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Revision as of 12:24, 14 March 2008
- see African studies for the study of African culture and history in Africa.
Part of the Politics series on |
Pan-Africanism |
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Afrocentricity, or Afrocentrism, is a world view which emphasizes the importance of African peoples in culture, philosophy, and history.[1] Fundamental to Afrocentrism is the assumption that approaching knowledge from a Eurocentrist perspective, as well as certain mainstream assumptions in the application of information in the West, has led to injustices and also to inadequacies in meeting the needs of African peoples, meaning indigenous, Black Africans and the peoples of the African diaspora. The Afrocentrist paradigm seeks to discover and also reinterpret information through African eyes.
As an ideology and scholarly and social movement, the Afrocentrist paradigm has its beginnings among Black intellectuals, political figures and historians in the practice of history and social and political activism. However, as part of a broader, multicultural movement, it is in use today beyond these contexts across a number of disciplines, among them religion, education, sociology, psychiatry, medicine and public health, and in the delivery of government and social services.[citation needed] Molefi Kete Asante describes "Afrocentricity" as a "systematic nationalism", however, it focuses more on one's consciousness instead of the change of the black nation. This term no longer represents a "coherent political ideology" but appears to be instead a set of tactics in the struggle for cultural survival.[2]
According to its critics, Afrocentrism is a mythology which exaggerates the contributions of African peoples to culture, philosophy, and history. They point towards their claims of Egyptians being black and the Olmecs being an African people, allegations unsupported by the critics.[citation needed] They claim it is examples an attempt to claim black superiority over other races, when blacks were ultimately behind Western civilization.[citation needed] The prime goal or Afrocentrism is to encourage black nationalism as well as ethnic pride in order to effective combat the destructive consequences of cultural and universal racism.[3]
History
Afrocentrists commonly contend that Eurocentrism has led to the neglect or denial of the contributions of African people and focused instead on a generally European-centered model of world civilization and history. Therefore, Afrocentrism is a paradigm shift from a European-centered history to an African-centered history. More broadly, Afrocentrism is concerned with distinguishing African achievements apart from the influence of European peoples.[4] Some Western mainstream scholars have assessed some Afrocentric ideas as pseudohistorical, especially claims regarding Ancient Egypt as contributing directly to the development of Greek and Western culture.[5] [6]Contemporary Afrocentrists may view the movement as multicultural rather than ethnocentric.[7] According to US professor Victor Oguejiofor Okafor, concepts of Afrocentricity lie at the core of the disciplines such as African American studies.[8]
Modern afrocentricity has its origins in the work of African and African diaspora intellectuals in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Afrocentricity has changed over time. Aspects have been hotly debated both outside and within Afrocentric circles.
Afrocentrism developed first as an argument among leaders and intellectuals in the Western Hemisphere. It arose following social changes in the United States and Africa due both to the end of slavery and expansion of British colonialism. Wanting to further establish their own identities in freedom, African Americans left white-dominated churches to establish their own. They pulled together in communities and often migrated to restore their families. African Americans eagerly sought education. They withdrew women and children from fieldwork as much as possible, the men received the right to vote and participate in public office, and their leaders took more active public roles despite severe discrimination and segregation.[9][10]
By the late 19th century, Great Britain had become a world power. Through the century Great Britain and France governments, travelers, scholars, artists and writers increasingly turned their attentions to Africa and the Near East as places of exploration (both physical and intellectual), settlement, exploitation of new resources, and playing out of their longstanding rivalries. They completed the Suez Canal in 1869, simplifying ship passage between Europe and the Far East. Based on their self-appraisal of the value of technology, industrialization, Western infrastructure, and culture, these European nations assumed their superiority to the peoples and cultures they encountered in Africa.
19th and early 20th century
Edward Wilmot Blyden, an Americo-Liberian educator and diplomat active in the pan-Africa movement, perceived a change in perception taking place among Europeans towards Africans in his 1908 book African Life and Customs, which originated as a series of articles in the Sierra Leone Weekly News.[11] In it, he proposed that Africans were beginning to be seen simply as different and not as inferior, in part because of the work of English writers such as Mary Kingsley and Lady Lugard, who traveled and studied in Africa.[11] Such an enlightened view was fundamental to refute prevailing ideas among Western peoples about African cultures and Africans.
Blyden used that standpoint to show how the traditional social, industrial, and economic life of Africans untouched by "either European or Asiatic influence", was different and complete in itself, with its own organic wholeness.[11] In a letter responding to Blyden's original series of articles, Fante journalist and politician J.E. Casely Hayford commented, "It is easy to see the men and women who walked the banks of the Nile" passing him on the streets of Kumasi.[11] Hayford suggested building a University to preserve African identity and instincts. In that university, the history chair would teach
"...universal history, with particular reference to the part Ethiopia has played in the affairs of the world. I would lay stress upon the fact that while Ramses II was dedicating temples to "the God of gods, and secondly to his own glory", the God of the Hebrews had not yet appeared unto Moses in the burning bush; that Africa was the cradle of the world's systems and philosophies, and the nursing mother of its religions. In short, that Africa has nothing to be ashamed of in its place among the nations of the earth. I would make it possible for this seat of learning to be the means of revising erroneous current ideas regarding the African; of raising him in self-respect; and of making him an efficient co-worker in the uplifting of man to nobler effort."[11]
The exchange of ideas between Blyden and Hayford embodied the fundamental concepts of Afrocentricism.
In the United States, writers and editors of publications such as The Crisis and The Journal of Negro History sought to counter the prevailing view that Sub-Saharan Africa had contributed nothing of value to human history that was not the result of incursions by Europeans and Arabs.[12] Authors in these journals theorized that Ancient Egyptian civilization was the culmination of events arising from the origin of the human race in Africa. They investigated the history of Africa from that perspective.
Afrocentrists claimed The Mis-Education of the Negro (1933) by Carter G. Woodson, an African- American historian, as one of their foundational texts. Woodson critiqued education of African Americans as "mis-education" because he held that it denigrated the black while glorifying the white. For these early Afrocentrists, the goal was to break what they saw as a vicious cycle of the reproduction of black self-abnegation. In the words of The Crisis editor W.E.B. Du Bois, the world left African Americans with a "double consciousness," and a sense of "always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity."[13]
In his early years, W.E.B. Du Bois, researched West African cultures and attempted to construct a pan-Africanist value system based on West African traditions. In the 1950s Du Bois envisioned and received funding from Ghanaian president Kwame Nkrumah to produce an Encyclopedia Africana to chronicle the history and cultures of Africa. Du Bois died before being able to complete his work. Some aspects of Du Bois's approach are evident in work by Cheikh Anta Diop in the 1950s and 1960s. Diop identified a pan-African protolanguage and presented evidence that ancient Egyptians were, indeed, Africans.
Du Bois inspired a number of authors, including Drusilla Dunjee Houston. After reading his work The Negro (1915), Houston embarked upon writing her Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire (1926). The book was a compilation of evidence related to the historic origins of Cush and Ethiopia, and assessed their influences on Greece.
1960s and 1970s
The 1960s and 1970s were times of social and political ferment which gave rise in the U.S. to the Black Nationalist, Black Power and Black Arts Movements, all driven to some degree by a rejection of Western values and an identification with "Mother Africa." Afrocentric scholars and Black youth also challenged Eurocentric ideas in academia. 1968 signaled a new era in student unrest in the U.S. when Howard University became the first major university to be shut down by student protests, in part over demands for a more Afrocentric orientation of the institution.
The work of Cheikh Anta Diop became very influential. In the following decades, histories related to Africa and the diaspora gradually would incorporate a more African perspective. Since that time, African peoples increasingly have been seen as the makers and shapers of their own histories.[1]
You have all heard of the African Personality; of African democracy, of the African way to socialism, of negritude, and so on. They are all props we have fashioned at different times to help us get on our feet again. Once we are up we shan't need any of them any more. But for the moment it is in the nature of things that we may need to counter racism with what Jean-Paul Sartre has called an anti-racist racism, to announce not just that we are as good as the next man but that we are much better.
—Chinua Achebe, 1965[14]
Tejumola Olaniyan writes that Chinua Achebe easily might have included Afrocentrism in his list of "props." In this context, ethnocentric Afrocentrism was not intended to be essential or permanent. It was a consciously fashioned strategy of resistance to the Eurocentrism of the time.[13] Afrocentric scholars adopted two approaches: a deconstructive rebuttal of what they called "the whole archive of European ideological racism" and a bold reconstructive act of writing new, authentic, self-constructed histories.[13] Afrocentricity gained an international forum when Senegalese scholar Cheikh Anta Diop attacked the long history of biased scholarship at a 1974 UNESCO symposium in Cairo. The several-day symposium on "The Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Decipherment of Meroitic Script" brought together scholars of Egypt from around the world.[15]
Key texts from this period include:
- The Destruction of Black Civilization (1971) by Chancellor Williams
- The African Origins of Civilization: Myth or Reality (1974) by Cheikh Anta Diop
- They Came Before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America (1976) by Ivan Van Sertima
Scholars have noted, however, that in fact Greeks built the Library of Alexandria, and stocked it with scrolls collected from Egyptian temples. This work took place during the Hellenistic period of Egypt, many years after Aristotle's death. James' claims are thus disproved. He is considered as having contributed more by encouraging pride in Africa than by making significant contributions to the historical record.
Some Afrocentric writers focused on study of indigenous African civilizations and peoples, to emphasize African history separate from European or Arab influence. Primary among them was Chancellor Williams, whose book The Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. set out to determine a "purely African body of principles, value systems (and) philosophy of life". Because he published the first version in 1971 and the second edition in 1987, his book reached at least two generations of audiences.[16]
Pre-Columbian Africa-Americas contact theories
It has been suggested that this article be split into a new article titled Pre-Columbian Africa-Americas contact theories. (discuss) |
In the 1970s, several scholars[citation needed] advanced theories that the complex civilizations of the Americas were the result of trans-oceanic influence from the Egyptians or other African civilizations. Such a claim is the primary thesis of Ivan van Sertima's book They Came Before Columbus, published in 1978. These hyper-diffusionist writers seek to establish that the Olmec people, who built the first highly complex civilization in Mesoamerica and are considered by some to be the mother civilization for all other civilizations of Mesoamerica, were deeply influenced by Africans. Van Sertima himself contended that the Olmec civilization was a hybrid one of Africans and Native Americans. His book, published by a major publishing house, received broad exposure. While Van Sertima rejected[citation needed] the notion that his findings were driven by Afrocentrism, the book received a friendly reception among Afrocentrist proponents. His theory of pre-Columbian American-African contact has met with opposition in academia, with some Mesoamericanists charging Van Sertima with "doctoring" and twisting data to fit his conclusions, and with inventing evidence.[6] However, archaeological finds over the last two decades in South America of rock art and human skeletal remains suggest to some scholars and academicians an ancient, pre-Columbian presence of "Australoid" or "Negroid" peoples in the New World[17] who came from Australia and Melanesia earlier than the Asian ancestors of current Native American populations.[18][19]
1980s and 1990s
In the 1980s and 1990s, Afrocentrism increasingly became seen as a tool for addressing social ills and a means of grounding community efforts toward self-deterimination and political and economic empowerment.
In his (1992) article "Eurocentrism vs. Afrocentrism", US anthropologist Linus A. Hoskins wrote:
The vital necessity for African people to use the weapons of education and history to extricate themselves from this psychological dependency complex/syndrome as a necessary precondition for liberation. [...] If African peoples (the global majority) were to become Afrocentric (Afrocentrized), ... that would spell the ineluctable end of European global power and dominance. This is indeed the fear of Europeans. ... Afrocentrism is a state of mind, a particular subconscious mind-set that is rooted in the ancestral heritage and communal value system. [20]
Although Afrocentricity is often associated with liberal or left-wing politics politics, the movement is not homogeneous. During the 1980s and 1990s, sociological research became increasingly preoccupied with the problem of the "black underclass". Some Afrocentric scholars began[citation needed] to frame Afrocentric values as a remedy for what they perceived to be the social ills of poor African Americans. American educator Jawanza Kunjufu made the case that hip hop culture, rather than being creative expression of the culture, was the root of many social ills.[21] For some Afrocentrists, the contemporary problems of the ghetto stemmed not from race and class inequality, but rather from a failure to inculcate Black youth with Afrocentric values.[22]
Afrocentric ideas also received a considerable boost from the cultural shift known as postmodernism and its privileging of difference, micro-struggles, and the politics of identity. Postmodernism's general assault on the authority and universalist claims of Western "culture" is also a mainstay in many Afrocentric agendas. In turn, postmodern pluralism has begun to permeate Afrocentric thought.[13]
In the West and elsewhere, the European, in the midst of other peoples, has often propounded an exclusive view of reality; the exclusivity of this view creates a fundamental human crisis. In some cases, it has created cultures arrayed against each other or even against themselves. Afrocentricity’s response certainly is not to impose its own particularity as a universal, as Eurocentricity has often done. But hearing the voice of African American culture with all of its attendant parts is one way of creating a more sane society and one model for a more humane world. -Asante, M. K. (1988)[23]
By the end of the 1990s, the ethnocentric Afrocentrism of the '50s, '60s and '70s[citation needed] had largely fallen out of favor.[citation needed] In 1997, US cultural historian Nathan Glazer described Afrocentricity as a form of multiculturalism. He wrote that its influence ranged from sensible proposals about inclusion of more African material in school curriculums to what he called senseless claims about African primacy in all major technological achievements. Glazer argued that Afrocentricity had become more important due to the failure of mainstream society to assimilate all African Americans. Anger and frustration at their continuing separation gave black Americans the impetus to reject traditions that excluded them.[24]
Contemporary
Today, Afrocentricity takes many forms, including serving as a tool for creating a more multicultural and balanced approach to the study of history and sociology. Afrocentricity contends that race still exists as a social and political construct.[22] It argues that for centuries in academia, Eurocentric ideas about history were dominant: ideas such as blacks having no civilizations, no written languages, no cultures, and no histories of any note before coming into contact with Europeans. Further, according to the views of some Afrocentrists, European history has commonly received more attention within the academic community than the history of sub-Saharan African cultures or those of the many Pacific Island peoples. Afrocentrists contend it is important to divorce the historical record from past racism. Molefi Kete Asante's book Afrocentricity (1988) argues that African-Americans should look to African cultures "as a critical corrective to a displaced agency among Africans." Less concerned about specific claims about the race of the Egyptians or other controversial topics, some Afrocentrists believe that the burden of Afrocentricity is to define and develop African agency in the midst of the cultural wars debate. By doing so, Afrocentricity can support all forms of multiculturalism.[25]
Afrocentrists argue that Afrocentricity is important for people of all ethnicities who want to understand African history and the African diaspora. For example, the Afrocentric method can be used to research African indigenous culture. Queeneth Mkabela writes in 2005 that the Afrocentric perspective provides new insights for understanding African indigenous culture, in a multicultural context. According to Mkabela and others, the Afrocentric method is a necessary part of complete scholarship and without it, the picture is incomplete, less accurate, and less objective.[26]
Contemporary Afrocentrists may view the movement as multicultural rather than ethnocentric.[7]They see Afrocentricity as one part of a larger multicultural movement that has begun to shift the focus of historical and cultural studies away from Eurocentrism.[27] Studies of African and African-diaspora cultures have shifted understanding and created a more positive acceptance of influence by African religious, linguistic and other traditions, both among scholars and the general public. For example Lorenzo Dow Turner's seminal 1949 study of the Gullah language, a dialect spoken by black communities in Georgia and South Carolina, demonstrated that its idiosyncrasies were not simply incompetent command of English, but incorporated West African linguistic characteristics in vocabulary, grammar, sentence structure, and semantic system.[28] Likewise, religious movements such as Vodou are now less likely to be characterized as "mere superstition", but understood in terms of links to African traditions. Scholars who adopt such approaches may or may not see their work as Afrocentrist in orientation.[citation needed]
In recent years Africana Studies or Africology[1] departments at many major universities have grown out of the Afrocentric "Black Studies" departments formed in the 1970s. Rather than focusing on black topics in the African diaspora (often exclusively African American topics), these reformed departments aim to expand the field to encompass all of the African diaspora. They also seek to better align themselves with other University departments and find continuity and compromise between the radical Afrocentricity of the past decades and the multicultural scholarship found in many fields today.[29]
Eurocentrism
In part in response to the pressure of Afrocentrists, the study of history and sociology has changed, gradually incorporating Afrocentic ideas as a part of a broader push toward multiculturalism in academia. Afrocentricity has had an impact on the disciplines of African studies, Black studies and Africana studies, as well as anthropology, sociology, and the study of history as a whole. Adisa A. Alkebulan writes that the Afrocentric idea has been a guiding paradigm in postcolonial African studies and Africana studies.[30] These changes were necessary due to the limits of Eurocentrism, especially in earlier western scholarship. For example:
I am apt to suspect the Negroes to be naturally inferior to the Whites. There scarcely ever was a civilized nation of that complexion, nor even any individual, eminent either in action or speculation. No ingenious manufactures amongst them, no arts, no sciences. ...[In] our colonies, there are Negro slaves dispersed all over Europe, of whom none ever discovered the symptoms of ingenuity; though low people, without education, will start up amongst us, and distinguish themselves in every profession. In Jamaica, indeed, they talk of one Negro as a man of parts and learning; but it is likely he is admired for slender accomplishments, like a parrot who speaks a few words plainly. - David Hume 18th century Scottish historian, philosopher and essayist.[31]
By the mid-20th century many such overtly derogatory ideas had been rejected, but Afrocentrists contended that the denial, denigration and appropriation of black historical and cultural achievements made it important to study world history from a new perspective. Thus, Afrocentric scholars have worked to engage the biased methods and approaches used by some European scholars and the European-dominated intellectual community, in relation to all the people of Africa and the diaspora.
