Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Religion - African Diasporic
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         African Diasporic:     more books (25)
  1. DIASPORIC CULTURES IN THE AMERICAS: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History, 2nd ed.</i> by Norman, JR. Whitten, 2006
  2. Diasporic Avant-Gardes: Experimental Poetics and Cultural Displacement
  3. Slaves to Fashion: Black Dandyism and the Styling of Black Diasporic Identity by Monica L. Miller, 2009-01-01
  4. Reading the World: An African Perspective on World History by Kwasi Konadu, 2010-06-01
  5. Welfare Reform and the Revitalization of Inner City Neighborhoods (Black American and Diasporic Studies Series) by James Jennings, 2003-04
  6. Unknown Tongues: Black Women's Political Activism in the Antebellum Era, 1830-1860 (Black American and Diasporic Studies) by Gayle T. Tate, 2003-02
  7. White Face, Black Mask: Africaneity and the Early Social History of Popular Music in Brazil (Black American and Diasporic Studies) by Darien J. Davis, 2008-10-01
  8. Haunting Capital: Memory, Text and the Black Diasporic Body (Reencounters with Colonialism: New Perspectives on the Americas) by Hershini Young, 2005-12-02
  9. Contact Zones: Memory, Origin, and Discourses in Black Diasporic Cinema (Contemporary Approaches to Film and Television) by Sheila J. Petty, 2008-01-10
  10. Diasporic Africa: A Reader
  11. The Borders in All of Us: New Approaches to Global Diasporic Societies by Williams, Vasquez, Furusa Little, 2006-03-03

21. African: Diasporic
african diasporic. A lengthy ist of books on all aspects of african diasporic religions in Cuba written by the renowned ethnographer Lydia Cabrera.
http://www.puredirectory.com/Society/Religion-and-Spirituality/African/Diasporic
African: Diasporic
Home Society Religion and Spirituality African : Diasporic Akan Anago Yoruba Candombl Hoodoo, Rootwork, Conjure, Obeah ... Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo google_ad_client = 'pub-3272565765518472';google_ad_width = 336;google_ad_height = 280;google_ad_format = '336x280_as';google_color_border = 'FFFFFF';google_color_bg = 'FFFFFF';google_ad_channel ='7485447737';google_alternate_color = 'FFFFFF';google_color_link = '0000FF';google_color_url = '008000';google_color_text = '000000';
Standard Listings
Ancestors and Inquices
Kongo-derived religions are based on veneration of named ancestors (Nkuyu), water spirits or remote ancestors (Simbi), nature spirits or remotest ...
At the Crossroads: Afro-Cuban Orisha Arts
A multimedia exhibition at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida on traditional arts associated with the Afro-Cuban Orisha religion in Miami.
ATR Pan-African Spirituality Forum
Discussion forum on all African Traditional Religions as practiced in Africa and the Diaspora, including Vodoun, Ifa, Orisha, Santeria, Candomble,...
Basic Standards of Palo and Lukumi Beliefs
A detailed exposition of the differences and similarities between the deities, rituals, and practices of Kimbisa / Espiritismo / Palo Monte tradit...

22. African: Diasporic: Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo
african diasporic Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo.
http://www.puredirectory.com/Society/Religion-and-Spirituality/African/Diasporic
African: Diasporic: Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo
Home Society Religion and Spirituality African ... Diasporic : Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo google_ad_client = 'pub-3272565765518472';google_ad_width = 336;google_ad_height = 280;google_ad_format = '336x280_as';google_color_border = 'FFFFFF';google_color_bg = 'FFFFFF';google_ad_channel ='7485447737';google_alternate_color = 'FFFFFF';google_color_link = '0000FF';google_color_url = '008000';google_color_text = '000000';
Standard Listings
Afrocentric Experience: Origins of Voodoo
Voodoo is a derivative of the world's oldest known religions which have been around in Africa since the beginning of human civilization. Some esti...
Ancestors in Haitian Vodou by Mambo Racine Sans But
Essay on respect for ancestors in Vodou, with information on the ceremony of "desounin" and related beliefs and practices.
arealvoodooclub
Forum ["club"] for discussion on both Haitian Vodou and New Orleans Voodoo. Open membership, public archives.
Calling on the Gods: the Embodied Aesthetic of Haitian Vodou
Academic essay, with many photo illustrations, discussing the art and visuals of Vodou in Haiti.
Carrefour
Discussion group, mainly about Haitian Vodou, but sometimes covering African Vodun and New Orleans Voodoo as well. "Seekers, syncretists, mambos, ...

