Africana Cultural Memory in the Afroeuropean Context
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Published:2021-03-14
Issue:4
Volume:52
Page:418-440
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ISSN:0021-9347
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Container-title:Journal of Black Studies
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Journal of Black Studies
Affiliation:
1. University of Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract
With the publication of Black Cultural Mythology (2020), the discipline of Africology and African American Studies has a better resource that answers the call for methodological and theoretical tools to institutionalize Africana cultural memory studies as a robust subfield. This content analysis tests the applicability of the critical framework of Black cultural mythology—which emerges from a study of the African American Diaspora of the United States—with the Afroeuropean Diaspora, namely the Black British experience. A feature of this study’s methodology is evaluating the efficacy of the genre of anthology—in this case Kwesi Owusu’s Black British Culture and Society: A Text Reader (2000)—as a comprehensive source suitable for content analysis and from which to infer a sense of the region’s approaches to cultural memory and memory-adjacent worldviews.
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies