On décalages in the African Diaspora
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Published:2019-12-09
Issue:1-2
Volume:11
Page:162-178
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ISSN:1872-5457
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Container-title:African Diaspora
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language:
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Short-container-title:Afr. Diaspora
Affiliation:
1. 1 University of Cergy-Pontoise France
Abstract
Abstract
This paper explores Brent Edwards’s 2001 notion of “décalage” and its role in the evolution of the African diaspora studies. I argue that this notion should be profoundly considered in envisioning the future of the field since it not only reflects the original chasm between African and African-American understandings of the diaspora as Edwards states, but it also illustrates how the diaspora has gradually turned into multiple and sometimes scattered diasporas. I also contend that this multiplicity forces us to question what unites African and Afro-descendants today. I do so relying on Gilles Deleuze’s disjunctive synthesis to examine these three dimensions of diasporan relations. I also discuss how ideological frameworks such as Pan-Africanism or Négritude bridged differences thanks to key ideas of emancipation, black existence and connected struggles. I finally explore contemporary models that could renew diaspora studies: Africana and Afro-liminalities.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Sociology and Political Science,History,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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