23. Lukol Directory - Society Religion And Spirituality African Diasporic
Lydia Cabrera Bibliography A lengthy ist of books on all aspects of african diasporic religions in Cuba written by the renowned ethnographer Lydia Cabrera.
http://www.lukol.com/Top/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/African/Diasporic/

Lukol Directory -
Society Religion and Spirituality African ... Organization of African Traditional Healers (OATH)
A nonprofit, religious, educational, and certification organization committed to the positive promotion of African Traditional Religions, and the legitimatization of ATR practitioners in the United States and its territories.
http://www.mamiwata.com/OATH.html
Lydia Cabrera Bibliography

A lengthy ist of books on all aspects of African Diasporic religions in Cuba written by the renowned ethnographer Lydia Cabrera.
http://www.afrocubaweb.com/cabrera.htm
At the Crossroads: Afro-Cuban Orisha Arts

A multimedia exhibition at the Historical Museum of Southern Florida on traditional arts associated with the Afro-Cuban Orisha religion in Miami.
http://www.historical-museum.org/exhibits/orish...
Palo and Lukumi Organization
An interfaith religious web site administered by an elder priest of both the Palo and Lukumi traditions, providing guidance and assistance to the followers of these religions. Many families practice two or more African, Christian, or Spiritist belief systems; such syncretism is found throughout Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. This web site hosts an impressive and extensive archive of educational articles on all aspects of African Syncretism. http://www.palo.org/

24. Afrolatino
african diasporic Studies A Select Bibliography. Africa. Imagining home class, culture, and nationalism in the AFrican Diaspora. London Verso, 1994.
http://www.unc.edu/depts/afriafam/AnniversaryConference/bib.htm
African Diasporic Studies: A Select Bibliography Africa . [A six-part video history of Africa, narrated by Basil Davidson] Bastide, Roger. African Civilizations in the New World . London: C. Hurst, 1971. Birmingham-Pokorny, Elba D. An English Anthology of Afro-Hispanic Writers of the Twentieth Century . Miami: Ediciones Universal, 1995. Boyer, Horace Clarence. How Sweet the Sound: The Gold Age of Gospel . Washington, DC: Elliot and Clark, 1995. Callaloo . [Online at http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/callaloo/] Curtin, Philip D. The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census . Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 1969. Danticat, Edwidge. Breath, Eyes, Memory . New York: Vintage-Random House, 1995. Krik? Krak! New York : Soho P, 1995. Davidson, Basil. The Blackman’s Burden and Africa in History: Themes and Outlines Slavery and Beyond: The African Impact on Latin America and the Caribbean . Wilmington, Del.: Scholarly Resources, 1995. Desmangles, Leslie G. Faces of the Gods: Vodou and Roman Catholicism in Haiti . Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1992. Duberman, Martin B.

25. Faithfound.com : Top > More Religions > African > Diasporic
Cabrera Bibliography Detail A lengthy ist of books on all aspects of african diasporic religions in Cuba written by the renowned ethnographer Lydia Cabrera.
http://www.faithfound.com/browse.php?cat=4255

26. July 2004
african diasporic representation, practice and imagination are polysemous, polyvalent, ambivalent and contradictory across space and time.
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"

27. July 2005
consistent disruptions to discourses of national identity through legal and extralegal interventions for the management of african diasporic populations as
http://www.fiu.edu/~interad/Summer2005.htm
International Summer Graduate Seminar Summer 2005
African Diaspora Identities
Whether as "racial," ethnic, linguistic, sexual, national, or transnational subjects, they negotiated the obstacles and opportunities to forge creative social positions that erupt in cultural productions. "Esmeraldas Ambassadors (Ecuador),
by Andrés Sánchez Gallque, 1559, Museo de América, Madrid"
The seminar will focus closely on the identity politics of African diaspora subjects, examining critical perspectives that have shaped debates on the biosocial-spatial continuum of identity formation: "race," gender, sexuality, class, nation, and mobility. It will highlight discourses of shared and divergent diaspora identities. The problematics of a diasporic selfhood more or less derived and (usually violently) separated from already diverse originary African societies influenced different strategies of individuation and collective agency, shaped by variables of time, distance, and language. Central to African diaspora experiences has been the social construction of the black and the "interracial" body in Western societies that ambivalently valued and devalued those bodies for economic and political reasons. The invention of racial, gender, and sexual norms in colonial and metropolitan societies that developed around the challenge to manage evolving power relations provided both obstacles and opportunities for the formation of self-ideation and socialization practices.

28. Diasporic African Religion And Spirituality Society
Organization of African Traditional Healers (OATH) www.mamiwata.com/OATH.html Religion and Spirituality african diasporic. A
http://www.interactiva.org/Dir/I/English/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Afric
www.interactiva.org English Deutsch Espa±ol ... Diasporic Diasporic : Religion and Spirituality African Diasporic: Akan
Anago Yoruba

Candombl©

Hoodoo, Rootwork, Conjure, Obeah
...
Products and Services

English Arts Literature Myths and Folktales Myths: Caribbean
English Society Religion and Spirituality Pagan: Kemetic
English Society Ethnicity African: Religion
Palo and Lukumi Organization

www.palo.org/

Religion and Spirituality African Diasporic. An interfaith religious web site administered by an elder priest of both the Palo and Lukumi traditions ( Palo and Lukumi Organization ) providing guidance and assistance to the followers of these religions. Many families practice two or more African, Christian, or Spiritist belief systems; such syncretism is found throughout Cuba, Haiti, Brazil, Puerto Rico, Jamaica, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. This web site hosts an impressive and extensive archive of educational articles on all aspects of African Syncre National African Religion Congress (NARC) narcworld.com Religion and Spirituality African Diasporic. Provides international directory of Priests and Priestesses of the Akan ( National African Religion Congress (NARC) ) Candomble, Haitian Voodoo, Yoruba, Lucumi, Santeria, and related religions of the African Diaspora. Discusses unity among practioners of all African based religions and gives information on up-coming NARC conferences and ceremonies.

29. EOL 7 Book Review: African Diaspora
She begins her essay by addressing idealized notions of african diasporic music as racial politics that have flooded previous debates.
http://research.umbc.edu/eol/7/keyes/
EOL 7 Book Review The African Diaspora
A Musical Perspective
Ingrid Monson, ed. 2000. New York: Garland Publishing , Inc. vii, 366 pp. Critical and Cultural Musicology series, vol. 3. Three photos, 7 musical transcriptions, 1 map, 44 illustrations, notes, bibliography.
$75 US/$113 Canada Gilroy 1993 Do It A Cappella horonw ), artisans ( nyamakalaw ) and slaves ( jonw ). Among the artisans are hereditary musicians or jeliw , (known as griots in French), whose performance duties are divided along gender lines. Durán notes that males do not normally sing but recite family histories, whereas women sing at life-cycle ceremonies. Durán observes that by the 1970s a new form of professional music emerged in western Mali called wassoulou kamalengoni jelimusow jeliya Mamaya . Described as a dance event, Mamaya makes use of xylophones ( bala ), a bass drum ( dundun alárìijò juju ochan and rasanble transformation and reinterpretation of French military drum music. Additionally, there is a section on kò mizik mennwat corps de musique and the French menuet . Finally, there is a section on the

30. Historian: The African Diaspora. - Review - Book Reviews
The African Diaspora. This volume provides evidence of the vibrant and rich scholarship emerging in the field of african diasporic studies.
http://articles.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2082/is_1_62/ai_57874157
@import url(/css/us/style.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); @import url(/css/us/articles.css); Advanced Search Home Help
IN all publications this publication Reference Automotive Business Computing Entertainment Health News Reference Sports
YOU ARE HERE Articles Historian Fall, 1999 Content provided in partnership with
Print friendly
Tell a friend Find subscription deals The African Diaspora. - Review - book reviews
Historian
Fall, 1999 by Nancy L. Clark
Beginning with a historical overview by Joseph E. Harris, the complexity and scale of African movement overseas is made clear. Africans were sold into slavery in Europe and Asia as well as in the American continents, and some returned to Africa with the abolition of slavery. Harris argues that the identification of African Americans with Africa and interest in African problems gained organizational form in the latter nineteenth century and became especially pronounced in the postwar movement for African independence. The book thus starts from the premise that the African diaspora has engendered a dynamic and active link between peoples of African heritage. The organization of the remaining essays in The African Diaspora leads the reader geographically from Africa, across the Atlantic in the slave trade, to final destinations in North and South America. Alusine Jalloh introduces the reader to the complexities of African culture with an essay describing the Fula trading diaspora, a centuries-old movement of ethnic Fulani that facilitated trade throughout west Africa. This internal diaspora was marked by the integrity of Fula culture, held together by "jokereendhan (social solidarity), a cultural practice that brought together Fulas, irrespective of social class, to help one another in diverse ways." Through this practice, Fula resisted integration into their surrounding culture (25). The Fula thus raise two important questions: If ethnic groups retained such tight boundaries within Africa, could they unite in an "African" identity outside of Africa? And, could practices such as jokereendhan be successfully adapted to the wider diaspora?

31. Sub Categories Of African Diasporic Traditions
Joseph Bearwalker Wilson s Shamanic Link Pages. Recommended Sites. Back to Link Directory Home. Links in the african diasporic Traditions category.
http://www.shamanist.us/links/African-Diasporic-Traditions.htm
Bearwalker's Shamanic
Teachings and Techniques Joseph Bearwalker Wilson's Shamanic Link Pages
Recommended Sites
Back to Link Directory Home
Links in the African Diasporic Traditions category
Lucky Mojo: Hoodoo, Magic, Mojo Hands, Occult Shop, Sacred Sex, Amulets, Books, Spells, Information
Lucky Mojo: Hoodoo, Magic, Mojo Hands, Occult Shop, Sacred Sex, Amulets, Books, Spells, Information
http://www.luckymojo.com/

Macumba, Umbanda, and Orishas in Brazil

Macumba, Umbanda, and Orishas in Brazil
http://www.stirlinglaw.com/ea/macumba.htm

New Announcements from The VODOU Page

New Announcements from The VODOU Page
http://members.aol.com/racine125/index.html

OrishaNet
OrishaNet http://www.seanet.com/~efunmoyiwa/ochanet.html Built with ARELIS (Axandra's Reciprocal Links Solution)

32. Spirit Drumz' Drumming Workshops
african diasporic Drumming Workshops. Drums and percussive instruments of the African Diaspora are Afia Walking Tree s focus and specialty!
http://www.spiritdrumz.org/components_african_diasporic_workshops.htm
SPIRIT DRUMZ COMPONENTS Davis Street Underground June 2001, Intensive Weekend Institute Empowerment/Holistic Healing Workshops African Diasporic Drumming Workshops Performances/"Edutainment" Creative - Expressive - Healing Arts Women's Drumming Weekend Afia Walking Tree’s CD Soul Affirmationz
African Diasporic Drumming Workshops
FunDRUMentals
  • On-Going Class Series
  • Private Sessions
  • Conferences, Staff Development Trainings, School Assemblies
    FunDRUMentals can be adapted to fit various frameworks and is appropriate for all ages and levels of musical experience! Drums and percussive instruments of the African Diaspora are Afia Walking Tree's focus and specialty! (This includes, but is not limited to: Djembes, Djun Djuns, Congas, Ashikos, Shekere and bells.) Check out our Calendar to see when and where FunDRUMentals is currently being taught. On-Going Class Series
    Are you looking for exciting, rejuvenating, technique-based drumming workshops? Would you like to develop your skills playing multiple percussive instruments? FunDRUMentals workshops are adaptable to all levels of experience, ranging from beginners to accomplished percussionists. Afia Walking Tree will explore her/historical contextualization, incorporate original rhythms, offer instruction using drum-specific techniques, encourage "soul-speaking," singing while drumming and facilitate holistic group dynamics! Known for her innovative, personable teaching style, Walking Tree facilitates
  • 33. Narrations Of "Exile" In Recent African Diasporic Literary Imagination
    SESSION “NARRATIONS OF ‘EXILE’ IN RECENT african diasporic LITERARY IMAGINATION”. Paper 1. Christopher N. Okonkwo. University of MissouriColumbia.
    http://www.uiowa.edu/~mmla/abstracts 2002/129a.html
    SESSION: “NARRATIONS OF ‘EXILE’ IN RECENT AFRICAN DIASPORIC LITERARY IMAGINATION” Paper 1 Christopher N. Okonkwo University of Missouri-Columbia OkonkwoC@missouri.edu “ ‘Coming to America’: Ike Oguine’s A Squatter’s Tale and the Nigerian Expatriate’s Odyssey” My paper explores Ike Oguine’s A Squatter’s Tale (Heinemann 2000) as an immigrant faction For the Nigerian immigrant, specifically, coming to America means both navigating geographical, economic, cultural, political, and emotional spaces and forging a shifting identity. Those efforts are, however, complicated by the exigencies of exile and adjustment to a new land, “immense, indifferent, frightening . . . varied, challenging and . . . still full of opportunities” ( Squatter’s Reflecting on his odyssey, Obi, the novel’s expatriate-protagonist, narrator and implied author, addresses that paradox: “although I would always be in a sense apart from it, always be more Nigerian than American, I also had to strive for a place inside it; I had to find a way to be both apart from and a part of this vast country” (196). A Squatter’s Tale sub-texts the experiences of many Nigerian, particularly Igbo, immigrants in the United States.