Because of bias due to Eurocentrism, scholars sometimes overlooked or denied Africans' agency in the creation of their own histories. For example until recently, Western scholars believed cities such as Dakar, Banjul (Bathhurst), Abidjan, Conakry and others were created by Western colonizers. Although the cities were transformed by colonization (in both negative and positive ways), each of them predated colonization. Similarly, many of the existing economic and institutional patterns in Africa had origins well before colonialism.[32]
Lynn Meskell writes that archaeologists working in Egypt have rarely considered the local and global ramifications of their interpretations of ancient history. According to Meskell, many continue to operate under the residual effects of colonialism.[33] In 1991 Wyatt MacGaffey wrote that the bulk of scholarly work about Africa took for granted a Eurocentric distinction between "savage" and "civilized" peoples calculated to flatter the European and white audience for which it was intended. MacGaffey writes that it has only been since the 1960s that the possibility of writing any history for Africa has been generally admitted.[34]
Nathan Glazer acknowledges that Afrocentricity and multiculturalism have played a role in shaping trends in the teaching of history and the social sciences, but he also stresses that they are not the only cultural movements responsible for the move away from now increasingly obsolete forms of Eurocentrism.[24]
Definitions of Pan-African identity
Afrocentic scholars have struggled to reconcile the relationships among racial, cultural and continental identities. Some authors[who?] have used the concept of black racial identity to gather under the umbrella of "African" peoples even widely dispersed populations traditionally classified and thought of as non-Africans. These include the Dravidians of India, the people of the rest of the Indian subcontinent, and the Australoid aboriginal peoples of Australia and New Guinea.
Some Afrocentric writers[who?] also include in the African diaspora the "Negritos" of Southeast Asia (Thailand, Java, Borneo, Sumatra and Malaysia, and Cambodia); and the Africoid, aboriginal peoples of Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia.
Some Afrocentrists claim that the Olmecs of Mexico were a hybrid society comprised of Native American peoples and Africans. Mainstream historians of Mesoamerica do not share that view.[6]
Afrocentrists who adopt this approach contend that such peoples are African in a racial sense, just as the white inhabitants of modern Australia may be said to be European.[who?] In doing so, they ignore the drastically different time frames for migration of whites from Europe to Australia within the last 200 years, and ancient peoples from the African continent to India or Polynesia tens of thousands of years ago.
In 2003, geneticist Spencer Wells' findings confirmed a clear DNA link between indigenous Africans and the Australoid peoples of India, Australia and Southeast Asia, tracing the DNA of San bushmen from southeast Africa to India and on to Australia. Earlier studies showed that some of these darker-skinned ethnic groups cluster genetically more closely with neighboring East Asians than with indigenous Africans, due to millennia of intermingling with one another in relative isolation.
Afrocentrists have adopted a pan-Africanist perspective that such people of color are all "African people" or "diasporic Africans," citing physical characteristics they exhibit in common with Black Africans. Afrocentric scholar Runoko Rashidi writes that they are all part of the "global African community."
Critics of Afrocentrism note that the Southeast Asian and Melanesian peoples did not emigrate out of Africa within any time span that relates them closely to ancient African civilizations. Wells' work indicates that the ancestors of Southeast Asian and Melanesian peoples migrated out of Africa before the ancestors of modern Europeans did. The Afrocentric designation of Southeast Asians and Melanesians as "African diaspora" is also made without reference to the self-identities of the peoples in question, who may not generally consider themselves African.
Views on race
Afrocentricity contends that race exists primarily as a social and political construct. That is, race is important because of its cultural rather than its supposed biological significance.[22] Many Afrocentrists seek to challenge concepts such as white privilege, so-called color-blind perspectives, and race-neutral pedagogies. There are strong ties between Afrocentricity and Critical race theory.[36]
Afrocentrists hold that Africans exhibit a range of types and physical characteristics, and that such elements as wavy hair or aquiline facial features are part of a continuum of African types that do not depend on admixture with Caucasian groups. Work by Hiernaux [37] and Hassan [38] demonstrated that populations could vary based on microevolutionary principles (climate adaptation, drift, selection), and that such variations existed in both living and fossil Africans.[39]
Afrocentrists condemned attempts to split African peoples into racial clusters as new versions of older, discredited theories, such as the "Hamitic Hypothesis" and the Dynastic Race Theory. These had attempted to identify certain African ethnicities, such as Nubians, Ethiopians and Somalians, as "Caucasoid" groups that entered Africa to bring civilization to the natives.
Afrocentrists charged that a double standard existed as Western academics had made limited attempts to define a "true white".[40] They believed that Western academics had traditionally limited the peoples they defined as Black Africans, but used broader "Caucasoid" or related categories to classify peoples of Egypt or certain other African cultures.
Afrocentric writer C.A. Diop expressed this belief in a double standard as follows in 1964:
"But it is only the most gratuitous theory which considers the Dinka, the Nouer and the Masai, among others, to be Caucasoids. What if an African ethnologist were to persist in recognising as white only the blond, blue-eyed Scandinavians, and systematically refused membership to the remaining Europeans, and Mediterraneans in particular--the French, Italians, Greek, Spanish, and Portuguese? Just as the inhabitants of Scandinavia and the Mediterranean countries must be considered as two extreme poles of the same anthropological reality, so should the Negroes of East and West Africa be considered as the two extremes in the reality of the Negro world. To say that a Shillouk, a Dinka, or a Nouer is a Caucasoid is for an African as devoid of sense and scientific interest as would be, to a European, an attitude which maintained that a Greek or a Latin were not of the same race."[41]
Afrocentrists believed that European scholars defined Black peoples as narrowly as possible, defining as the extreme "true Negro" only those peoples living south of the Sahara. All those who did not meet the definition of this extreme were allocated to "Caucasoid" groupings, including Ethiopians, Egyptians and Nubians (C. G. Seligman's Races of Africa, 1966)[42] Some anthropologists pointed out there was little evidence to suggest that these populations were closely related to "Caucasoids" of Europe and western Asia.[37]
French historian Jean Vercoutter claimed that selective grouping was common among scholars assessing the ethnicity of the ancient Egyptians. He said that workers routinely classified Negroid remains as "Mediterranean", even though archaeological workers found such remains in substantial numbers with ancient artifacts.( Vercoutter 1978- The Peopling of ancient Egypt)[43]
More recent work by DNA analysts provides evidence that Caucasians likely are descended from populations who migrated north and east out of East Africa and the Horn, hence certain shared genetic and phenotypical characteristics among Caucasians and some East African groups, including some Ethiopians and some Somalis.[44] Some phenotypical similarities among Somalis and Europeans exist at a higher structural level, such as skull shape, according to anthropologist Loring Brace. "When the nonadaptive aspects of craniofacial configuration are the basis for assessment, the Somalis cluster with Europeans before showing a tie with the people of West Africa or the Congo Basin". This suggests that the people of Somalia first separated or branched off from the people of West Africa or the Congo Basin. Then, after some period of time, more peoples moved from Somalia to migrate further north into the Caucasus and Europe. The separation between the last movements was closer in time than the separation of Somalis from the peoples of West Africa or the Congo Basin.[45] Genetic analyses of male DNA in the 21st century have indicated that male Somali people, in particular, are overwhelmingly indigenous. [46]
Afrocentrists have argued against the classifying of indigenous, Black Africans as Caucasoid and instead have advanced the use of the term Africoid to encompass the varying phenotypes of both Negroid and proto-Caucasoid Black peoples. They argue it is more appropriate to name Africans in a fashion that reflects their geographical origin, as are Asians, as Mongoloids, and Europeans, as Caucasians.
Role of Ancient Egypt
Several Afrocentrists have said that important cultural characteristics of ancient Egypt were indigenous to Africa and that these features were present in other African civilizations.[47] Critical of much of mainstream Egyptology, Afrocentrists wrote that the study of ancient Egyptian culture had been artificially disconnected from other early African civilizations, such as Kerma and the Meroitic civilizations of Nubia — particularly in light of the fact that archaeological evidence clearly indicated a confluence among this cultural triad.[48] This perspective, championed by the Senegalese scholar Cheikh Anta Diop in the 1960s, was known formally as the Cultural Unity Theory. These related theories had proponents in the 1980s outside Afrocentric circles, among them Bruce Williams of the Oriental Institute, Chicago.[49]
Mainstream archaeologists and Egyptologists such as Frank J. Yurco and Fekri Hassan have stated that ancient Egyptian peoples comprised a mix of North and sub-Saharan African peoples that have typified Egyptians ever since. They said that the Egyptian people were generally coextensive with other Africans in the Nile valley.[50]
Early Afrocentrists pointed to the work in the 1960s of Czech anthropologist Eugene Strouhal, which described physical, cultural and material links of ancient Egypt with the peoples of Nubia and the Sahara ( Strouhal (1968, 1971- Strouhal, E., ‘Evidence of the early penetration of Negroes into prehistoric Egypt).[51], the analyses of Falkenburger (1947) which show a clear Negroid element, especially in the southern population and sometimes as predominating in the predynastic period.[52] In 1993 C Loring Brace et al wrote "The attempt to force the Egyptians into either a “black” or a “white” category has no biological justification. Our data show only that Egypt clearly had biological ties to the north and to the south, but that it was intermediate between populations to the east and the west, and that Egypt was basically Egyptian from the Neolithic right on up to historic times."[53]
Research by archaeologist Bruce Williams argued for Nubian cultural influence on formation of the Egyptian kingships. [54]
Egyptians themselves called for the inclusion of Egypt in Du Bois's early drafts of the Encyclopedia Africana. The director of the United Arab Republic Cultural Center in Accra wrote to praise Du Boise for having "maintained faith in the African character of Egypt's achievement," and urging that the Encyclopedia Africana keep Egypt within its Afrocentric focus. [55]
Afrocentrists have claimed a growing scholarly acceptance of Egypt as an African culture with its own unique elements. They cite mainstream scholars like Bruce Trigger, who in 1978 decried that approaches of the past were 'marred by a confusion of race, language, and culture and by an accompanying racism'.[56] and Egyptologist Frank Yurco, who in the late 1990s viewed the Egyptians, Nubians, Ethiopians, Somalians, and others as one localized Nile valley population, that need not be artificially clustered into racial percentages.[57] Afrocentrists have cited 1990s mainstream studies that confirmed the varied physical character of the Egyptian people, and influence on them from other peoples of the Nile (Nilotic influence).[58]
Afrocentrists also claimed that the ancient Egyptians made significant contributions to ancient Greece and Rome during their formative periods. They also claimed that Egyptians were black, as discussed above.[citation needed]
This early Afrocentric view is at odds with conclusions of mid-20th c. Eurocentric scholars such as British historian Arnold Toynbee and hearkens back to the findings of earlier historians.[citation needed] Toynbee believed the ancient Egyptian cultural sphere had died out without leaving a successor. He regarded as "myth" the idea that Egypt was the "origin of Western civilization."
There are accounts in the historical record dating back several centuries, in which writers noted Egypt's contributions to Mediterranean civilizations.[59]
Criticism
This article's "criticism" or "controversy" section may compromise the article's neutrality. |
Critics contend that some Afrocentric historical research lacks merit and that it essentially supplants and counters one form of racism with another,[citation needed] rather than attempting to arrive at the truth. Among these critics are Mary Lefkowitz, who contends Afrocentric historical claims are grounded in identity politics and myth rather than sound scholarship. [60] Other critics of the Afrocentric approach in the study of history include history professor Clarence E. Walker[61] and the late Egyptologist Frank Yurco.[62]
Nathan Glazer writes that although Afrocentricity can mean many things, the popular press has generally given most attention to its most outlandish theories.[24] Glazer supports many of the findings in Mary Lefkowitz book Not Out of Africa but also recognizes that Afrocentricity may, at times, take the form of legitimate and relevant scholarship.[24]
Often, the work that critics of Afrocentricity call "bad scholarship" is also rejected by Afrocentrists. Adisa A. Alkebulan writes that critics have used claims of what she calls "a few non-Afrocentrists" as "an indictment against Afrocentricity."[30]
List of prominent authors
- Molefi Kete Asante, professor, author: Afrocentricity: The theory of Social Change; The Afrocentric Idea; The Egyptian Philosophers: Ancient African Voices from Imhotep to Akhenaten
- Ishakamusa Barashango, college professor and lecturer; founder, Temple of the Black Messiah, School of History and Religion; co-founder and creative director, Fourth Dynasty Publishing Company, Silver Spring, Maryland
- Hakim Bey, leader of the Moorish Science Temple, author of the "Journal of the Moorish Paradigm"
- Jacob Carruthers, Egyptologist; founding director of the Association for the Study of Classical African Civilization; founder and director of the Kemetic Institute, Chicago
- Cheikh Anta Diop [2],[3], author: The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality; Civilization or Barbarism: An Authentic Anthropology; Precolonial Black Africa; The Cultural Unity of Black Africa: The Domains of Patriarchy and of Matriarchy in Classical Antiquity; The Peopling of Ancient Egypt & the Deciphering of the Meroitic Script
- H. B. ("Barry") Fell, Harvard professor, biologist, author: Saga America, 1980 [4]
- Charles S. Finch, medical doctor and author: Echoes of the Old Darkland: Themes from the African Eden (1991), Africa and the Birth of Science and Technology (1991), The Star of Deep Beginnings (1998), Biblio Africana: An Annotated Reader's Guide to African Cultural History and Related Subjects (1999), The African Background to Medical Science: Essays on African History, Science & Civilizations (2000), The Afrikan Origins of the Major World Religions (with Yosef Ben-Jochannan and Modupe Oduyoye) (1987)
- Drusilla Dunjee Houston, lecturer, syndicated columnist, author: Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire, 1926.
- Yosef Ben-Jochannan, author: African Origins of Major "Western Religions"; Black Man of the Nile and His Family; Africa: Mother of Western Civilization; New Dimensions in African History; The Myth of Exodus and Genesis and the Exclusion of Their African Origins; Africa: Mother of Western Civilization; Abu Simbel to Ghizeh: A Guide Book and Manual
- Runoko Rashidi [5], author: Introduction to African Civilizations; The global African community: The African presence in Asia, Australia, and the South Pacific
- J.A. Rogers, author: Sex and Race: Negro-Caucasian Mixing in All Ages and All Lands : The Old World; Nature Knows No Color Line; Sex and Race: A History of White, Negro, and Indian Miscegenation in the Two Americas : The New World; 100 Amazing Facts About the Negro With Complete Proof: A Short Cut to the World History of the Negro
- Ivan van Sertima, author: They Came before Columbus: The African Presence in Ancient America, African Presence in Early Europe ISBN 0887386644; Blacks in Science Ancient and Modern; African Presence in Early Asia; African Presence in Early America; Early America Revisited; Egypt Revisited: Journal of African Civilizations; Nile Valley Civilizations; Egypt: Child of Africa (Journal of African Civilizations, V. 12); The Golden Age of the Moor (Journal of African Civilizations, Vol. 11, Fall 1991); Great Black Leaders: Ancient and Modern; Great African Thinkers: Cheikh Anta Diop[6]
- Chancellor Williams, author: The Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D.
- Bekeh Ukelina Utietiang, author: "Afridentity: Essays on Africa" Silver Spring: Africa Reads Books, 2007.
- Théophile Obenga, author: Ancient Egypt and Black Africa : a student's handbook for the study of Ancient Egypt in philosophy, linguistics, and gender relations
- Asa Hilliard, III, author: SBA: The Reawakening of the African Mind; The Teachings of Ptahhotep
See also
- African philosophy
- African Renaissance
- Ausar Auset
- Black Athena
- Ethnocentrism
- Eurocentrism
- Kush
- Race of Ancient Egyptians
Notes
- ^ a b c Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Volume 1. Page 111 by Henry Louis Gates (Editor), Kwame Anthony Appiah (Editor) Oxford University Press. 2005. ISBN 0195170555 Cite error: The named reference "Africana" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Gilroy, Paul. "It's a Family Affair." In That's the Joint!: The Hip- hop Studies Reader, 87-94. New York; London: Routledge, 2004.
- ^ http://skepdic.com/afrocent.html
- ^ Moses, Greg. ""Afrocentricity as a Quest for Cultural Unity: Reading Diop in English"". National Association for African American Studies. Retrieved 2007-11-13.
- ^ Sherwin, Elisabeth. "Clarence Walker encourages black Americans to discard Afrocentrism". Davis Community Network. Retrieved 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Ortiz de Montellano, Bernardo & Gabriel Haslip Viera & Warren Barbour (1997). "They were NOT here before Columbus: Afrocentric hyper-diffusionism in the 1990'es". Ethnohistory: 199–234.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Olaniyan, T. (2006). "From Black Aesthetics To Afrocentrism (or, A Small History Of An African And African American Discursivepractice)". West Africa Review. ISSN 1525-4488.
- ^ The Place of Africalogy in the University Curriculum. Victor Oguejiofor Okafor Journal of Black Studies, v26 n6 p688-712 Jul 199
- ^ W.E.B. Du Bois, Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880.New York: Harcourt Brace, 1935; reprint New York: The Free Press, 1998
- ^ Reconstruction, accessed 11/19/2007
- ^ a b c d e Blyden, Edward Wilmot (1994-03-01). African Life and Customs. Black Classic Press. ISBN 978-0933121430.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|coauthors=
(help) Cite error: The named reference "alc" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - ^ The African Origin of the Grecian Civilisation, Journal of Negro History, 1917, pp.334-344
- ^ a b c d From Black Aesthetics to Afrocentrism Tejumola Olaniyan. West Africa Review Issue 9 (2006) Cite error: The named reference "BlackAesthetics" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ The Novelist as Teacher Chinua Achebe 1965
- ^ The Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Decipherment of Meroitic Script: Proceedings of the Symposium Held in Cairo from 28 January to 3 February 1974 by UNESCO, Review author[s]: Bruce G. Trigger, The International Journal of African Historical Studies, Vol. 13, No. 2 (1980), pp. 371-373
- ^ The Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D., p. 19 1987
- ^ "'First Americans Were Australian'." BBC News, Sci/Tech, Thursday, August 26, 1999. Retrieved 01-13-2008
- ^ Bello, David. Scientific American, Skulls Suggest Differing Stocks for First Americans, December 13, 2005. Retrieved 01-13-08.
- ^ Handwerk, Brian."Americas Settled by Two Groups of Early Humans, Study Says." National Geographic News, Dec 12, 2005. Retrieved 01-13-08
- ^ Linus A. Hoskins, Eurocentrism vs. Afrocentrism: A Geopolitical Linkage Analysis, Journal of Black Studies (1992), pp. 249, 251, 253.
- ^ Hip-Hop vs MAAT : A Psycho/Social Analysis of Values Jawanza Kunjufu 1993
- ^ a b c Achieving Blackness: Race, Black Nationalism, and Afrocentrism By Algernon Austin. ISBN 0814707076 Cite error: The named reference "AchievingBlackness" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Asante, M. K. (1988). Afrocentricity. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press Inc. Page 28
- ^ a b c d We Are All Multiculturalists Now By Nathan Glazer Published 1997 Harvard University Press ISBN 067494836X
- ^ Teasley, M. (2007). "Cultural Wars and the Attack on Multiculturalism: An Afrocentric Critique". Journal of Black Studies. 37 (3): 390. doi:10.1177/0021934706290081.
{{cite journal}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Using the Afrocentric Method in Researching Indigenous African Culture by Queeneth Mkabela The Qualitative Report Volume 10 Number 1 March 2005 178-189
- ^ Banks, J.A. (1993). "The Canon Debate, Knowledge Construction, and Multicultural Education". Educational Researcher. 22 (5): 4. doi:10.3102/0013189X022005004.
- ^ Wade-Lewis, Margaret (2007) "Lorenzo Dow Turner: Father of Gullah Studies," University of South Carolina Pres
- ^ Out of the Revolution: The Development of Africana Studies By Delores P. Aldridge, Carlene Young. Lexington Books 2000. ISBN 0739105477
- ^ a b Defending the Paradigm Adisa A. Alkebulan, Journal of Black Studies, Vol. 37, No. 3, 410-427 (2007) Cite error: The named reference "DefendingtheParadigm" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Morton, E. (2002). "Race And Racism In The Works Of David Hume" (PDF). Journal of African Philosophy. 1. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
- ^ The History of African Cities South of the Sahara by Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch P. 329
- ^ The Practice and Politics of Archaeology in Egypt Lynn Meskell. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (2000)
- ^ Who Owns Ancient Egypt? Wyatt MacGaffey The Journal of African History, Vol. 32, No. 3 (1991), pp. 515-519
- ^ [1]
- ^ Critical Pedagogy and Race By Zeus Leonardo Page 129 ISBN 1405129689
- ^ a b Hiernaux, J. (1974). The People of Africa. Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
- ^ Hassan, F.A. (1988). "The Predynastic of Egypt" (PDF). Journal of World Prehistory. 2 (2): 135–185. Retrieved 2007-11-13.
- ^ Keita, S. (1992). "Further Studies of Crania From Ancient Northern Africa: An Analysis of Crania From First Dynasty Egyptian Tombs, Using Multiple Discriminant Functions". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 87: 245–54. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330870302.
- ^ Keita, op. cit
- ^ Evolution of the Negro world' in Presence Africaine (1964)
- ^ C. G. Seligman's Races of Africa, (Oxford University Press: 1966)
- ^ Jean Vercoutter, The Peopling of Ancient Egypt and the Deciphering Meroitic Script. Paris: UNESCO, pp. 15-36.
- ^ Cavalli-sforza, L.L. (1988). "Reconstruction of Human Evolution: Bringing Together Genetic, Archaeological, and Linguistic Data". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 85 (16): 6002–6006. Retrieved 2007-11-16.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
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suggested) (help) - ^ Brace, C.L. (1993). "Clines and clusters versus "Race": A test in ancient Egypt and the case of a death on the Nile". Yearbook of Physical Anthropology. 36: 1–31. doi:10.1002/ajpa.1330360603.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
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suggested) (help) - ^ "High frequencies of Y chromosome lineages characterized by E3b1, DYS19-11, DYS392-12 in Somali males". European Journal of Human Genetics. 2005-03-09. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ Diop, C.A. (1964). "Evolution of the Negro world'". 23 (51): 5–15.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Bruce Williams, 'The lost pharaohs of Nubia', in Ivan van Sertima (ed.), Egypt Revisited (New Brunswick, NJ, Transaction, 1993).
- ^ Forebears of Menes in Nubia: Myth or Reality? Bruce Williams Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 46, No. 1 (Jan., 1987), pp. 15-26
- ^ Yurco, Frank. ""Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White?"" (PDF). BAR magazine. Retrieved 2007-10-03.
- ^ [http://www.search.com/reference/Badarian Strouhal, E., 1971, ‘Evidence of the early penetration of Negroes into prehistoric Egypt’, Journal of African History, 12: 1-9)
- ^ Falkenburger F. (1947) La composition racialel’ hcienne Egypt. L’Anthropologie 51239-250
- ^ C. L. Brace, et al. 1993. “Clines and Clusters Versus “Race:” A Test in ancient Egypt and the Case of a Death on the Nile,” Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 36: 1-31.
- ^ Bruce Williams, 'The lost pharaohs of Nubia', in Ivan van Sertima (ed.), Egypt Revisited (New Brunswick, NJ, Transaction, 1993).
- ^ Afrotopia: The Roots of African American Popular History By Wilson Jeremiah Moses. Page 3. ISBN 052147941X
- ^ Bruce Trigger, 'Nubian, Negro, Black, Nilotic?', in Sylvia Hochfield and Elizabeth Riefstahl (eds), Africa in Antiquity: the arts of Nubia and the Sudan, Vol. 1 (New York, Brooklyn Museum, 1978).
