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         African Diasporic:     more books (25)
  1. Configuring the African World: Continental and Diasporic Literatures and Cultures by Femi Ojo-Ade, 2007-09-05
  2. Journeys Home: An Anthology of Contemporary African Diasporic Experience
  3. DanceHall: From Slave Ship to Ghetto (African and Diasporic Cultural Studies) by Sonjah Stanley Niaah, 2010-07-10
  4. Ma-Ka Diasporic Juks: Contemporary Writing by Queers of African Descent
  5. Racing Cultural Interface: African Diasporic Identities In Digital Age
  6. Oshun's Light Rebirth of Anansi: A ThirdWave Feminist Collection from African Diasporic students by Tiphanie Gundel, 2000
  7. Clear Word and Third Sight: Folk Groundings and Diasporic Consciousness in African Caribbean Writing by Catherine A. John, 2004-05
  8. Michael A. Gomez, ed. Diasporic Africa: A Reader.(Book review): An article from: African American Review by Lauren Hauptman, 2007-12-22
  9. African Stability & Integration Regional, Continental & Diasporic Pan-African Realities by AgyemangAtahPoku, 2000
  10. How Diasporic Peoples Maintain Their Identity in Multicultural Societies: Chinese, Africans, and Jews by Norman Vasu, 2009-01-31
  11. DANCE, DIASPORIC: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 2nd ed.</i> by Robin Wilson, 2006
  12. TEXTILES, DIASPORIC: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 2nd ed.</i> by Maude Wahlman, 2006
  13. DIASPORIC PHOTOGRAPHY: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 2nd ed.</i> by Isolde Brielmaier, 2006
  14. Editorial: whose diaspora is this anyway? Continental Africans trying on and troubling diasporic identity.(Editorial): An article from: Critical Arts by Handel Kashope Wright, 2003-01-01

41. New Diaspora
creation of a variety of new african diasporic communities ones which do within traditional conceptions of ‘the African diaspora’ or the ‘African
http://www.ibiblio.org/afaa/id42.htm
var TlxPgNm='id42';
Generational Identity and Sexuality
New Diaspora AAA 2000 Preview Overview Back to the Village, Off to The City: Ethnographies of African Cosmopolitans
Association for Africanist Anthropology home New Diaspora American Anthropological Association Meetings November 1999, Chicago, Ill
by Jon Holtzman, Indiana UniversityPurdue University at Indianapolis Anthropology News , , volume , number , pp.
Friday, November 19, a group of panelists gathered for one of AfAA’s two invited sessions ‘New Diasporas: Implications for Theory and Methods in Africanist Anthropology.’ Jon Holtzman chaired the session, with additional papers presented by JoAnn D’Alisera (U Arkansas), Donald Carter (Johns Hopkins), Rose Kadende-Kaiser (Mississippi State) and Bruce Roberts (Moorhead State). Paul Stoller (Westchester U) served as discussant.
In the final paper, ‘Encounters: Diaspora in Theory and Practice,’ Donald Carter used the case of Senegalese communities in northern Italy as a medium through which to explore the theory and practice of diasporic life. Carter considered notions of diaspora and exile contained in the Nigerian author Ben Okri’s novel The Famished Road
In considering these various case studies from a range of theoretical perspectives, we hope this panel will serve as an impetus for a greater exploration of the implications which the development of new African diasporic communities has for Africanist anthropology as a discipline, as well as for the methodological practices of Africanist anthropologists.

42. Issues: Perspectives (September 1998): Defining And Studying The Modern African
diasporic streams form what I shall call the premodern African diaspora.The fourth major african diasporic stream, and the one that is most widely
http://www.historians.org/perspectives/issues/1998/9809/9809VIE2.CFM
Print View l From the Viewpoints column in the September 1998 Perspectives
Defining and Studying the Modern African Diaspora
By Colin Palmer The fourth major African diasporic stream, and the one that is most widely studied today, is associated with the Atlantic trade in African slaves. This trade, which began in earnest in the 15th century, may have delivered as many as 200,000 Africans to various European societies and 11 to 12 million to the Americas over time. The fifth major stream began during the 19th century particularly after slavery's demise in the Americas and continues to our own times. It is characterized by the movement of Africans and peoples of African descent among, and their resettlement in, various societies. These latter two diasporic streams, along with several substreams and the communities that emerged, constitute the modern African diaspora. Unlike the premodern diaspora, "racial" oppression and resistance to it are two of its most salient features. Although diasporas involve the movement of a particular people to several places at once or over time, a migration is usually of a more limited scope and duration, and essentially is the movement of individuals from one point to another within a polity or outside of it. The boundaries between the two processes are, to be sure, very elastic because diasporas are the products of several migratory streams. Thus, the contemporary movement of Jamaicans to England is a migration, but it also constitutes a part of the fifth diasporic stream identified in this essay.

43. Programme Of ESSHC
Queer Subjects as Liberatory Sites in african diasporic Literature These contemporary african diasporic counterdiscourses use sexuality to interrogate
http://www2.iisg.nl/esshc/programme.asp?selyear=6&pap=1245

44. Harding, A Refuge In Thunder
of Candomblé as an african diasporic home for dislocated Africans and their and wider african diasporic religious experience in the Americas.
http://northstar.vassar.edu/volume5/harding.html
vol. 5, no. 1 (Fall 2001)
ISSN 1094-902X The central thesis of A Refuge in Thunder is that blacks in Brazil were involved in a continual process of transformational engagement with the assigned spaces and the signified identities imputed upon them by the dominant slavocratic and racist society. Using a variety of meansritual, communal, familial, aesthetic, etc.African and their descendants created alternative spaces and alternative definitions of themselves and of the meaning of their presence in the New World [xvii]. Consonant with its subtitle, Candomblé and Alternative Spaces of Blackness , the book examines the development of Candomblé in terms of the elements, experiences, and meanings which lie at its foundations in nineteenth-century Bahia. Harding outlines her authorial task as "looking at the nature and experience of slavery in Brazil (and particularly in the north-eastern captaincy/province of Bahia); the specific conjunction of Africans and Brazilian-born blacks in Salvador and the Bahian Recôncavo; the role of freedpeople in the leadership and development of the religion; networks of support and repression; the complex of magico-pharmacopoeic, ludic, divinational, and relational elements which came to comprise Candomblé; and especially, the role of the religion in the development of alternative meanings of human community and black identity within the matrix of slavery [xvii]." The book is a worthwhile study in New World study of religion as resistance to cultural hegemony and modern capitalism.

45. African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective - Word Power
An important work in the understanding of african diasporic music and The African Diaspora answers the question of why music claims such pride of
http://www.word-power.co.uk/catalogue/0415967694
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46. July 2004
african diasporic representation, practice and imagination are This modulewill discuss the african diasporic imaginary from the point of view of the
http://www.fiu.edu/~interad/Summer2004.htm
International Summer Graduate Seminar Summer 2004 Imagining the African Diaspora: Genealogy and Social Constructions Week 1: "African Diaspora Studies: Epistemologies and Methodologies"
Week 2: "Modernity, Nation, and Citizenship"

"Marcus Garvey"
"Photograph by Ernest C. Withers, Sanitation workers' strike, Memphis, Tennessee, 1968"
Week 3: "The Culture of Politics and the Politics of Culture"
"American athletes Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the Mexico Olympics
in 1968" "At the World's Fair in 1893,
Aunt Jemima Was a Sensation,"
Ladies' Home Journal, March 1921, 86." "No More!, 1967. Painting by Jon Onye Lockard"
"Uncle Tom and Eva" Week 4: "African Diaspora: Philosophies and Ideologies"

47. Society: Religion_and_Spirituality: African: Diasporic: Hoodoo,_Rootwork,_Conjur
Society Religion_and_Spirituality african diasporic Hoodoo,_Rootwork,_Conjure,_Obeah.
http://www.dir.eclub.lv/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/African/Diasporic/Hood
eOpenDir ( www.dir.eclub.lv ) Web eclub.lv TOP Society Religion and Spirituality African ... Diasporic Hoodoo, Rootwork, Conjure, Obeah See also: Site list:
  • Hoodoo in Theory and Practice by Catherine Yronwode An online book with hundreds of interlinked illustrated web pages on African-American folk-magic (a.k.a. hoodoo, rootwork, or conjure). Included are descriptions of how to lay tricks; burn candles and incense; sprinkle powders; make mojo bags; prepare spiritual baths and floor washes; use dressing oils, herbs, minerals, and roots; perform spells for drawing luck, love, and money; take off jinxes and crossed conditions. Hoodoo: An Afro-Diaspora Tradition A New World name of an Ancient African Magical Tradition. Obeah and Kumina - Definitions Brief definitions of Obeah and Kumina, from a larger site on Jamaican folklore. Rethinking the Nature and Tasks of African-American Theology Anthony B. Pinn of Macalester College provides scholarly examples of how hoodoo and other African-based religious practices form a "second stream" within African-American Christianity, forcing a recognition of theological complexity beyond the merely folkloric or religio-magical orientation of conjure.
  • Adult Arts Business Computers ... World
    Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.

48. LiP | Feature | Firespitter: Jayne Cortez And The Poetics Of Diasporic Resistanc
African diaspora and Africa itself, but the interactions of diasporic to their core and connects the african diasporic dots before our very ears.
http://www.lipmagazine.org/articles/feat_sakolsky_jaynecortez_p.htm
Published in LiP Magazine
http://www.lipmagazine.org EMAIL THIS ARTICLE TO A FRIEND Firespitter: Jayne Cortez and the Politics of Diasporic Resistance
by Ron Sakolsky
Find your own voice and use it
Use your own voice and find it
(Jayne Cortez, 2002) AS THE DUB POETS SAY,
Much has been written on the value of creating an African consciousness in relation to national liberation movements located outside of the African continent, particularly in the Caribbean. Dub poetry, as a decolonizing agent, extends the connection beyond that of the nation-state to the Motherland. By so doing, it allows for the creation of a new cognitive map which is at once rooted in Africa and at the same time is dynamic enough to encompass not only two-way flows between the scattered peoples of the African diaspora and Africa itself, but the interactions of diasporic peoples with one another based on both the commonality and the diversity of their diasporic experiences. Here I will draw upon the work of African American poet Jayne Cortez as a touchstone in charting the poetics of struggle along diasporic lines in relation to dub poetry.
because the blues stealers like to steal
when they think they have nothing of their own
before Robert Johnson comes from
the graveyard to say Langston Hughes returns to say The blues that came to me from the slave dungeons the blues that came to me from the death trails the blues that came to me from my ancestors the blues that came to me in a spell that tells me

49. Center For African And African American Studies
Diasporic Dialogues Race and Politics Across the Black Atlantic mixed race identities and the gendered politics of african diasporic formations.
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/caaas/events/brit/
Jester Center A232A; Austin, TX 78705 :: (512) 471-1784 Fax (512) 471-1798
Main Menu
Home About the Center Undergraduate Program Africa Program ... Site Map
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Coming soon: Fall 2005 Event Calendar!
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Diasporic Dialogues: Race and Politics Across the Black Atlantic
Friday, May 6th, 2005
Moncrief-Neuhaus Athletics Complex
Conference Room 1.210
(located at 2012 Robert Dedman Drive)

This free one day conference brings together three of Britain¹s leading intellectuals to discuss the changing nature of racism in post-Imperial Britain and the place of the black public intellectual in both the UK and the USA. The internationally recognized speakers are drawn from the fields of literature (Caryl Phillips), journalism (Gary Younge), and academia (Jayne Ifekwunigwe).
The speakers will address the nature of race and politics in the UK whilst reflecting upon their own migratory experiences in moving from England to he USA as a way to think about the pervasiveness of and disruptions to 21st century global racisms. Conference Schedule
Conference registration
Introduction: ŒI thought you¹d be white¹: Notes on the impossibility of being black British in the USA ­ Ben Carrington (Sociology, UT)

50. Home Page
Collective of musicians, storytellers, and dancers who are priests and adherents of african Traditional diasporic Religions; dedicated to sharing the AfroLatin music, dance, and traditions of Lucumi Orisha and Palo Mayombe.
http://www.wemba-music.org/
WEMBA MEANS MAGIC click the magical bird or here to enter the world of Wemba Wemba@wemba-music.org please contact webmaster Denise Oliver-Velez for use of text or images

51. African Holocaust & African Diaspora
The african Diaspora The forced and brutal dispersal of millions of Though enslaved and uprooted, diasporic blacks of african descent used their lives
http://web.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/CoursePack/diaspora.htm
HUM 211 Course Pack - Fall 2004
COCC Home
Cora Agatucci Home Classes HUM 211 Home ... HUM 211 Course Pack The African Holocaust: (hol e kost), n. 1a. a great or complete slaughter or reckless destruction of life.
"The Black Holocaust is one of the more underreported events in the annals of human history. The Black Holocaust makes reference to the millions of African lives which have been lost during the centuries to slavery, colonization and oppression. The Black Holocaust makes reference to the horrors endured by millions of men, women, and children throughout the African Diaspora. In sheer numbers, depth and brutality, it is a testimony to the worst elements of human behavior and the strongest elements of survival." The Black Holocaust: From Maafa to Colonization KAMMAASI / Sankofa Project Guide
http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Classroom/9912/blackholocaust.html
The African Diaspora:
The forced and brutal dispersal of millions of Africans into foreign lands created the African / Black Diaspora.

52. Diasporic Linkages Between Africa And The Americas
The african Diaspora Interpretive Essays. Martin Kilson and Robert Rotberg (eds . africana Studies A Survey of Africa and the african Diaspora.
http://africa.wisc.edu/outreach/units/diaspora-bib.html
University of Wisconsin-Madison African Studies Program
Outreach Services Diasporic Linkages Between Africa and the Americas Compiled by Jermaine Jones, African Studies Outreach (1997). Please also consult our African Diaspora Page Print Resources
  • Almeida, Bira. Capoeira, a Brazilian Art Form . Richmond, CA: North Atlantic Books, 1981. Black Art, Ancestral Legacy: The African Impulse in African-American Art . The Dallas Museum of Art. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990. Price, Sally. Afro-American Arts of the Suriname Rain Forest . Los Angeles: Museum of Cultural History/University of California Press. Sacred Arts of Haitian Vodou . Donald Cosentino (ed.) Los Angeles: UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, 1981. Thompson, Robert Farris. Face of the Gods: Arts and Altars of Africa and the African Americas . New York: Museum for African Arts, 1993. Flash of the Spirit: African and Afro-American Art and Philosophy . New York: Random House, 1983. The Four Moments of the Sun: Kongo Art in Two Worlds . Washington: National Gallery of Art, 1981.

53. Graduates
She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in african Diaspora Studies with a designated She is currently examining the diasporic relationship between african
http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~africam/programs/graduates.htm
Graduate Advisor: Robert L. Allen, Adjunct Professor rlallen@berkeley.edu Current Graduate Students ARAKI, KEIKO
keikoara@berkeley.edu

Keiko received her B.A. in Law (International Relations) from Hitotsubashi University (Japan) and Master's degrees in Political Science from Keio University (Japan) and in African American Studies from UC Berkeley. Her academic interests include the worldview influence of Marcus Garvey's movement, especially upon the Japanese. Keiko explores racial international relations/world structure through Garvey's movement in the early 20th century. She is currently in Japan conducting research BAILEY, MARLON M.
mmbailey@berkeley.edu

Marlon has recently accepted the UC Berkeley Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellowship in Gender and Women Studies for the next 2 yrs (2005-2007). BECK, LATOYA
lbeck01@berkeley.edu

LaToya received her B.A. (cum laude) in International Studies and a Certificate in International Journalism from Hamline University in 2003. She is currently looking at the movement of Africans to the Middle East during the East African slave trade and is attempting to make a case for their inclusion in the global African diaspora. LaToya is also interested in understanding how notions of African diaspora account for themselves and who they exclude. She maintains an interest photography and film, as well as a scholarly interest in journalism and news production.

54. Conferences
african and diasporic Intellectuals and Discussions of a Black Atlantic -TheIndian Ocean african Diaspora -diasporic Migrations
http://www.yorku.ca/nhp/conferences/aswad2005/
CALL FOR PAPERS CALL FOR PAPERS DIASPORIC ENCOUNTERS AND COLLABORATIONS
The Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora (ASWAD)
Third Biennial Conference
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
October 5-7, 2005
The Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora (ASWAD) was created as an avenue through which scholars, activists, policy-makers, and others can discuss ideas concerning the state of the global African Diaspora and connect these ideas wth concrete concerns and actions. Recognizing both the unity and the diversity of the African Diaspora, ASWAD conferences facilitate, in workshops, roundtables and panels, the exchange of information and knowledge about issues confronting African Diasporan populations around the world.
ASWAD has selected Brazil, the country with the largest African descendant population in the Americas and, after Nigeria, in the world, as the venue of its third biennial conference in recognition of both the historic place of Brazil within the Diaspora and the prevalent Africanity of its national culture. Brazil is traversing a most intriguing moment in Brazilian, South American and
descent. In addition, ASWAD is aware of the increasing involvement of the Brazilian government with present-day Africa, highlighting a whole range of issues including North-South trade, debt relief, and the fight against pandemic disease.

55. NYU Press
This sparkling mosaic of thought from the african Diaspora redraws the boundaries diasporic Africa presents the most recent research on the history and
http://www.nyupress.org/product_info.php?products_id=3833

56. German Anthropology-Online
african diaspora. Out of Africa Intor new worlds diasporic groups rememberingAfrica is the topic of these papers their history, enslavement, violence,
http://www.anthropology-online.de/Aga03/0122.html
3122 ZIPS, WERNER (Ed.)
Afrikanische Diaspora. Out of Africa - Intor new worlds
(Afrika und ihre Diaspora 1)
462 pp., Euro 29.90; ISBN 3-8258-3971-0 African diaspora. Out of Africa - Intor new worlds
Diasporic groups remembering Africa is the topic of these papers: their history, enslavement, violence, etc. Today, there are remembering, new beginnings, and re-unification processes.
  • ONYEJI, CHIBO: An image of Africans
  • BERG, MARTINA: Dynamische Diaspora-Dimensionen Die Gemeinschaft der African Hebrew Israelites [Dynamic diaspora: The community of the African Hebrew Israelites]
  • ONYEJI, CHIBO: Rephrasing premises: A role for African/Nigerian journalism
  • ZOBEL, CLEMENS: The presence of the absent: The Griot tradition in Black popular culture experiencing the griot
  • BILBY, KENNETH: Making modernity in the hinterlands: new Maroon musics in the Black Atlantic
  • THIELE, MARIA ELISABETH: Die Religion der Yoruba in der afrikanischen Diaspora Londons [The religion of the Yoruba in the African diaspora of London]
  • SCHMIDT, BETTINA E.: Die Welt der Orichas in New York. Puerto-Ricaner entdecken ihre afrikanischen Wurzeln in der Santeria [Orichas in New York. Puerto-Ricans discover their African roots in the Santeria]

57. African & African-American Diasporic Web Sites
Music from Africa and the african Diaspora Back to top Literature QBR (TheQuarterly Black Review) Sister Sleuth This site features mystery novels by and
http://www.af.public.lib.ga.us/aarl/AARL-Refernce&Research DivisionAfrican&Afric
Home About AARL AARL Events Calendar ... Tours
Reference Databases Online Databases:
Black Literature 1827-1940
Black Drama 1850 to Present
JSTOR
CD-ROM Databases:

Black Literature 1827-1940 Index on
CD-ROM
Black Studies on Disc (annual)
Database of African-American
Poetry 1760-1900 Ask a Reference Question Reproduction Policy Search Catalogue Manuscript Collections ... Archives Finding Aids-Alphabetical Digital Collections Photograph Collections Photograph Request Form Library Resources S ... y Quick Links Publishers Libraries Journals Online Religion ... BlacK Americans in Publishing A non-profit organization which supports the advancement of black professionals and aspirants in all areas of the publishing industry, through career networking, mentorship, and education outreach. These goals are realized through regular meetings, special programs, and publications dedicated to support, enable, and encourage our membership. Black Women in Publishing Established in 1979, BWIP, Inc. is an employee-based trade association dedicated to increasing the presence, and supporting the efforts of African Heritage women and men in the publishing industry.

58. [URBANTH-L]CFP: DIASPORIC ENCOUNTERS AND COLLABORATIONS (ASWAD)
Recognizing both the unity and the diversity of the african Diaspora, ASWADconferences facilitate, in workshops, roundtables and panels, the exchange of
http://lists.ysu.edu/pipermail/urbanth-l/2004-December/000184.html
[URBANTH-L]CFP: DIASPORIC ENCOUNTERS AND COLLABORATIONS (ASWAD)
Angela Jancius acjancius at ysu.edu
Mon Dec 6 21:10:32 EST 2004

59. African Studies: African Diaspora
african diaspora newsletter. (Online) Toronto, Cananda York University,Department of History, 2000 (PDF files); Conferences organized by the NHP and
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/diaspora.html
CU Home Libraries Home Search Site Index ... Help Search Library Catalog: Title (start of title) Journal (start of title) Author (last, first) Keyword (and, or, not, "") Subject Go To CLIO >> Find Databases: Title Keywords Title (start of title) Keywords Go To Databases >> Find E-Journals: Title (start of title) Title Keywords Subject Keywords Go To E-Journals >> Search the Libraries Website: Go To Advanced Website Search >> About the Libraries Libraries Collections Digital Collections Hours Directions to Columbia Map of Campus Libraries More... Catalogs CLIO (Columbia's Online Catalog) Other Catalogs at CU and Nearby A-Z List of Library Catalogs Course Reserves More... E-Resources Citation Finder Databases E-Journals E-Books E-Data E-News E-Images Subject Guides More...

60. Global Mappings: Northwestern University
Welcome to Global Mappings A Political Atlas of the african Diaspora.This interactive website demonstrates linkages between transnational black politics,
http://diaspora.northwestern.edu/
Welcome to Global Mappings: A Political Atlas of the African Diaspora . This interactive website demonstrates linkages between transnational black politics, social movements and world historical events of the 20th century. Certain software is necessary to view the site. Most important is a current version of the Macromedia Flash player . If you see the words "Get Flash Player", you need to download the software from the Macromedia Flash site First time visitors are recommended to view the Introduction, returning visitors may prefer to go to the Map directly. Should you experience any problems using the site, please contact technical support at the Multimedia Learning Center. Sitewide Index of Articles (for Search Engines)

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