    34. Spirit And Sky Religion: African: Diasporic: Lucumi-ocha-santeria
    Professor Marta Moreno Vega, founder of the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute, presents the philosophy, practices, clothing, interior designs
    http://www.spiritandsky.com/religion/african/diasporic/lucumi-ocha-santeria/
    Home religion african diasporic : lucumi-ocha-santeria
    the entire directory only this category More search options Home Search Suggest a Site ... diasporic : lucumi-ocha-santeria Links:
    • A Structuralist Analysis of Puerto Rican Santeria A Structuralist Analysis of Puerto Rican Santeria Anthropological analysis by Lily Diaz of Kardekian Spiritualism (La Mesa Blanca), and Santeria as practiced by Puerto Ricans.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7802
    • African New World Soap Making Recipes for the Spiritual Bath African New World Soap Making Recipes for the Spiritual Bath Recipes for home-crafting herbal soaps for use in rituals dedicated to the Orishas.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7809
    • Alafia Net Alafia Net Descriptions of various aspects of Orisha worship: Warriors, Ilekes, Ikofa/Awofaka (initiation to Orunmila), and answers to readers questions on "Who is my crowning Orisha?".
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7813
    • At the Crossroads At the Crossroads An exhibit of Afro-Cuban Orisha arts in Miami, Florida, presented by the Historical Museum of Southern Florida, includes historical articles, beadwork, implements, and paintings by orisha artists.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7806
    • Bata Drums Bata Drums These sacred, double-headed drums from the Yoruba culture, were brought to Cuba and are now played in the U.S. Information on the drums, songs, rhythms, dances, religion, history, and culture surrounding bata drumming.

    35. Spirit And Sky Religion: African: Diasporic: Hoodoo-rootwork-conjure-obeah
    Home religion african diasporic hoodoorootwork-conjure-obeah. Home religion african diasporic hoodoo-rootwork-conjure-obeah. Links
    http://www.spiritandsky.com/religion/african/diasporic/hoodoo-rootwork-conjure-o
    Home religion african diasporic : hoodoo-rootwork-conjure-obeah
    the entire directory only this category More search options Home Search Suggest a Site ... diasporic : hoodoo-rootwork-conjure-obeah Links:
    • Hoodoo in Theory and Practice by Catherine Yronwode 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.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7822
    • Hoodoo: An Afro-Diaspora Tradition Hoodoo: An Afro-Diaspora Tradition A New World name of an Ancient African Magical Tradition.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7825
    • Index of 19th Century Southern Texts Index of 19th Century Southern Texts An archive of texts by Charles W. Chestnutt, Joel Chandler Harris, and Mary Alice Owen that mention African-American hoodoo beliefs that derive from African religious sources. Also included at the site are extracts from Mark Twain's works that mention European-American witchcraft beliefs.
      (Added: Thu Jan 01 2004) ID 7824
    • Obeah and Kumina - Definitions Obeah and Kumina - Definitions Brief definitions of Obeah and Kumina, from a larger site on Jamaican folklore.

