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Known variously as African studies, black studies, African American studies, Afro-American studies, and Africology, the academic study of the African diaspora as a holistic discipline is a relatively new phenomenon. University programs have been created with reference to a disciplinary matrix, retarding the development of appropriate theory and methods throughout Africana studies.Fifteen leaders in the field of Africana studies provide the conceptual framework for establishing the field as a mature discipline. The focus is on four basic areas: administration and organizational structure; disciplinary matrix; Africana womanism; and cultural aesthetics. The work examines both the theory and the method of scholars in African and African-diaspora studies.
The late James L. Conyers, Jr., winner of the Cheikh Anta Diop Ankh Award for Distinguished Research in the Discipline of African American Studies, was the director of the African American Studies Program and university professor of African American Studies at the University of Houston.
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments A Note to the Reader Preface Part 1: Administration and Organizational Structure in Africana Studies1. Black Studies: An Overview 2. Notes on Administration of Africana Studies Departments and Programs 3. Black Studies: A New Story 4. Administration of African American Studies at Black Colleges 5. “Can the Big Dog Run?” Developing African American Studies at the University of Georgia 6. Africology: Building an Academic Discipline Part 2: Disciplinary Matrix and Analysis7. Afrocentricity and the Quest for Method 8. Africana Studies and Epistemology: A Discourse in the Sociology of Knowledge 9. Reaching for Higher Ground: Toward an Understanding of Black/Africana Studies 10. African American Studies: Locating a Niche in the Public Sphere of Higher Eucation Part 3: Africana Womanism11. Womanist Issues in Black Studies: Towards Integrating Africana Womanism into Africana Studies 12. Black Women, Feminism, and Black Liberation 13. Feminism or Womanism? A Black Woman Defining Self 14. On the Myth of Male Supremacy: Adam and Eve and the Imperative of a New African-centered Epistemology of Gender Part 4: Cultural Aesthetics15. Culture, Language, and Symbols in Africana Studies: An Etymological Analysis 16. The Black poet in Mississippi, 1990–1980 About the Contributors Index
“Explores the development of theory and methodology in establishing African and African-diaspora studies as an academic discipline...essential for Africana collections”—American Libraries.