African studies
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African studies is the study of Africa, and can encompass such fields as social and economic development, politics, history, culture, sociology, anthropology or linguistics. A specialist in African studies is referred to as an Africanist. Adisa A. Alkebulan writes that the Afrocentric idea has been a guiding paradigm in postcolonial African studies.[1]
Contents |
Subfields include:
African American studies, a subfield of American studies is sometimes combined with African studies under the name of "Africana studies" (or Black studies).
- Robert Sutherland Rattray
- Basil Davidson
- François Bassolet
- Ali Mazrui
- Bill Freund
- Jean Suret-Canale
- David William Cohen
- Roland Oliver
- John Fage
- Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch
- Albert Adu Boahen
- Cheikh Anta Diop
- Patrick Manning
- Walter Rodney
- Andrzej Zajączkowski
- Konrad Tuchscherer
- Nji Oumarou Nchare
- Niara Sudarkasa
- Bamum Scripts and Archives Project
- Timbuktu Manuscripts Project
- Nordic Africa Institute
- Centre of West African Studies
- African Affairs: Previously know as the Journal of the African Society and the Journal of the Royal African Society.
- ^ Defending the Paradigm Adisa A. Alkebulan Journal of Black Studies, Vol. 37, No. 3, 410-427 (2007)
- Journal of Pan-African Studies
- Centre of African Studies, the University of Edinburgh
- Institute of Asian and African Studies, Moscow State University
- Boston University African Studies Center.
- H-net historians network list of African History Journals.
- UNESCO maintains a large number of African cultural and historical study projects, including
- Princeton University African Studies Resources.