    36. :: Ez2Find :: Diasporic
    Translate Open New Window A lengthy ist of books on all aspects of african diasporic religions in Cuba written by the renowned ethnographer Lydia Cabrera.
    http://ez2find.com/cgi-bin/directory/meta/search.pl/Society/Religion_and_Spiritu
    Guide : Diasporic Global Metasearch
    Any Language English Afrikaans Arabic Bahasa Melayu Belarusian Bulgarian Catala Chinese Simplified Chinese Traditional Cymraeg Czech Dansk Deutsch Eesti Espanol Euskara Faroese Francais Frysk Galego Greek Hebrew Hrvatski Indonesia Islenska Italiano Japanese Korean Latvian Lietuviu Lingua Latina Magyar Netherlands Norsk Polska Portugues Romana Russian Shqip Slovensko Slovensky Srpski Suomi Svenska Thai Turkce Ukrainian Vietnamese Mode
    All Words Any Word Phrase Results
    Timeout
    Depth
    Adult Filter Add to Favorites Other Search Web News Newsgroups Images
    Guides Diasporic
    ez2Find Home Directory Society Religion and Spirituality ... African : Diasporic Akan Anago Yoruba Candombl© Hoodoo, Rootwork, Conjure, Obeah ... Vodou, Vodun, Voodoo Related Categories Arts: Literature: Myths and Folktales: Myths: Caribbean Society: Ethnicity: African: Religion Society: Religion and Spirituality: Pagan: Kemetic
    Web Sites

    37. Welcome To Routledge
    Hence, I unequivocally recommend The African Diaspora as an important work in the understanding of african diasporic music and culture.. –Cheryl Keyes, UCLA
    http://www.routledge-ny.com/books.cfm?isbn=0415967694

    38. African Diaspora
    Arguably, both the Eurocentric omissions of african diasporic history and the Diasporan s initiative for restoring that history, respectively operated to
    http://ehlt.flinders.edu.au/wac5/theme rationales/AfricanDiaspora.htm

    39. Review
    Aurora Metro Press np.Order It! Reviewed by George Elliott Clarke. African Canada is absent from two current considerations of african diasporic literature.
    http://www.canlit.ca/reviews/180/5671_Clarke.html
    "In Living Colour"
    Chinosole
    . Peter Lang n.p. Order It! Cheryl Robinson, ed.
    Black and Asian Plays Anthology . Aurora Metro Press n.p.. Order It!
    Reviewed by George Elliott Clarke Nada The Autobiography of Malcolm X A Map to the Door of No Return: Notes to Belonging Black and Asian Plays Anthology Of the five plays, Harvest is by an Indian woman, Manjula Padmanabhan; Made in Britain is by an Indo-British man, Parv Bancil; Calcutta Kosher is by an Indo-Anglo-Jewish woman, Shelley Silas; and Brother to Brother and Under their Influence are by male Black Brits Michael McMillan and Wayne Buchanan respectively. Padmanabhan is the only non-British contributor; Bancil and McMillan are British-born children of immigrants, while Silas is a newcomer from India and Buchanan a newcomer from Jamaica. This quintet defines the poco, pomo moment. Harvest Brave New World . Thus, it demands recuperation of Canuck philosopher George Grant as a poco critic: his anatomy of modernity is mandatory here.

    40. African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective; Editor: Monson, Ingrid; Hardback; Book
    Francis Inc ISBN 0815323824 In eleven original essays, the contributors address why music claims such pried of place in the african diasporic population, and
    http://www.opengroup.com/mubooks/081/0815323824.shtml
    African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective
    English Books

    German Books

    Spanish Books

    Sheet Music
    ... NEW RELEASES
    African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective
    Editor: Monson, Ingrid
    Series#:3; Critical and Cultural Musicology; Hardback; Book
    448 pages
    Published: November 2000
    ISBN: 0815323824 In eleven original essays, the contributors address why music claims such pried of place in the African diasporic population, and to provide particular examples of the interweaving of the local and global in the lives of musicians and their audiences.This volume presents musical case studies from various regions of the African diaspora, including Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, North America, and Europe, discussing their relation to race, gender, politics, and nationalism. PRODUCT CODE: 0815323824 USA/Canada: US$ 119.90 Australia/NZ: A$ 113.30 Other Countries: US$ 173.00 convert to your currency Delivery costs included if your total order exceeds US$50. We do not charge your credit card until we ship your order. Government and corporate Purchase Orders accepted without prior account application. PLACE AN ORDER To prepare to buy this item click "add to cart" above. You can change or abandon your shopping cart at any time before checkout.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 2     21-40 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter