africana people (and phenomena) exist in a dual racialized (black-white) world and subsequently develop a dual consciousness.[1] Rather than succumb to various forms of external pressure (e.g., assimilation, harassment, prejudice, racism, sexism, surveillance), Africana people discover how to steer through them.[1]

Four Basic Tasks of the Black Studies Scholar Edit

James Turner developed the research method and social scientific framework, known as Four Basic Tasks of the Black Studies Scholar, which investigates the problems that affect the experiences of Africana peoples and addresses four related criteria (e.g., defend, disseminate, generate, preserve new knowledge) utilizing various means of examination from an assortment of disciplines (e.g., conceptual history, economics, political science, sociology).[1]

Interpretative Analysis Edit

Charles H. Wesley developed the research method of Interpretative Analysis, which utilizes a structural or cultural system to gather, analyze, and interpret data.[1]

Kawaida Theory Edit

 
Maulana Karenga, United States

Maulana Karenga drew from the concept of Nguzo Saba to develop his research method, known as Kawaida Theory.[1] Seven factors (e.g., creative production, ethos, history, religion, economic organization, political organization, social organization) are utilized to examine the Africana experience, which is set within a Pan-Africanist context.[1]

Miseducation of the Negro Edit

Carter G. Woodson developed the research method of and conceptual framework for the Miseducation of the Negro, which analyzes and assesses the history and culture of Africana people, and notates their notable loss of such is due to Africana people being decentered from their own historic and cultural contexts.[1]

Nigrescence Edit

William E. Cross Jr. developed the research method, known as Nigrescence, as a psychological framework; with the framework, he analyzes Africana culture and the behavioral dimensions of its psycho-adaptive traits as well as analyzes a timeline of Black culture (which is composed of five steps).[1]

Optimal Worldview of Psychology Edit

Linda Meyers developed the research method, known as the Optimal Worldview of Psychology, which utilizes investigates the African mind through a cultural framework (e.g., surface-level structure of culture, deep structure of culture); its sub-optimal viewpoint highlights the demerits of an African mind that has an assimilated mentality and its optimal viewpoint corresponds with an African mind that has an Africana mentality.[1]

Paradigm of Unity Edit

Abdul Alkalimat developed the research method known as the Paradigm of Unity, which has a considerable focus on relationships between social classes, via Marxist analysis, and utilizes gender as a determining factor as well as utilizes an undefined notion of Afrocentricity.[1][89]

Shared Authority Edit

Michael Frisch developed the research method, known as Shared Authority, to investigate orature, which recognizes the personhood (e.g., subject, agency) and experiences of the Africana individual.[1] Through this methodological recognition, information that may not have been captured in prior publications is able to be optimally acquired.[1]

Social Legitimacy Edit

Winston Van Horn developed a research method and methodological framework (composed of three steps), known as Social Legitimacy, which analyzes the experiences of Africana peoples and Africana phenomena in their political and sociological contexts.[1]

Two Cradle Theory Edit

 
Cheikh Anta Diop, Senegal

Cheikh Anta Diop drew from anthropology, archaeology, history, and sociology to develop a research method and cultural metric, known as Two Cradle Theory, to assess the differences between African and European cultures – between what are characterized and viewed as the southern cradle and the northern cradle.[1]

Ujimaa Edit

James L. Conyers, Jr. drew from the concept of Nguzo Saba to develop the research method known as Ujimaa; the methodological framework draws from philosophy, sociology, and conceptual history, with the understanding that culture is utilized to analyze and assess Pan-Africanist phenomena from around the world, and is utilized to analyze social responsibility and the work of the collective.[1]

Recent challenges and criticisms Edit

One of the major setbacks with Black studies programs or departments is that there is a lack of financial resources available to students and faculty.[90] Many universities and colleges around the United States provided Black studies programs with small budgets and, therefore, it is difficult for the department to purchase materials and hire staff. Due to the budget allocated to Black studies being limited, some faculty are jointly appointed, therefore, causing faculty to leave their home disciplines to teach a discipline with which they may not be familiar. Budgetary issues make it difficult for Black studies programs and departments to function and to promote themselves.[91]

Racism, perpetrated by many administrators, is alleged to hinder the institutionalization of Black studies at major universities.[90] As with the case of UC Berkeley, most of the Black studies programs across the country were instituted because of the urging and demanding of black students to create the program. In many instances, black students also called for the increased enrollment of black students and financial assistance to these students.[90] Also seen in the case of UC Berkeley is the constant demand to have such a program, but place the power of control in the hands of black people. The idea was that Black studies could not be "realistic" if it were taught by someone who was not accustomed to the black experience. On many campuses, directors of Black studies have little to no autonomy—they do not have the power to hire or grant tenure to faculty. On many campuses, an overall lack of respect for the discipline has caused instability for the students and for the program.

In the past thirty years, there has been a steady decline of Black studies scholars.[90]

Universities and colleges with Black studies departments, programs, and courses Edit

Brazil

Canada

Caribbean

Colombia

Ecuador

  • Simón Bolívar Andean University[12]

United Kingdom

United States

Venezuela

  • Universidad Politécnica Territorial de Barlovento Argelia Laya[13]

Universities with Ph.D. programs in Black studies Edit

Prominent academics in Black studies Edit

Scholarly and academic journals Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Conyers, James L. Jr. (October 15, 2018). "Research Methods In Africana Studies". Africana Methodology: A Social Study of Research, Triangulation and Meta-theory. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 201–204. ISBN 9781527519404.
  2. ^ Dagbovie, Pero Gaglo (2007). The Early Black History Movement, Carter G. Woodson, and Lorenzo Johnston Greene. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-07435-6.
  3. ^ Kelly, Jason (November–December 2010). "Lorenzo Dow Turner, PhD'26". The University of Chicago® Magazine. Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect (1949) ... was considered not only the defining work of Gullah language and culture but also the beginning of a new field, Black studies. 'Until then it was pretty much thought that all of the African knowledge and everything had been erased by slavery. Turner showed that was not true,' [curator Alcione] Amos says. 'He was a pioneer. He was the first one to make the connections between African Americans and their African past.
  4. ^ Cotter, Holland (September 2, 2010). "A Language Explorer Who Heard Echoes of Africa". The New York Times. Turner published 'Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect,' a book that would help pave the way for the field of African-American studies in the 1960s.
  5. ^ a b Andrews, Kehinde (December 2020). "Blackness, Empire and migration: How Black Studies transforms the curriculum". Area. 52 (4): 701–707. doi:10.1111/area.12528. S2CID 151178582.
  6. ^ a b Andrews, Kehinde (September 1, 2018). "The Black Studies Movement in Britain: Becoming an Institution, Not Institutionalised". In Arday, Jason; Mirza, Heidi Safia (eds.). Dismantling Race in Higher Education. Springer International Publishing. pp. 271–287. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-60261-5_15. ISBN 9783319602615. S2CID 158719176.
  7. ^ a b c d Teelucksingh, Jerome (September 29, 2017). "Academic Revolution: Black Studies". Civil Rights in America and the Caribbean, 1950s–2010s. Springer International Publishing. p. 31. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-67456-8_3. ISBN 9783319674568. S2CID 166000160.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Nascimento, Elisa Larkin (April 13, 2021). "The Ram's Horns: Reflections on the Legacy of Abdias Nascimento". Journal of Black Studies. 52 (6): 9. doi:10.1177/00219347211006484. S2CID 234812096.
  9. ^ a b c d Barnstead, John A. (November 9, 2007). "Black Canadian Studies as the Cutting Edge of Change: Revisioning Pushkin, Rethinking Pushkinology". Journal of Black Studies. 38 (3): 367–368. doi:10.1177/0021934707306571. JSTOR 40034385. S2CID 144613740.
  10. ^ a b c d e Carillo, Mónica (2008). "Academic Studies On People Of African Descent In The Americas: Debate Between The Americas". International Journal of Africana Studies. 14 (1): 248–254.
  11. ^ a b c d e Carillo, Mónica (2008). "African Diaspora Studies, African Americans". International Journal of Africana Studies. 14 (1): 255–260.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Johnson, Ethan (October 2014). "Afro-Ecuadorian Educational Movement: Racial Oppression, Its Origins and Oral Tradition" (PDF). Journal of Pan African Studies. 7 (4): 122–123. S2CID 141610274.
  13. ^ a b c d Brown-Vincent, Layla Dalal Zanele Sekou (2016). "We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting for: Pan-African Consciousness Raising and Organizing in the United States and Venezuela" (PDF). Duke University. pp. 125, 127. S2CID 157727663.
  14. ^ Zeleza, Paul Tiyambe (25 Feb 2011). "Building intellectual bridges: from African studies and African American studies to Africana studies in the United States". Journal of Black Studies. 24 (2): 17. doi:10.21825/af.v24i2.5000. S2CID 155291097.
  15. ^ Reid-Merritt, Patricia (May 7, 2009). "Defining Ourselves: Name Calling in Black Studies". Journal of Black Studies. 40 (1): 80–81. doi:10.1177/0021934709335136. JSTOR 40282621. S2CID 143530857.
  16. ^ Reid-Merritt, Patricia (September 2009). "Defining Ourselves One Name, One Discipline?". Journal of Black Studies. 40 (1): 6. doi:10.1177/0021934709335130. S2CID 144557289.
  17. ^ Karenga, Maulana (2018). "Founding the First PhD in Black Studies: A Sankofa Remembrance and Critical Assessment of Its Significance". Journal of Black Studies. 49 (6): 579. doi:10.1177/0021934718797317. S2CID 150088166.
  18. ^ Reid-Merritt, Patricia (2018). "Temple University's African American Studies PhD Program @ 30: Assessing the Asante Affect". Journal of Black Studies. 49 (6): 559. doi:10.1177/0021934718786221. S2CID 150164309.
  19. ^ Karenga, Maulana (May 20, 2009). "Names and Notions of Black Studies: Issues of Roots, Range, and Relevance". Journal of Black Studies. 40 (1): 45–46. doi:10.1177/0021934709335134. JSTOR 40282619. S2CID 144854972.
  20. ^ Christian, Mark (May 1, 2006). "Black Studies in the 21st Century: Longevity Has Its Place". Journal of Black Studies. 36 (5): 698–719. doi:10.1177/0021934705285939. JSTOR 40026680. S2CID 144986768.
  21. ^ Conyers, James L. Jr. (May 1, 2004). "The Evolution Of Africology: An Afrocentric Appraisal" (PDF). Journal of Black Studies. 34 (5): 640–652. doi:10.1177/0021934703259257. JSTOR 3180921. S2CID 145790776.
  22. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (10 Aug 2020). "Africology, Afrocentricity, and What Remains to Be Done". The Black Scholar. 50 (3): 48. doi:10.1080/00064246.2020.1780859. S2CID 221097874.
  23. ^ Dawkins, Marvin P.; Braddock II, Jomills Henry; Theune, Felecia; Gilbert, Shelby (29 July 2021). "The Status of Black Studies at Public Institutions After the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Academic Scandal". Journal of African American Studies. 25 (3): 5. doi:10.1007/s12111-021-09547-1. S2CID 238821709.
  24. ^ [14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23]
  25. ^ Mazama, Ama (May 6, 2009). "Naming and Defining: A Critical Link". Journal of Black Studies. 40 (1): 65–76. doi:10.1177/0021934709335135. JSTOR 40282620. S2CID 142081339.
  26. ^ Okafor, Victor Oguejiofor (March 2014). "Africology, Black Studies, African American Studies, Africana Studies, or African World Studies? What's so Important about a Given Name?" (PDF). The Journal of Pan African Studies. 6 (7): 218–219. S2CID 140735927.
  27. ^ Diaz Casas, Maria Camila; Velazquez, Maria Elisa (2017). "Afro-Mexican studies: a historiographical and anthropological review". Tabula Rasa. 27: 221–248. doi:10.25058/20112742.450. ISSN 1794-2489. S2CID 192255238.
  28. ^ a b Robert L. Harris Jr. (2004). "The Intellectual and Institutional Development of Africana Studies" (PDF). In Jacqueline Bobo; Cynthia Hudley; Claudine Michel (eds.). The Black Studies Reader. Routledge. p. 15. doi:10.4324/9780203491348. ISBN 9780203491348. S2CID 211644148.
  29. ^ DeMuth, Jerry; "Fannie Lou Hamer: Tired of Being Sick and Tired", The Nation, June 1, 1964, 548–551.
  30. ^ a b c d Taylor, Ula (2010). "Origins of African American Studies at UC-Berkeley". Western Journal of Black Studies. 34 (2): 256–257. S2CID 141223846.
  31. ^ a b "Free Speech Café Mural". Moffit Library (University of California, Berkeley).
  32. ^ a b "EOP Offers Aid". Daily Californian. October 19, 1970.
  33. ^ "Racial, ethnic minorities 7.02 percent of Cal Students". California Monthly (Editorial). July–August 1966.
  34. ^ "Negro Group Afro-American Rally Will Oppose SDS", Daily Californian, Editorial, October 26, 1966.
  35. ^ a b "Afro-American Studies Proposal", Daily Californian, Editorial, March 4, 1969.
  36. ^ "Search results for Las Positas College Library". WorldCat. Retrieved December 12, 2019.
  37. ^ Barlow, William; Shapiro, Peter (1971). An End to Silence: The San Francisco State Student Movement in the '60s. New York: Pegasus. S2CID 142356551.
  38. ^ "African & African American Studies – Stanford University". Stanford University.
  39. ^ "History of the Department". Department of Black Studies, University of California – Santa Barbara.
  40. ^ Martin, Douglas; "Robert A. Dahl Dies at 98; Defined Politics and Power", The New York Times, February 8, 2014.
  41. ^ . S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Syracuse University. Archived from the original on October 4, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  42. ^ a b Ruffin II, Herb (November 22, 2010). "Department of African American Studies History". Syracuse University.
  43. ^ Fenderson, Jonathan (2009). "The Black Studies Tradition and the Mappings of Our Common Intellectual Project". Western Journal of Black Studies. 33 (1): 46–58. S2CID 142090553.
  44. ^ Curry, Tommy J. (2011). "On Derelict and Method The Methodological Crisis of African-American Philosophy's Study of African-Descended Peoples under an Integrationist Milieu". Radical Philosophy Review. 14 (2): 153. doi:10.5840/radphilrev201114216. S2CID 146188329.
  45. ^ Gordon, Lewis R. (November 17, 2015). "African American Philosophy, Race, and the Geography of Reason". Not Only the Master's Tools African American Studies in Theory and Practice. Taylor & Francis. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-59451-147-9. S2CID 142164186.
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Conyers, James L. Jr. (May 1, 2004). "The Evolution Of Africology: An Afrocentric Appraisal" (PDF). Journal of Black Studies. 34 (5): 643–644, 646–648. doi:10.1177/0021934703259257. JSTOR 3180921. S2CID 145790776.
  47. ^ a b c d e Asante, Molefi Kete (2008). "The Pursuit of Africology: On the Creation and Sustaining of Black Studies". International Journal of Africana Studies. 14 (1): 317–328. doi:10.4135/9781412982696.N22. ISBN 9780761928409. S2CID 132662366.
  48. ^ a b Mazama, Ama (2021). "Africology and the Question of Disciplinary Language". Journal of Black Studies. 52 (5): 450. doi:10.1177/0021934721996431. S2CID 234870652.
  49. ^ a b c d Shefferman, David Adam (August 2006). Displacing Magic: Afro-Cuban Studies and the Production of Santería, 1933–1956 (Thesis). University of North Carolina. pp. v, 6, 93, 182. doi:10.17615/60mt-1x20. S2CID 190944973.
  50. ^ Valdez, Juan R. (Jan 31, 2011). "Pedro Henríquez Ureña and the Whitening of Dominican Identity". Tracing Dominican Identity: The Writings of Pedro Henríquez Ureña. Springer. p. 158. doi:10.1057/9780230117211_6. ISBN 978-0-230-11721-1. S2CID 163716448.
  51. ^ Lipski, John M. (1994). "A New Perspective on Afro-Dominican Spanish: the Haitian Contribution" (PDF). Research Paper Series. University of New Mexico. 26: 1. S2CID 160357833.
  52. ^ McGee, Adam (2008). "Constructing Africa: Authenticity and Gine in Haitian Vodou" (PDF). Journal of Haitian Studies. 14 (2): 36. JSTOR 41715187. S2CID 169669971.
  53. ^ Pamphile, Leon D. (2001). "Acknowledgments". Haitians and African Americans: A Heritage of Tragedy and Hope. University Press of Florida. p. xiii. ISBN 0-8130-2119-7. S2CID 96464990.
  54. ^ Franco, Marina Reyes (March 2019). "Atlas San Juan: Afro-Caribbean Connection". Art in America. S2CID 171872259.
  55. ^ Guzman, Will (2019). "Scripts of Blackness: Race, Cultural Nationalism, and U.S. Colonialism in Puerto Rico". Afro-Hispanic Review. 38 (1): 233. ISSN 0278-8969.
  56. ^ Garcia, Jessica J. "Do Female Legislators Represent All Women And Marginalized Groups? A Study Of Two Latin American Legislatures" (PDF). Texas A&M University. pp. 29, 36.
  57. ^ Bryant, Sherwin K.; Vinson III, Ben; O'Toole, Rachel Sarah (Feb 15, 2012). "Introduction". Africans to Spanish America: Expanding the Diaspora. University of Illinois Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-252-09371-5. S2CID 160329038.
  58. ^ Mason-Montero, A. Erin (September 10, 2010). "The Construction of Blackness in Honduran Cultural Production". University of New Mexico. pp. 113–114. S2CID 135173660.
  59. ^ Redwood, John (November 2000). Race and Poverty: Interagency Consultation on Afro-Latin Americans (PDF). Sector Management Unit for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development of the World Bank's Latin America and Caribbean Regional Office. p. 23.
  60. ^ Rebagliati, Lucas (2014). "¿Una esclavitud benigna? La historiografía sobre la naturaleza de la esclavitud rioplatense" (PDF). Andes. 25 (2): 29. ISSN 0327-1676. S2CID 143187725.
  61. ^ Saunders, Tanya L.; Ipólito, Jessica; Rodrigues, Mariana Meriqui; Souza, Simone Brandão (2020). "Kuírlombo Epistemologies Introduction to the CRGS Special Issue Genders and Sexualities in Brazil" (PDF). Caribbean Review of Gender Studies (14): 3. ISSN 1995-1108.
  62. ^ a b Marfull, Montserrat Arre; Vergara, Paulina Barrenechea (2017). "From denial to diversification: the intramural and extramural aspects of Afro-Chilean studies". Tabula Rasa. 27: 129–160. doi:10.25058/20112742.447. ISSN 1794-2489. S2CID 165774774.
  63. ^ a b c d e Velandia, Pedro J.; Restrepo, Edward (2007). "Afro-Colombian studies: balance of a heterogeneous field". Tabula Rasa (27). doi:10.25058/20112742.448. ISSN 1794-2489. S2CID 193998215.
  64. ^ a b c Arocha, Jaime; et al. (2007). "Elegguá y respeto por los afrocolombianos: una experiencia con docentes de Bogotá en torno a la Cátedra de Estudios Afrocolombianos". Revista de Estudios Sociales (27): 94–105. doi:10.7440/res27.2007.06. S2CID 142662429.
  65. ^ a b Rojas, Axel (2008). "¿Etnoeducación o educación intercultural? Estudio de caso sobre la licenciatura en Etnoeducación de la Universidad del Cauca". Diversidad Cultural e Interculturalidad en Educación Superior. Experiencias en América Latina. IESALC-UNESCO. p. 233. ISBN 978-980-7175-00-5.
  66. ^ "Codigos De Dependencias: Programas Academicos" (PDF). Universidad del Cauca. p. 4.
  67. ^ Martínez, Axelalejandro Rojas (2004). "Introducción: Sobre Las Formas Sociales De Recordar". Si No Fuera Por Los Quince Negros Memoria Colectiva De La Gente Negra De Tierradentro. Editorial Universidad del Cauca. p. 20. ISBN 958-9475-49-3.
  68. ^ a b "Master of Afro-Colombian Studies". Pontifical Javeriana University.
  69. ^ a b c "Overseas Capacity Building Initiatives". U.S. Department of State. 21 May 2018.
  70. ^ Lipski, John M. (December 2008). "Afro-Paraguayan Spanish: The Negation of Non-Existence" (PDF). Journal of Pan African Studies. 2 (7): 10. S2CID 142520037.
  71. ^ Maass, Claire K. "A Collaborative Bioarchaeology Of African Diaspora And Enslavement In Colonial Cañete, Peru" (PDF). Stanford University. p. 272.
  72. ^ a b "1st International Meeting: Studies of the African Diaspora in Peru and Latin America". LUNDU.
  73. ^ "1st International Meeting of African Diaspora Studies". Universidad Complutense Madrid.
  74. ^ Rivera, Daniela (September 8, 2020). "Living within the Collapsed Myth of Multiculturalism: Afro-descendent Women during Covid-19". ReVista: Harvard Review of Latin America.
  75. ^ Schmidt, Bettina E. (2007). "Afro-Peruvian Representations in and around Cusco: a Discussion about the Existence or Non-existence of an Afro-Andean Culture in Peru" (PDF). Indiana (24). doi:10.18441/ind.v24i0.191-209. ISSN 2365-2225. S2CID 55136251.
  76. ^ "The ALARI First Continental Conference on Afro-Latin American Studies". Harvard University.
  77. ^ Rocamora, Martín (April 6, 2018). "Computational Methods for Percussion Music Analysis: The Afro-Uruguayan Candombe Drumming as a Case Study" (PDF). Universidad de la República. p. 11. ISSN 1688-2784.
  78. ^ a b c Brar, Dhanveer Singh; Sharma, Ashwani (2020). "What is this 'Black' in Black Studies?: From Black British Cultural Studies to Black Critical Thought in U.K. Arts and Higher Education". New Formations. 2020 (99): 88, 107. doi:10.3898/NewF:99.05.2019. ISSN 0950-2378. S2CID 219148972.
  79. ^ a b Monteiro-Ferreira, Ana (2009). "Afrocentricity and the Western Paradigm". Journal of Black Studies. 40 (2): 333–335. doi:10.1177/0021934708314801. JSTOR 40282637. S2CID 144475771.
  80. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (December 17, 2007). An Afrocentric Manifesto: Toward an African Renaissance. Polity. p. 17. ISBN 9780745641027. S2CID 190415914.
  81. ^ Alkebulan, Adisa A. (January 2007). "Defending The Paradigm". Journal of Black Studies. Sage Publications, Inc. 37 (3): 411, 413–417. doi:10.1177/0021934706290082. JSTOR 40034783. S2CID 143557323.
  82. ^ Pellerin, Marquita (June 2012). "Benefits of Afrocentricity in Exploring Social Phenomena: Understanding Afrocentricity as a Social Science Methodology" (PDF). The Journal of Pan African Studies. 5 (4): 149–160. S2CID 18435352.
  83. ^ a b Asante, Molefi Kete; Mazama, Ama; Cérol, Marie-José (2005). "Temple Circle". Encyclopedia of Black Studies. SAGE. p. 445. doi:10.4135/9781412952538. ISBN 9781452265445. S2CID 141533226.
  84. ^ a b Karenga, Maulana (2018). "Founding the First PhD in Black Studies: A Sankofa Remembrance and Critical Assessment of Its Significance". Journal of Black Studies. SAGE Journals. 49 (6): 587. doi:10.1177/0021934718797317. S2CID 150088166.
  85. ^ Asante, Molefi Kete (October 19, 2010). Afrocentricity and Africology: Theory and Practice in the Discipline. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 48–50. ISBN 9780748686971. JSTOR 10.3366/j.ctt1g0b6m8.
  86. ^ Myers, Joshua (2015). "Racial Economies of Academia: Africana Studies as Arbiter". Journal of African American Studies. 19 (1): 85. doi:10.1007/s12111-014-9291-8. JSTOR 43525579. S2CID 144208208.
  87. ^ a b Wint, Keisha M.; Opara, Ijeoma; Gordon, Rahjaun; Brooms, Derrick R. (2021). "Countering Educational Disparities Among Black Boys and Black Adolescent Boys from Pre-K to High School: A Life Course-Intersectional Perspective". The Urban Review. 54 (2): 183–206. doi:10.1007/s11256-021-00616-z. PMC 8450170. PMID 34565917. S2CID 237582266.
  88. ^ a b c d Bryan, Nathaniel (January 30, 2020). "Remembering Tamir Rice and Other Black Boy Victims: Imagining Black PlayCrit Literacies Inside and Outside Urban Literacy Education". Urban Education. 56 (5): 12, 14–16, 20. doi:10.1177/0042085920902250. S2CID 213465389.
  89. ^ Alkalimat, Abdul. "Toward A Paradigm of Unity in Black Studies", in Nathaniel Norment, Jr. (ed.),The African American Studies Reader, Durham, North Carolina: Carolina Academic Press, 2001.
  90. ^ a b c d Phillips, M. (June 22, 2010). "Black Studies: Challenges and Critical Debates". Western Journal of Black Studies. 34 (2): 273–274. S2CID 140445922.
  91. ^ Patton, Stacey (April 12, 2012). "Black Studies: 'Swaggering into the Future'". The Chronicle of Higher Education Almanac. ISSN 0009-5982. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  92. ^ "Minor in Africana Studies". Brock University.
  93. ^ "Black Studies curriculum report". Concordia University.
  94. ^ "Black African Diaspora (Minor)". Dalhousie University.
  95. ^ "Introduction of a BA Minor/General in Black Studies". Queen's University.
  96. ^ "Black Canadian Studies". York University.
  97. ^ "Black Studies". Birmingham City University.
  98. ^ "Duke African & African American Studies". Duke University.
  99. ^ "Africology and African American Studies". Eastern Michigan University.
  100. ^ "Department of Africana Studies". Kent State University. May 7, 2022.
  101. ^ "Department of Africana Studies". Oberlin College & Conservatory. October 24, 2016.
  102. ^ "African American Studies". Pennsylvania State University. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  103. ^ "Black Studies Department". Portland State University.
  104. ^ "SJSU Department of African-American Studies". San Jose State University.
  105. ^ "Department of Africana Studies". State University of New York at Albany.
  106. ^ "Home – UCI African American Studies". University of California Irvine.
  107. ^ "Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies". University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  108. ^ "Department of Africana Studies". University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
  109. ^ . University of North Carolina Greensboro. Archived from the original on May 9, 2016. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  110. ^ "Black Studies PhD". University of Nottingham.
  111. ^ . Pennsylvania State University. Archived from the original on April 26, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
  112. ^ . University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on July 2, 2012. Retrieved July 15, 2012.
  113. ^ . African and African Diaspora Studies, University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original on March 31, 2014. Retrieved March 30, 2014.

Further reading Edit

  • Alkalimat, Abdul (2021). The History of Black Studies. London: Pluto Press. ISBN 9780745344225.
  • Biondi, Martha. The Black Revolution on Campus. University of California Press, 2014.
  • Ferguson, Stephen. Philosophy of African American Studies: Nothing Left of Blackness. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015.
  • Higgins, Andrew Stone. Higher Education for All: Racial Inequality, Cold War Liberalism, and the California Master Plan. University of North Carolina Press, 2023.
  • Kendi, Ibram X. The Black Campus Movement: Black Students and the Racial Reconstitution of Higher Education, 1965–1972. Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.
  • Rooks, Noliwe M. White Money/Black Power: The Surprising History of African American Studies and the Crisis of Race in Higher Education. Beacon Press, 2007.


black, studies, confused, with, african, studies, africana, studies, with, nationally, specific, terms, such, african, american, studies, black, canadian, studies, interdisciplinary, academic, field, that, primarily, focuses, study, history, culture, politics,. Not to be confused with African studies Black studies or Africana studies with nationally specific terms such as African American studies and Black Canadian studies is an interdisciplinary academic field that primarily focuses on the study of the history culture and politics of the peoples of the African diaspora and Africa The field includes scholars of African American Afro Canadian Afro Caribbean Afro Latino Afro European Afro Asian African Australian and African literature history politics and religion as well as those from disciplines such as sociology anthropology cultural studies psychology education and many other disciplines within the humanities and social sciences The field also uses various types of research methods 1 Map of Africa and the African diaspora throughout the worldIntensive academic efforts to reconstruct African American history began in the late 19th century W E B Du Bois The Suppression of the African Slave trade to the United States of America 1896 Among the pioneers in the first half of the 20th century were Carter G Woodson 2 Herbert Aptheker Melville Herskovits and Lorenzo Dow Turner 3 4 Programs and departments of Black studies in the United States were first created in the 1960s and 1970s as a result of inter ethnic student and faculty activism at many universities sparked by a five month strike for Black studies at San Francisco State University In February 1968 San Francisco State hired sociologist Nathan Hare to coordinate the first Black studies program and write a proposal for the first Department of Black Studies the department was created in September 1968 and gained official status at the end of the five month strike in the spring of 1969 The creation of programs and departments in Black studies was a common demand of protests and sit ins by minority students and their allies who felt that their cultures and interests were underserved by the traditional academic structures citation needed Black studies departments programs and courses were also created in the United Kingdom 5 6 the Caribbean 7 Brazil 8 Canada 9 Colombia 10 11 Ecuador 12 and Venezuela 13 Contents 1 Names of the academic discipline 2 History 2 1 Americas 2 1 1 North America 2 1 1 1 Canada 2 1 1 2 Mexico 2 1 1 3 United States 2 1 2 Caribbean 2 1 2 1 Cuba 2 1 2 2 Dominican Republic 2 1 2 3 Haiti 2 1 2 4 Puerto Rico 2 1 3 Central America 2 1 3 1 Costa Rica 2 1 3 2 Guatemala 2 1 3 3 Honduras 2 1 3 4 Panama 2 1 4 South America 2 1 4 1 Argentina 2 1 4 2 Brazil 2 1 4 3 Chile 2 1 4 4 Colombia 2 1 4 5 Ecuador 2 1 4 6 Paraguay 2 1 4 7 Peru 2 1 4 8 Uruguay 2 1 4 9 Venezuela 2 2 Europe 2 2 1 United Kingdom 3 Research methods 3 1 African Self Consciousness 3 2 Africana Womanism 3 3 Afrocentricity 3 4 Black Male Studies 3 5 Blues Culture 3 6 Double Consciousness 3 7 Four Basic Tasks of the Black Studies Scholar 3 8 Interpretative Analysis 3 9 Kawaida Theory 3 10 Miseducation of the Negro 3 11 Nigrescence 3 12 Optimal Worldview of Psychology 3 13 Paradigm of Unity 3 14 Shared Authority 3 15 Social Legitimacy 3 16 Two Cradle Theory 3 17 Ujimaa 4 Recent challenges and criticisms 5 Universities and colleges with Black studies departments programs and courses 6 Universities with Ph D programs in Black studies 7 Prominent academics in Black studies 8 Scholarly and academic journals 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingNames of the academic discipline EditThe academic discipline is known by various names 24 Mazama 2009 expounds In the appendix to their recently published Handbook of Black Studies Asante and Karenga note that the naming of the discipline remains unsettled Asante amp Karenga 2006 p 421 This remark came as a result of an extensive survey of existing Black Studies programs which led to the editors identifying a multiplicity of names for the discipline Africana Studies African and African Diaspora Studies African Black World Studies Pan African Studies Africology African and New World Studies African Studies Major Black World Studies Latin American Studies Latin American and Caribbean Studies Black and Hispanic Studies Africana and Latin American Studies African and African American Studies Black and Hispanic Studies African American Studies Afro American Studies African American Education Program Afro Ethnic Studies American Ethnic Studies American Studies African American Emphasis Black Studies Comparative American Cultures Ethnic Studies Programs Race and Ethnic Studies 25 Okafor 2014 clarifies What appears to drive these distinctive names is a combination of factors the composite expertise of their faculty their faculty s areas of specialization and the worldviews of the faculty that make up each unit By worldview I am referring to the question of whether the constituent faculty in a given setting manifests any or a combination of the following visions of our project a domestic vision of black studies that sees it as focusing exclusively on the affairs of only United States African Americans who descended from the generation of enslaved Africans a diasporic vision of black studies that is inclusive of the affairs of all of African descendants in the New World that is the Americas North America South America and the Caribbean a globalistic vision of the black studies that is a viewpoint that thinks in terms of an African world a world encompassing African origin communities that are scattered across the globe and the continent of Africa itself 26 History EditAmericas Edit North America Edit Canada Edit In 1991 the national chair for Black Canadian Studies which was named after James Robinson Johnston was created at Dalhousie University for the purpose of advancing the development and presence of Black studies in Canada 9 Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin was studied by the Black Canadian Studies chairman John Barnstead 9 Mexico Edit Through development of the publication The black population in Mexico 1946 Gonzalo Aguirre Beltran made way for the development of Afro Mexican studies 27 United States Edit nbsp Carter G Woodson United StatesA specific aim and objective of this interdisciplinary field of study is to help students broaden their knowledge of the worldwide human experience by presenting an aspect of that experience the Black Experience which has traditionally been neglected or distorted by educational institutions Additionally this course of study strives to introduce an Afro centric perspective including phenomena related to the culture According to Robert Harris Jr an emeritus professor of history at the Africana Studies Research Center at Cornell there have been four stages in the development of Africana studies from the 1890s until the Second World War numerous organizations developed to analyze the culture and history of African peoples In the second stage the focus turned to African Americans In the third stage a bevy of newly conceived academic programs were established as Black studies 28 In the United States the 1960s is rightfully known as the Turbulent Sixties During this time period the nation experienced great social unrest as residents challenged the social order in radical ways Many movements took place in the United States during this time period including women s rights movement labor rights movement and the civil rights movement 29 The students at the University of California Berkeley UC Berkeley were witnesses to the Civil Rights Movement and by 1964 they were thrust into activism 30 On October 1 1964 Jack Weinberg a former graduate student was sitting at a table where the Congress of Racial Equality CORE was distributing literature encouraging students to protest against institutional racism Police asked Weinberg to produce his ID to confirm that he was a student but he refused to do so and was therefore arrested In support of Weinberg 3 000 students surrounded the police vehicle and even used the car as a podium from where they spoke about their right to engage in political protest on campus 31 This impromptu demonstration was the first of many protests culminating in the institutionalization of Black studies Two months later students at UC Berkeley organized a sit in at the Sproul Hall Administration building to protest an unfair rule that prohibited all political clubs from fundraising excluding the democrat and republican clubs 30 Police arrested 800 students Students formed a freedom of speech movement and Mario Savio became its poetic leader stating that freedom of speech was something that represents the very dignity of what a human is 31 The Students for a Democratic Society SDS a well connected and organized club hosted a conference entitled Black Power and its Challenges 30 Black leaders who were directly tied to then ongoing civil rights movements spoke to a predominantly white audience about their respective goals and challenges These leaders included Stokely Carmichael of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee SNCC and James Bevel of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference SCLC Educational conferences like that of the SDS forced the university to take some measures to correct the most obvious racial issue on campus the sparse black student population 32 In 1966 the school held its first official racial and ethnic survey in which it was discovered that the American Negro represented 1 02 of the university population 33 In 1968 the university instituted its Educational Opportunity Program EOP facilitated the increased minority student enrollment and offered financial aid to minority students with high potential 32 By 1970 there were 1 400 EOP students As the minority student population increased tension between activists clubs and minorities rose because minorities wanted the reigns of the movement that affected them directly One student asserted that it was backward to educate white people about Black Power when many black people are still uneducated on the matter 34 The members of the Afro American Student Union AASU proposed an academic department called Black Studies in April 1968 30 We demand a program of Black Studies a program that will be of and for black people We demand to be educated realistically and that no form of education which attempts to lie to us or otherwise mis educate us will be accepted 35 AASU members asserted The young people of America are the inheritors of what is undoubtedly one of the most challenging and threatening set of social circumstances that has ever fallen upon a generation of young people in history 35 Everyone learns differently and teaching only one way is a cause for students to not want to learn which eventually leads to dropping out All students have their specialties but teachers don t use that to help them in their learning community Instead they use a broad way of teaching just to get the information out 36 AASU used these claims to gain ground on their proposal to create a Black studies department Nathan Hare a sociology professor at San Francisco State University created what was known as the A Conceptual Proposal for Black Studies and AASU used Hare s framework to create a set of criteria 37 A Black studies program was implemented by the UC Berkeley administration on January 13 1969 In 1969 St Clair Drake was named the first chair of the degree granting Program in African and Afro American Studies at Stanford University 38 Many Black studies programs and departments and programs around the nation were created in subsequent years citation needed At University of California Santa Barbara similarly student activism led to the establishment of a Black studies department amidst great targeting and discrimination of student leaders of color on the University of California campuses In the Autumn season of 1968 black students from UCSB joined the national civil rights movement to end racial segregation and exclusion of Black history and studies from college campuses Triggered by the insensitivity of the administration and general campus life they occupied North Hall and presented the administration with a set of demands Such efforts led to the eventual creation of the Black studies department and the Center for Black Studies 39 Similar activism was happening outside of California At Yale University a committee headed by political scientist Robert Dahl recommended establishing an undergraduate major in African American culture one of the first of such at an American university 40 When Ernie Davis who was from Syracuse University became the first African American to win the Heisman Trophy in college football it renewed debates about race on college campuses in the country Inspired by the Davis win civil rights movement and nationwide student activism in 1969 black and white students led by the Student African American Society SAS at Syracuse University marched in front of the building at Newhouse and demanded for Black studies to be taught at Syracuse 41 It existed as an independent underfunded non degree offering program from 1971 until 1979 42 In 1979 the program became the Department of African American Studies offering degrees within the College of Arts and Sciences 42 Unlike the other stages Black studies grew out of mass rebellions of black college students and faculty in search of a scholarship of change The fourth stage the new name Africana studies involved a theoretical elaboration of the discipline of Black studies according to African cultural reclamation and disparate tenets in the historical and cultural issues of Africanity within a professorial interpretation of the interactions between these fields and college administrations 28 Thus Africana studies reflected the mellowing and institutionalization of the Black studies movement in the course of its integration into the mainstream academic curriculum Black studies and Africana studies differ primarily in that Africana studies focuses on Africanity and the historical and cultural issues of Africa and its descendants while Black studies was designed to deal with the uplift and development of the black African American community in relationship to education and its relevance to the black community The adaptation of the term Africana studies appears to have derived from the encyclopedic work of W E B Du Bois and Carter G Woodson James Turner who was recruited from graduate school at Northwestern on the heels of the student rebellions of 1969 first used the term to describe a global approach to Black studies and name the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell where he acted as the founding director 43 Studia Africana subtitled An International Journal of Africana Studies was published by the Department for African American Studies at the University of Cincinnati in a single issue in 1977 an unrelated journal called Studia Africana is published by the Centro de Estudios Africanos in Barcelona since 1990 The International Journal of Africana Studies ISSN 1056 8689 has been appearing since 1992 published by the National Council for Black Studies Africana philosophy is a part of and developed within the field of Africana studies 44 45 In 1988 and 1990 publications on African American studies were funded by the Ford Foundation and the African American academics who produced the publications used traditional disciplinary orthodoxies from outside of African American studies to analyze and evaluate the boundaries structure and legitimacy of African American studies 46 To the detriment of the field an abundance of research on African American studies has been developed by academics who are not within the discipline of African American studies 46 Rather the academics and the scholarship they have produced about African American studies has been characterized as bearing an Aryan hegemonic worldview 46 Due to a staffing shortage in the field of African American studies academics in the field who are trained in traditional fields carry with them presumptions of the primacy of their field of training s viewpoints which tends to result in the marginalization of the African phenomena that are the subjects of study and even the field of African American studies at large 46 Consequently matters of development of theory as well as the development of historical and African consciousness frequently go overlooked 46 As the focus of African American studies is the study of the African diaspora and Africa including the problems of the African diaspora and Africa this makes the theory of Afrocentricity increasingly relevant 46 The National Council for Black Studies has also recognized the problem of academics who have been trained in fields such as education economics history philosophy political science psychology and sociology fields outside of African American studies and are committed to their disciplinary training yet are not able to recognize the shortcomings of their training as it relates to the field of African American studies that they are entering into 46 Furthermore such academics who would also recognize themselves as experts in the discipline of African American studies would also attempt to assess the legitimacy of Africology done so through analysis based on critical rhetoric rather than based on pensive research 46 Following the Black studies movement and Africana studies movement Molefi Kete Asante identifies the Africological movement as a subsequent academic movement 47 Asante authored the book Afrocentricity in 1980 47 Within the book Asante used the term Afrology as the name for the interdisciplinary field of Black studies and defined it as the Afrocentric study of African phenomena 47 Later Winston Van Horne changed Asante s use of the term Afrology to Africology 47 Asante then went on to use his earlier definition for Afrology as the definition for his newly adopted term Africology 47 Systematic Africology 46 1 which is a research method in the field of Black studies that was developed by Asante 1 utilizes the theory of Afrocentricity to analyze and evaluate African phenomena 46 In an effort to shift Black studies away from its interdisciplinary status toward disciplinary status Asante recommended that Afrocentricity should be the meta paradigm for Black studies and that the new name for Black studies should be Africology this is intended to shift Black studies away from having a topical definition of studying African peoples which is shared with other disciplines toward having a perspectival definition that is unique in how African peoples are studied that is the study of African peoples through a centered perspective which is rooted in and derives from the cultures and experiences of African peoples 48 By doing so as Ama Mazama indicates this should increase how relevant Black studies is and strengthen its disciplinary presence 48 Caribbean Edit Among English speaking countries of the Caribbean scholars educated in the United States and Britain added considerably to the development of Black studies 7 Scholars such as Fitzroy Baptiste Richard Goodridge Elsa Goveia Allister Hinds Rupert Lewis Bernard Marshall James Millette and Alvin Thompson added to the development of Black studies at the University of the West Indies campuses in Barbados Jamaica and Trinidad 7 Cuba Edit During the early 1900s Fernando Ortiz pioneered the emerging field of Afro Cuban studies 49 On January 16 1937 the Society for Afro Cuban Studies was established 49 Afro Cuban Studies Estudios Afrocubanos is the academic journal for the Society for Afro Cuban Studies SEAC Sociedad de Estudios Afrocubanos 49 In 1939 Romulo Lachatanere s academic work appeared in a volume of this journal 49 Dominican Republic Edit In 1967 Carlos Larrazabal Blanco authored Los Negros Y La Esclavitud En Santo Domingo which is considered to be a foundational academic work in Afro Dominican studies 50 Even in areas of the Dominican Republic with many Afro Dominicans and where Afro Dominican culture is predominant there has been an ongoing challenge in Afro Dominican studies to find linguistic evidence of a remnant Afro Dominican language 51 Haiti Edit Lorimer Denis Francois Duvalier and Jean Price Mars as founders of the Bureau of Ethnology and leading figures in the Noirisme movement in Haiti were also influential in the publishing of the foundational Afro Haitian studies journal Les Griots 52 One of the most influential academics in Afro Haitian studies is Rene Piquion 53 Puerto Rico Edit As of 2019 Afro Puerto Rican studies is not offered as a degree program by the University of Puerto Rico 54 Numerous academic publications such as Arrancando Mitos De Raiz Guia Para La Ensenanza Antirracista De La Herencia Africana En Puerto Rico were scholarly works that established Isar Godreau as a leading academic in Afro Puerto Rican Studies 55 Central America Edit Costa Rica Edit The Executive branch created a law to establish a Committee for Afro Costa Rican Studies as one among other laws to increase the level of inclusion of Afro Costa Ricans in Costa Rica 56 Guatemala Edit Christopher H Lutz authored Santiago de Guatemala 1541 1773 which is considered to be one of the foundational literatures of Afro Guatemalan studies 57 Honduras Edit Due to a history of scarce resources and anti black racism Afro Hondurans have largely been excluded from academic publications about Honduras consequently Afro Honduran studies has remained limited in its formal development 58 Panama Edit In March 1980 along with the Panamanian government the Afro Panamanian Studies Center hosted the Second Congress on Black Culture in the Americas 59 South America Edit Argentina Edit Since the 1980s Afro Argentine studies has undergone renewed growth 60 Brazil Edit nbsp Abdias Nascimento BrazilIn 1980 Abdias Nascimento gave a presentation in Panama of his scholarship on Kilombismo at the 2nd Congress of Black Culture in the Americas 8 His scholarship on Kilombismo detailed how the economic and political affairs of Africans throughout the Americas contributed to how they socially organized themselves 61 Afterward Nascimento went back to Brazil and began institutionalization of Africana studies in 1981 8 While at the Pontifical Catholic University of Sao Paulo Nascimento developed the Afro Brazilian Studies and Research Institute IPEAFRO 8 A course for professors was provided by IPEAFRO between 1985 and 1995 8 Chile Edit From the 1920s to the 1950s publications that included the presence of Afro Chileans were not systematized and from the 1960s to the 1980s publications continued to group Afro Chileans with other groups 62 Since the 2000s there has been increasing systematization and a more formal development of Afro Chilean studies along with a greater focus on Afro Chileans and the recovery of Afro Chilean cultural heritage 62 Colombia Edit Scholars such as Rogerio Velasquez Aquiles Escalante Jose Rafael Arboleda and Thomas Price were forerunners in the development of Afro Colombian studies in the 1940s and 1950s 63 In the 1960s as social science programs became incorporated into university institutions contributions from anthropologists and social scientists added to its emergence 63 Following the promulgation of the Colombian Constitution particularly Article 55 in 1991 63 Law 70 in 1993 63 10 11 and Decree 804 by the Ministry of Education in 1995 10 11 the elements for Afro Colombian studies began to come together 63 and historic discrimination of Afro Colombians was able to begin being addressed with the development of national educational content about Afro Colombians and Africa 64 10 11 At the University City of Bogota of the National University of Colombia the Afro Colombian Studies Group developed and established a training program in Afro Colombian studies for primary and secondary school teachers 64 In February 2002 a continuing education diploma program in Afro Colombian studies was developed and began to be offered at the University of Cauca in Belalcazar Caldas 65 66 67 At the Pontifical Xavierian University there is a master s degree program in Afro Colombian studies 68 69 There is also a study abroad program for Afro Colombian students and African American students existing between the Afro Colombian studies program at the Pontifical Xavierian University in Colombia and African American studies programs at historically black colleges and universities in the United States 69 Ecuador Edit Afro Ecuadorians initiated the development of the Center of Afro Ecuadorian Studies in the late 1970s which served as a means of organizing academic questions relating to Afro Ecuadorian identity and history 12 Though it dissolved in the early 1980s by the 1990s organizations that followed in the example of the Center of Afro Ecuadorian Studies ushered in the development of the Afro Ecuadorian Etnoeducacion program at the National High School in Chota Valley Ecuador and a master s degree program in Afro Andean Studies at the Simon Bolivar Andean University UASB in Quito Ecuador 12 With the promulgation of Article 84 of the 1998 Constitution of Ecuador gave formal recognition was given to Afro Ecuadorian Etnoeducacion 12 Juan Garcia who was one of the founders of the Center of Afro Ecuadorian Studies is a leading scholar in Afro Ecuadorian studies and has contributed considerably to the development of the programs in Chota Valley and Quito 12 Paraguay Edit In 1971 Carvalho Neto authored Afro Paraguayan studies 70 Peru Edit While the presence of Afro Peruvian studies may not be strong in Peru 10 11 the body of scholarship is undergoing growth 71 There have been efforts to organize the elements of Afro Peruvian studies in Peru such as by LUNDU which organized an international conference for Afro Peruvian studies in Peru 72 on November 13 2009 73 During this LUNDU organized conference Luis Rocca who co founded the National Afro Peruvian Museum and is also a historian presented on his research regarding Afro Peruvians 72 A university student group focused on Afro Peruvian studies was also created near San Juan de Lurigancho Lima Peru 74 Additionally there has been some scholarship in Afro Peruvian studies developed in the United States 75 and a panel on Afro Peruvian studies at a conference hosted on December 11 2019 by the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research in the United States 76 Uruguay Edit Since 1996 the amount of scholarship of Afro Uruguayan studies has increased as a result of increased global focus on Afro Latin American studies 77 Venezuela Edit The curriculum for Afro Venezuelan studies was developed at Universidad Politecnica Territorial de Barlovento Argelia Laya UPTBAL in Higuerote Barlovento by Alejandro Correa 13 In 2006 Afro Epistemology and African Culture were formally developed as the initial courses for students in this curriculum 13 Europe Edit United Kingdom Edit nbsp Kehinde Andrews United KingdomFollowing the rise and decline of Black British Cultural Studies between the early 1980s and late 1990s Black studies in the United States reinvigorated Black Critical Thought in the United Kingdom 78 Kehinde Andrews who initiated the development of the Black Studies Association in the United Kingdom as well as the development of a course in Black studies at Birmingham City University 78 continues to advocate for the advancement of the presence of Black studies in the United Kingdom 5 6 Research methods EditAfrican Self Consciousness Edit Kobi K K Kambon developed a research method and psychological framework known as African Self Consciousness which analyzes the states and changes of the African mind 1 Africana Womanism Edit Delores P Aldridge developed a research method which analyzes from the viewpoint of black women known as Africana Womanism 1 Rather than the importance of the individual e g needs wants being considered greater than the family unit the importance of the family unit is regarded as greater than the individual 1 Afrocentricity Edit Main article Afrocentricity nbsp Molefi Kete Asante United StatesAfrocentricity is an academic theory and approach to scholarship that seeks to center the experiences and peoples of Africa and the African diaspora within their own historical cultural and sociological contexts 79 80 81 82 First developed as a systematized methodology by Molefi Kete Asante in 1980 he drew inspiration from a number of African and African diaspora intellectuals including Cheikh Anta Diop George James Harold Cruse Ida B Wells Langston Hughes Malcolm X Marcus Garvey and W E B Du Bois 79 The Temple Circle 83 84 also known as the Temple School of Thought 84 Temple Circle of Afrocentricity 85 or Temple School of Afrocentricity 86 was an early group of Africologists during the late 1980s and early 1990s that helped to further develop Afrocentricity which is based on concepts of agency centeredness location and orientation 83 Black Male Studies Edit Main article Black Male Studies Black Male Studies primarily focuses on the study of Black men and boys 87 Its research focus includes the study of Black manhood and Black masculinity and it draws from disciplines such as history philosophy and sociology 87 Black Male Studies uses a Black male centered paradigm designed to critique past and present gender studies publications on Black males as well as centers and contends with the problem of anti Black misandry disdain for Black men and boys 88 Past and present gender studies publications tend to carry assumptions of Black men and boys being criminals and assailants of Black women and white women 88 Consequently past and present gender studies publications tend to contain paradigms theories and narratives that are grounded in anti Black misandry along with a theoretically constructed language of hypermasculinity and tend to be ill equipped at understanding Black males as victims 88 The past and present vulnerability of Black males ranging from rape to sexual abuse to death which tends to be overlooked and downplayed by rhetoric about hypermasculinity underscores the need to develop new language narratives and theories for understanding Black males 88 Blues Culture Edit James B Stewart developed the research method and methodological framework known as Blues Culture which examines the traits e g versatility vibration of Africana culture utilizing various means from an assortment of disciplines e g economics history sociology 1 Double Consciousness Edit nbsp W E B Du Bois United StatesW E B DuBois developed the research method and conceptual framework known as Double Consciousness to analyze how Africana people and phenomena exist in a dual racialized black white world and subsequently develop a dual consciousness 1 Rather than succumb to various forms of external pressure e g assimilation harassment prejudice racism sexism surveillance Africana people discover how to steer through them 1 Four Basic Tasks of the Black Studies Scholar Edit James Turner developed the research method and social scientific framework known as Four Basic Tasks of the Black Studies Scholar which investigates the problems that affect the experiences of Africana peoples and addresses four related criteria e g defend disseminate generate preserve new knowledge utilizing various means of examination from an assortment of disciplines e g conceptual history economics political science sociology 1 Interpretative Analysis Edit Charles H Wesley developed the research method of Interpretative Analysis which utilizes a structural or cultural system to gather analyze and interpret data 1 Kawaida Theory Edit nbsp Maulana Karenga United StatesMaulana Karenga drew from the concept of Nguzo Saba to develop his research method known as Kawaida Theory 1 Seven factors e g creative production ethos history religion economic organization political organization social organization are utilized to examine the Africana experience which is set within a Pan Africanist context 1 Miseducation of the Negro Edit Carter G Woodson developed the research method of and conceptual framework for the Miseducation of the Negro which analyzes and assesses the history and culture of Africana people and notates their notable loss of such is due to Africana people being decentered from their own historic and cultural contexts 1 Nigrescence Edit William E Cross Jr developed the research method known as Nigrescence as a psychological framework with the framework he analyzes Africana culture and the behavioral dimensions of its psycho adaptive traits as well as analyzes a timeline of Black culture which is composed of five steps 1 Optimal Worldview of Psychology Edit Linda Meyers developed the research method known as the Optimal Worldview of Psychology which utilizes investigates the African mind through a cultural framework e g surface level structure of culture deep structure of culture its sub optimal viewpoint highlights the demerits of an African mind that has an assimilated mentality and its optimal viewpoint corresponds with an African mind that has an Africana mentality 1 Paradigm of Unity Edit Abdul Alkalimat developed the research method known as the Paradigm of Unity which has a considerable focus on relationships between social classes via Marxist analysis and utilizes gender as a determining factor as well as utilizes an undefined notion of Afrocentricity 1 89 Shared Authority Edit Michael Frisch developed the research method known as Shared Authority to investigate orature which recognizes the personhood e g subject agency and experiences of the Africana individual 1 Through this methodological recognition information that may not have been captured in prior publications is able to be optimally acquired 1 Social Legitimacy Edit Winston Van Horn developed a research method and methodological framework composed of three steps known as Social Legitimacy which analyzes the experiences of Africana peoples and Africana phenomena in their political and sociological contexts 1 Two Cradle Theory Edit nbsp Cheikh Anta Diop SenegalCheikh Anta Diop drew from anthropology archaeology history and sociology to develop a research method and cultural metric known as Two Cradle Theory to assess the differences between African and European cultures between what are characterized and viewed as the southern cradle and the northern cradle 1 Ujimaa Edit James L Conyers Jr drew from the concept of Nguzo Saba to develop the research method known as Ujimaa the methodological framework draws from philosophy sociology and conceptual history with the understanding that culture is utilized to analyze and assess Pan Africanist phenomena from around the world and is utilized to analyze social responsibility and the work of the collective 1 Recent challenges and criticisms EditOne of the major setbacks with Black studies programs or departments is that there is a lack of financial resources available to students and faculty 90 Many universities and colleges around the United States provided Black studies programs with small budgets and therefore it is difficult for the department to purchase materials and hire staff Due to the budget allocated to Black studies being limited some faculty are jointly appointed therefore causing faculty to leave their home disciplines to teach a discipline with which they may not be familiar Budgetary issues make it difficult for Black studies programs and departments to function and to promote themselves 91 Racism perpetrated by many administrators is alleged to hinder the institutionalization of Black studies at major universities 90 As with the case of UC Berkeley most of the Black studies programs across the country were instituted because of the urging and demanding of black students to create the program In many instances black students also called for the increased enrollment of black students and financial assistance to these students 90 Also seen in the case of UC Berkeley is the constant demand to have such a program but place the power of control in the hands of black people The idea was that Black studies could not be realistic if it were taught by someone who was not accustomed to the black experience On many campuses directors of Black studies have little to no autonomy they do not have the power to hire or grant tenure to faculty On many campuses an overall lack of respect for the discipline has caused instability for the students and for the program In the past thirty years there has been a steady decline of Black studies scholars 90 Universities and colleges with Black studies departments programs and courses EditBrazil Pontifical Catholic University of Sao Paulo 8 Canada Brock University 92 Concordia University 93 Dalhousie University 94 9 Queen s University 95 York University 96 Caribbean University of the Virgin Islands University of the West Indies 7 Colombia National University of Colombia 64 Pontifical Xavierian University 68 69 University of Cauca 65 Ecuador Simon Bolivar Andean University 12 United Kingdom Birmingham City University 97 78 United States American University Amherst College Baruch College Brandeis University Brown University California State University Dominguez Hills California State University Fullerton California State University Northridge Carleton College Cleveland State University College of William and Mary Columbia University Dartmouth College Davidson College Dominican University Duke University 98 Eastern Kentucky University Eastern Michigan University 99 Emory University Fordham University Georgetown University Georgia State University Guilford College Hunter College Indiana University Kent State University 100 Oberlin College 101 Ohio State University Loyola Marymount University Luther College Middle Tennessee State University Mount Holyoke College Nassau Community College Northwestern University Pennsylvania State University 102 Portland State University 103 Princeton University Purdue University Queens College San Jose State University 104 Southern Illinois University Syracuse University Temple University The City College of New York The College of New Jersey Towson University Tufts University Tulane University University at Albany 105 University of Arizona University of Arkansas University at Buffalo University of California Berkeley University of California Davis University of California Irvine 106 University of California Los Angeles University of California San Diego University of California Santa Barbara University of Florida University of Houston University of Kansas University of Louisville University of Massachusetts Amherst University of Michigan University of Montana University of Nebraska at Omaha University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 107 University of North Carolina at Charlotte 108 University of North Carolina at Greensboro 109 University of North Texas University of Oklahoma University of Oregon University of Pennsylvania University of Puget Sound University of Rochester University of South Carolina University of Texas at Arlington University of Texas at Austin University of Virginia University of Wisconsin Valdosta State University Vassar College Virginia Commonwealth University Washington University in St Louis Western Illinois University Wesleyan University Wright State University Yale UniversityVenezuela Universidad Politecnica Territorial de Barlovento Argelia Laya 13 Universities with Ph D programs in Black studies EditUnited Kingdom University of Nottingham 110 United States Brown University Columbia University Cornell University Harvard University Indiana University Michigan State University Northwestern University Ohio State University Pennsylvania State University 111 Temple University University of California Berkeley University of Louisville University of Massachusetts Amherst University of Pennsylvania 112 University of Texas at Austin 113 University of Wisconsin Milwaukee Yale UniversityProminent academics in Black studies EditAfrica Micere MugoBrazil Lelia Gonzalez Abdias Nascimento Beatriz NascimentoCaribbean Carole Boyce Davies Horace Campbell Oliver Cromwell Cox Elsa Goveia C L R James Walter Rodney Kwame Ture Sylvia WynterUnited Kingdom Kehinde Andrews Kwame Anthony Appiah Hazel Carby Paul GilroyUnited States Shawn Alexander Molefi Kete Asante M K Asante Jr Houston A Baker Jr Bill Cole Patricia Hill Collins Edward W Crosby Allison Davis Angela Y Davis St Clair Drake W E B Du Bois Michael Eric Dyson Gerald Early John Hope Franklin E Franklin Frazier Henry Louis Gates Jr Farah Griffin Vincent Harding Nathan Hare Melissa Harris Perry Saidiya Hartman Melville Herskovits bell hooks Charles S Johnson Maulana Karenga Robin D G Kelley Glenn C Loury Manning Marable Janis Mayes Fred Moten Mark Anthony Neal Adolph Reed Cedric Robinson Tricia Rose Milton Sernett Christina Sharpe Tracy Denean Sharpley Whiting Renate Simson Geneva Smitherman Robert B Stepto Conrad Tillard Akinyele Umoja Cornel West William Julius Wilson Carter G Woodson Cynthia A YoungScholarly and academic journals EditAfrican American Review Africana 1 Journal of Ideas on Africa and the Diaspora Africana Online Journal of the Africana Center for Cultural Literacy and Research Africology The Journal of Pan African Studies 2 since 1987 Afro Americans in New York Life and History 3 since 1976 The Black Scholar since 1969 Callaloo Electronic Journal of Africana Bibliography 4 coverage includes any aspect of Africa its peoples their homes cities towns districts states countries regions including social economic sustainable development creative literature the arts and the Diaspora The Griot The Journal of African American Studies 5 International Journal of Africana Studies 6 designed to interrogate and analyze the lived experiences of Africana people The Journal of African Civilizations since 1979 Journal of African American History Journal of African American Males in Education JAAME 7 Journal of Black Studies Journal of Negro Education Journal of Negro History Western Journal of Black Studies 8 Negro Digest Negro Educational Review 9 Negro History Bulletin Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art 10 focuses on publishing critical work that examines the newly developing field of contemporary African and African Diaspora art within the modernist and postmodernist experience thereby contributing to the intellectual dialogue on world art and the discourse on internationalism and multiculturalism in the arts Phylon Race amp Class Souls A Critical Journal of Black Politics Culture and Society 11 Transition MagazineSee also EditAP African American Studies Critical race theoryReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Conyers James L Jr October 15 2018 Research Methods In Africana Studies Africana Methodology A Social Study of Research Triangulation and Meta theory Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 201 204 ISBN 9781527519404 Dagbovie Pero Gaglo 2007 The Early Black History Movement Carter G Woodson and Lorenzo Johnston Greene University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07435 6 Kelly Jason November December 2010 Lorenzo Dow Turner PhD 26 The University of Chicago Magazine Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect 1949 was considered not only the defining work of Gullah language and culture but also the beginning of a new field Black studies Until then it was pretty much thought that all of the African knowledge and everything had been erased by slavery Turner showed that was not true curator Alcione Amos says He was a pioneer He was the first one to make the connections between African Americans and their African past Cotter Holland September 2 2010 A Language Explorer Who Heard Echoes of Africa The New York Times Turner published Africanisms in the Gullah Dialect a book that would help pave the way for the field of African American studies in the 1960s a b Andrews Kehinde December 2020 Blackness Empire and migration How Black Studies transforms the curriculum Area 52 4 701 707 doi 10 1111 area 12528 S2CID 151178582 a b Andrews Kehinde September 1 2018 The Black Studies Movement in Britain Becoming an Institution Not Institutionalised In Arday Jason Mirza Heidi Safia eds Dismantling Race in Higher Education Springer International Publishing pp 271 287 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 60261 5 15 ISBN 9783319602615 S2CID 158719176 a b c d Teelucksingh Jerome September 29 2017 Academic Revolution Black Studies Civil Rights in America and the Caribbean 1950s 2010s Springer International Publishing p 31 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 67456 8 3 ISBN 9783319674568 S2CID 166000160 a b c d e f Nascimento Elisa Larkin April 13 2021 The Ram s Horns Reflections on the Legacy of Abdias Nascimento Journal of Black Studies 52 6 9 doi 10 1177 00219347211006484 S2CID 234812096 a b c d Barnstead John A November 9 2007 Black Canadian Studies as the Cutting Edge of Change Revisioning Pushkin Rethinking Pushkinology Journal of Black Studies 38 3 367 368 doi 10 1177 0021934707306571 JSTOR 40034385 S2CID 144613740 a b c d e Carillo Monica 2008 Academic Studies On People Of African Descent In The Americas Debate Between The Americas International Journal of Africana Studies 14 1 248 254 a b c d e Carillo Monica 2008 African Diaspora Studies African Americans International Journal of Africana Studies 14 1 255 260 a b c d e f Johnson Ethan October 2014 Afro Ecuadorian Educational Movement Racial Oppression Its Origins and Oral Tradition PDF Journal of Pan African Studies 7 4 122 123 S2CID 141610274 a b c d Brown Vincent Layla Dalal Zanele Sekou 2016 We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting for Pan African Consciousness Raising and Organizing in the United States and Venezuela PDF Duke University pp 125 127 S2CID 157727663 Zeleza Paul Tiyambe 25 Feb 2011 Building intellectual bridges from African studies and African American studies to Africana studies in the United States Journal of Black Studies 24 2 17 doi 10 21825 af v24i2 5000 S2CID 155291097 Reid Merritt Patricia May 7 2009 Defining Ourselves Name Calling in Black Studies Journal of Black Studies 40 1 80 81 doi 10 1177 0021934709335136 JSTOR 40282621 S2CID 143530857 Reid Merritt Patricia September 2009 Defining Ourselves One Name One Discipline Journal of Black Studies 40 1 6 doi 10 1177 0021934709335130 S2CID 144557289 Karenga Maulana 2018 Founding the First PhD in Black Studies A Sankofa Remembrance and Critical Assessment of Its Significance Journal of Black Studies 49 6 579 doi 10 1177 0021934718797317 S2CID 150088166 Reid Merritt Patricia 2018 Temple University s African American Studies PhD Program 30 Assessing the Asante Affect Journal of Black Studies 49 6 559 doi 10 1177 0021934718786221 S2CID 150164309 Karenga Maulana May 20 2009 Names and Notions of Black Studies Issues of Roots Range and Relevance Journal of Black Studies 40 1 45 46 doi 10 1177 0021934709335134 JSTOR 40282619 S2CID 144854972 Christian Mark May 1 2006 Black Studies in the 21st Century Longevity Has Its Place Journal of Black Studies 36 5 698 719 doi 10 1177 0021934705285939 JSTOR 40026680 S2CID 144986768 Conyers James L Jr May 1 2004 The Evolution Of Africology An Afrocentric Appraisal PDF Journal of Black Studies 34 5 640 652 doi 10 1177 0021934703259257 JSTOR 3180921 S2CID 145790776 Asante Molefi Kete 10 Aug 2020 Africology Afrocentricity and What Remains to Be Done The Black Scholar 50 3 48 doi 10 1080 00064246 2020 1780859 S2CID 221097874 Dawkins Marvin P Braddock II Jomills Henry Theune Felecia Gilbert Shelby 29 July 2021 The Status of Black Studies at Public Institutions After the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Academic Scandal Journal of African American Studies 25 3 5 doi 10 1007 s12111 021 09547 1 S2CID 238821709 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Mazama Ama May 6 2009 Naming and Defining A Critical Link Journal of Black Studies 40 1 65 76 doi 10 1177 0021934709335135 JSTOR 40282620 S2CID 142081339 Okafor Victor Oguejiofor March 2014 Africology Black Studies African American Studies Africana Studies or African World Studies What s so Important about a Given Name PDF The Journal of Pan African Studies 6 7 218 219 S2CID 140735927 Diaz Casas Maria Camila Velazquez Maria Elisa 2017 Afro Mexican studies a historiographical and anthropological review Tabula Rasa 27 221 248 doi 10 25058 20112742 450 ISSN 1794 2489 S2CID 192255238 a b Robert L Harris Jr 2004 The Intellectual and Institutional Development of Africana Studies PDF In Jacqueline Bobo Cynthia Hudley Claudine Michel eds The Black Studies Reader Routledge p 15 doi 10 4324 9780203491348 ISBN 9780203491348 S2CID 211644148 DeMuth Jerry Fannie Lou Hamer Tired of Being Sick and Tired The Nation June 1 1964 548 551 a b c d Taylor Ula 2010 Origins of African American Studies at UC Berkeley Western Journal of Black Studies 34 2 256 257 S2CID 141223846 a b Free Speech Cafe Mural Moffit Library University of California Berkeley a b EOP Offers Aid Daily Californian October 19 1970 Racial ethnic minorities 7 02 percent of Cal Students California Monthly Editorial July August 1966 Negro Group Afro American Rally Will Oppose SDS Daily Californian Editorial October 26 1966 a b Afro American Studies Proposal Daily Californian Editorial March 4 1969 Search results for Las Positas College Library WorldCat Retrieved December 12 2019 Barlow William Shapiro Peter 1971 An End to Silence The San Francisco State Student Movement in the 60s New York Pegasus S2CID 142356551 African amp African American Studies Stanford University Stanford University History of the Department Department of Black Studies University of California Santa Barbara Martin Douglas Robert A Dahl Dies at 98 Defined Politics and Power The New York Times February 8 2014 Revolutionary Minds S I Newhouse School of Public Communications Syracuse University Archived from the original on October 4 2011 Retrieved November 13 2011 a b Ruffin II Herb November 22 2010 Department of African American Studies History Syracuse University Fenderson Jonathan 2009 The Black Studies Tradition and the Mappings of Our Common Intellectual Project Western Journal of Black Studies 33 1 46 58 S2CID 142090553 Curry Tommy J 2011 On Derelict and Method The Methodological Crisis of African American Philosophy s Study of African Descended Peoples under an Integrationist Milieu Radical Philosophy Review 14 2 153 doi 10 5840 radphilrev201114216 S2CID 146188329 Gordon Lewis R November 17 2015 African American Philosophy Race and the Geography of Reason Not Only the Master s Tools African American Studies in Theory and Practice Taylor amp Francis p 3 ISBN 978 1 59451 147 9 S2CID 142164186 a b c d e f g h i j Conyers James L Jr May 1 2004 The Evolution Of Africology An Afrocentric Appraisal PDF Journal of Black Studies 34 5 643 644 646 648 doi 10 1177 0021934703259257 JSTOR 3180921 S2CID 145790776 a b c d e Asante Molefi Kete 2008 The Pursuit of Africology On the Creation and Sustaining of Black Studies International Journal of Africana Studies 14 1 317 328 doi 10 4135 9781412982696 N22 ISBN 9780761928409 S2CID 132662366 a b Mazama Ama 2021 Africology and the Question of Disciplinary Language Journal of Black Studies 52 5 450 doi 10 1177 0021934721996431 S2CID 234870652 a b c d Shefferman David Adam August 2006 Displacing Magic Afro Cuban Studies and the Production of Santeria 1933 1956 Thesis University of North Carolina pp v 6 93 182 doi 10 17615 60mt 1x20 S2CID 190944973 Valdez Juan R Jan 31 2011 Pedro Henriquez Urena and the Whitening of Dominican Identity Tracing Dominican Identity The Writings of Pedro Henriquez Urena Springer p 158 doi 10 1057 9780230117211 6 ISBN 978 0 230 11721 1 S2CID 163716448 Lipski John M 1994 A New Perspective on Afro Dominican Spanish the Haitian Contribution PDF Research Paper Series University of New Mexico 26 1 S2CID 160357833 McGee Adam 2008 Constructing Africa Authenticity and Gine in Haitian Vodou PDF Journal of Haitian Studies 14 2 36 JSTOR 41715187 S2CID 169669971 Pamphile Leon D 2001 Acknowledgments Haitians and African Americans A Heritage of Tragedy and Hope University Press of Florida p xiii ISBN 0 8130 2119 7 S2CID 96464990 Franco Marina Reyes March 2019 Atlas San Juan Afro Caribbean Connection Art in America S2CID 171872259 Guzman Will 2019 Scripts of Blackness Race Cultural Nationalism and U S Colonialism in Puerto Rico Afro Hispanic Review 38 1 233 ISSN 0278 8969 Garcia Jessica J Do Female Legislators Represent All Women And Marginalized Groups A Study Of Two Latin American Legislatures PDF Texas A amp M University pp 29 36 Bryant Sherwin K Vinson III Ben O Toole Rachel Sarah Feb 15 2012 Introduction Africans to Spanish America Expanding the Diaspora University of Illinois Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 252 09371 5 S2CID 160329038 Mason Montero A Erin September 10 2010 The Construction of Blackness in Honduran Cultural Production University of New Mexico pp 113 114 S2CID 135173660 Redwood John November 2000 Race and Poverty Interagency Consultation on Afro Latin Americans PDF Sector Management Unit for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development of the World Bank s Latin America and Caribbean Regional Office p 23 Rebagliati Lucas 2014 Una esclavitud benigna La historiografia sobre la naturaleza de la esclavitud rioplatense PDF Andes 25 2 29 ISSN 0327 1676 S2CID 143187725 Saunders Tanya L Ipolito Jessica Rodrigues Mariana Meriqui Souza Simone Brandao 2020 Kuirlombo Epistemologies Introduction to the CRGS Special Issue Genders and Sexualities in Brazil PDF Caribbean Review of Gender Studies 14 3 ISSN 1995 1108 a b Marfull Montserrat Arre Vergara Paulina Barrenechea 2017 From denial to diversification the intramural and extramural aspects of Afro Chilean studies Tabula Rasa 27 129 160 doi 10 25058 20112742 447 ISSN 1794 2489 S2CID 165774774 a b c d e Velandia Pedro J Restrepo Edward 2007 Afro Colombian studies balance of a heterogeneous field Tabula Rasa 27 doi 10 25058 20112742 448 ISSN 1794 2489 S2CID 193998215 a b c Arocha Jaime et al 2007 Eleggua y respeto por los afrocolombianos una experiencia con docentes de Bogota en torno a la Catedra de Estudios Afrocolombianos Revista de Estudios Sociales 27 94 105 doi 10 7440 res27 2007 06 S2CID 142662429 a b Rojas Axel 2008 Etnoeducacion o educacion intercultural Estudio de caso sobre la licenciatura en Etnoeducacion de la Universidad del Cauca Diversidad Cultural e Interculturalidad en Educacion Superior Experiencias en America Latina IESALC UNESCO p 233 ISBN 978 980 7175 00 5 Codigos De Dependencias Programas Academicos PDF Universidad del Cauca p 4 Martinez Axelalejandro Rojas 2004 Introduccion Sobre Las Formas Sociales De Recordar Si No Fuera Por Los Quince Negros Memoria Colectiva De La Gente Negra De Tierradentro Editorial Universidad del Cauca p 20 ISBN 958 9475 49 3 a b Master of Afro Colombian Studies Pontifical Javeriana University a b c Overseas Capacity Building Initiatives U S Department of State 21 May 2018 Lipski John M December 2008 Afro Paraguayan Spanish The Negation of Non Existence PDF Journal of Pan African Studies 2 7 10 S2CID 142520037 Maass Claire K A Collaborative Bioarchaeology Of African Diaspora And Enslavement In Colonial Canete Peru PDF Stanford University p 272 a b 1st International Meeting Studies of the African Diaspora in Peru and Latin America LUNDU 1st International Meeting of African Diaspora Studies Universidad Complutense Madrid Rivera Daniela September 8 2020 Living within the Collapsed Myth of Multiculturalism Afro descendent Women during Covid 19 ReVista Harvard Review of Latin America Schmidt Bettina E 2007 Afro Peruvian Representations in and around Cusco a Discussion about the Existence or Non existence of an Afro Andean Culture in Peru PDF Indiana 24 doi 10 18441 ind v24i0 191 209 ISSN 2365 2225 S2CID 55136251 The ALARI First Continental Conference on Afro Latin American Studies Harvard University Rocamora Martin April 6 2018 Computational Methods for Percussion Music Analysis The Afro Uruguayan Candombe Drumming as a Case Study PDF Universidad de la Republica p 11 ISSN 1688 2784 a b c Brar Dhanveer Singh Sharma Ashwani 2020 What is this Black in Black Studies From Black British Cultural Studies to Black Critical Thought in U K Arts and Higher Education New Formations 2020 99 88 107 doi 10 3898 NewF 99 05 2019 ISSN 0950 2378 S2CID 219148972 a b Monteiro Ferreira Ana 2009 Afrocentricity and the Western Paradigm Journal of Black Studies 40 2 333 335 doi 10 1177 0021934708314801 JSTOR 40282637 S2CID 144475771 Asante Molefi Kete December 17 2007 An Afrocentric Manifesto Toward an African Renaissance Polity p 17 ISBN 9780745641027 S2CID 190415914 Alkebulan Adisa A January 2007 Defending The Paradigm Journal of Black Studies Sage Publications Inc 37 3 411 413 417 doi 10 1177 0021934706290082 JSTOR 40034783 S2CID 143557323 Pellerin Marquita June 2012 Benefits of Afrocentricity in Exploring Social Phenomena Understanding Afrocentricity as a Social Science Methodology PDF The Journal of Pan African Studies 5 4 149 160 S2CID 18435352 a b Asante Molefi Kete Mazama Ama Cerol Marie Jose 2005 Temple Circle Encyclopedia of Black Studies SAGE p 445 doi 10 4135 9781412952538 ISBN 9781452265445 S2CID 141533226 a b Karenga Maulana 2018 Founding the First PhD in Black Studies A Sankofa Remembrance and Critical Assessment of Its Significance Journal of Black Studies SAGE Journals 49 6 587 doi 10 1177 0021934718797317 S2CID 150088166 Asante Molefi Kete October 19 2010 Afrocentricity and Africology Theory and Practice in the Discipline Edinburgh University Press pp 48 50 ISBN 9780748686971 JSTOR 10 3366 j ctt1g0b6m8 Myers Joshua 2015 Racial Economies of Academia Africana Studies as Arbiter Journal of African American Studies 19 1 85 doi 10 1007 s12111 014 9291 8 JSTOR 43525579 S2CID 144208208 a b Wint Keisha M Opara Ijeoma Gordon Rahjaun Brooms Derrick R 2021 Countering Educational Disparities Among Black Boys and Black Adolescent Boys from Pre K to High School A Life Course Intersectional Perspective The Urban Review 54 2 183 206 doi 10 1007 s11256 021 00616 z PMC 8450170 PMID 34565917 S2CID 237582266 a b c d Bryan Nathaniel January 30 2020 Remembering Tamir Rice and Other Black Boy Victims Imagining Black PlayCrit Literacies Inside and Outside Urban Literacy Education Urban Education 56 5 12 14 16 20 doi 10 1177 0042085920902250 S2CID 213465389 Alkalimat Abdul Toward A Paradigm of Unity in Black Studies in Nathaniel Norment Jr ed The African American Studies Reader Durham North Carolina Carolina Academic Press 2001 a b c d Phillips M June 22 2010 Black Studies Challenges and Critical Debates Western Journal of Black Studies 34 2 273 274 S2CID 140445922 Patton Stacey April 12 2012 Black Studies Swaggering into the Future The Chronicle of Higher Education Almanac ISSN 0009 5982 Retrieved April 29 2020 Minor in Africana Studies Brock University Black Studies curriculum report Concordia University Black African Diaspora Minor Dalhousie University Introduction of a BA Minor General in Black Studies Queen s University Black Canadian Studies York University Black Studies Birmingham City University Duke African amp African American Studies Duke University Africology and African American Studies Eastern Michigan University Department of Africana Studies Kent State University May 7 2022 Department of Africana Studies Oberlin College amp Conservatory October 24 2016 African American Studies Pennsylvania State University Retrieved April 25 2017 Black Studies Department Portland State University SJSU Department of African American Studies San Jose State University Department of Africana Studies State University of New York at Albany Home UCI African American Studies University of California Irvine Department of African African American and Diaspora Studies University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Department of Africana Studies University of North Carolina at Charlotte African American Studies Majors UNCG Admissions University of North Carolina Greensboro Archived from the original on May 9 2016 Retrieved April 26 2016 Black Studies PhD University of Nottingham Graduate African American Studies Pennsylvania State University Archived from the original on April 26 2017 Retrieved April 25 2017 PhD Program University of Pennsylvania Archived from the original on July 2 2012 Retrieved July 15 2012 Graduate Admissions for Master s and Ph D Programs African and African Diaspora Studies University of Texas at Austin Archived from the original on March 31 2014 Retrieved March 30 2014 Further reading EditAlkalimat Abdul 2021 The History of Black Studies London Pluto Press ISBN 9780745344225 Biondi Martha The Black Revolution on Campus University of California Press 2014 Ferguson Stephen Philosophy of African American Studies Nothing Left of Blackness Palgrave Macmillan 2015 Higgins Andrew Stone Higher Education for All Racial Inequality Cold War Liberalism and the California Master Plan University of North Carolina Press 2023 Kendi Ibram X The Black Campus Movement Black Students and the Racial Reconstitution of Higher Education 1965 1972 Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Rooks Noliwe M White Money Black Power The Surprising History of African American Studies and the Crisis of Race in Higher Education Beacon Press 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black studies amp oldid 1180368576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.