- ^ Frank Yurco, "An Egyptological Review", 1996 -in Mary R. Lefkowitz and Guy MacLean Rogers, Black Athena Revisited, 1996, The University of North Carolina Press, p. 62-100
- ^ S.O.Y. KEITA, "Studies of Ancient Crania From Northern Africa", AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY 83:35-48 (1990)]
- ^ Roth, A. (1995). "Building Bridges to Afrocentrism: A Letter to My Egyptological Colleagues". Newsletter of the American Research Center in Egypt: 167–8. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1996.tb23151.x.
- ^ name=Lefkowitz1996>
Lefkowitz, M.R. (1996). "Not Out of Africa: How" Afrocentrism" Became an Excuse to Teach Myth as History". Retrieved 2007-11-13.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Banner-haley, C.P. (2003). "We Can't Go Home Again: An Argument about Afrocentrism". Journal of Southern History. 69 (3): 663–665. Retrieved 2007-11-13.
- ^ Lefkowitz.
References
- Asante, Molefi Kete (1990). Kemet, Afrocentricity, and knowledge. Africa World Press.
- Bailey, Randall C. (editor) (2003). Yet with a steady beat: contemporary U.S. Afrocentric biblical interpretation. Society of Biblical Literature.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - Berlinerblau, Jacques (1999). Heresy in the University: The Black Athena Controversy and the Responsibilities of American Intellectuals. Rutgers University Press.
- Binder, Amy J. (2002). Contentious curricula: Afrocentrism and creationism in American public schools. Princeton University Press.
{{cite book}}
: External link in
(help)|publisher=
- Browder, Anthony T. (1992). Nile Valley Contributions To Civilization: Exploding the Myths, Volume 1. Washington, DC: Institute of Karmic Guidance.
- Crawford, Clinton (1996). Recasting Ancient Egypt In The African Context: Toward A Model Curriculum Using Art And Language. Trenton, New Jersey: Africa World Press.
- Henderson, Errol Anthony (1995). Afrocentrism and world politics: towards a new paradigm. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger.
- Henke, Holger and Fred Reno (editors) (2003). Modern political culture in the Caribbean. University of the West Indies Press.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - Howe, Stephen (1998). Afrocentrism: mythical pasts and imagined homes. London: Verso.
- Houston, Drusilla Dunjee (1926). Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire. Oklahoma: Universal Publishing Company.
- Kershaw, Terry (1992). ""Afrocentrism and the Afrocentric method." Western Journal of Black Studies". 16 (3): 160–168.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - Konstan, David. "Inventing Ancient Greece: [Review article]", History and Theory, Vol. 36, No. 2. (May, 1997), pp. 261–269.
- Lefkowitz, Mary R. (1996). Not out of Africa: how Afrocentrism became an excuse to teach myth as history. New York: BasicBooks.
- Lefkowitz, Mary R. and Guy MacLean Rogers (editors) (1996). Black Athena Revisited. University of North Carolina Press.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help) - Lewis, Martin W. (1997). The myth of continents: a critique of metageography. University of California Press.
- Magida, Arthur J. (1996). Prophet of rage a life of Louis Farrakhan and his nation. New York: BasicBooks.
- Morton, Eric. "Race and Racism in the Works of David Hume." Journal on African Philosophy. (2002) ISSN: 1533-1067. Africa Resource Center. Retrieved on 2006-11-06.
- Moses, Wilson Jeremiah (1998). Afrotopia: the roots of African American popular history. Cambridge University Press.
- Sniderman, Paul M. and Thomas Piazza (2002). Black pride and black prejudice. Princeton University Press.
- Spivey, Donald (2003). Fire from the soul: a history of the African-American struggle. Carolina Academic Press.
- Walker, Clarence E. (2000). We Can't Go Home Again: An Argument about Afrocentrism. Oxford University Press.
- Wells, Spencer (2002). The Journey of Man: A Genetic Odyssey. Princeton University Press.
- Osei-Yaw, Emmanuel. D.(2006)
- Ani, Marimba (1994). Yurugu: An African-centered Critique of European Thought and Behavior. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press. ISBN 0-86543-248-1.
- Asante, Molefi Kete (1988). Afrocentricity (rev. ed. ed.). Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press. ISBN 0-86543-067-5.
{{cite book}}
:|edition=
has extra text (help) - Asante, Molefi Kete (1990). Kemet, Afrocentricity, and Knowledge. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press. ISBN 0-86543-188-4.
- Asante, Molefi Kete (1998). The Afrocentric Idea. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-56639-594-1.
- Karenga, Maulana (1993). Introduction to Black Studies (2nd ed. ed.). Los Angeles: University of Sankore Press. ISBN 0-943412-16-1.
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:|edition=
has extra text (help)
External links
- 'Were the Ancient Egyptians Black or White' Biblical Archaeology Review for September – October, 1989. Frank Joseph Yurco's perpective on the race controversy of the ancient Egyptians
- Afrocentrism by Robert Todd Carroll, Skeptic's Dictionary
- Afrocentrism: The Argument We're Really Having by Ibrahim Sundiata
- Building Bridges to Afrocentrism by Ann Macy Roth, for the University of Pennsylvania's African Studies Center
- Afrocentrist multicultural pseudo-history by The Association for Rational Thought
- Ex Africa Lux? by T. A. Schmitz (PDF)
- Fallacies of Afrocentrism by Grover Furr, for the Montclair State University
- "Not Out Of Africa Excerpt," by Mary Lefkowitz
- Racism and the Rediscovery of Ancient Nubia
- UC Davis History Professor Clarence Walker's take on Afrocentrism
- Safari Scholarship Reinvents History by Ilana Mercer
- Robbing Native American Cultures: Van Sertima's Afrocentricity and the Olmecs, an article from Current Anthropology
- by Mark Newbrook
- Multiculturalism, Cult Archaeology, and Pseudoscience by Bernard Ortiz De Montellano
- Comments on Pitfalls in Multicultural Science Education
- Spreading Scientific Illiteracy Among Minorities - Part I: Multicultural Pseudoscience
- Spreading Scientific Illiteracy Among Minorities - Part II: Magic Melanin
- Afrocentric websites