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Africanisms in American culture
2005
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An important work in the field of diaspora studies for the past decade, this collection has inspired scholars and others to explore a trail blazed originally by Melville J. Herskovits, the father of New World African studies. Since its original publication, the field has changed considerably. Africanism has been explored in its broader dimensions, particularly in the area of white Africanisms. Thus, the new edition has been revised and expanded. Joseph E. Holloway has written three essays for the new volume. The first uses a transnational framework to examine how African cultural survivals have changed over time and readapted to diasporic conditions while experiencing slavery, forced labor, and racial discrimination. The second essay is "Africanisms in African American Names in the United States." The third reconstructs Gullah history, citing numerous Africanisms not previously identified by others. In addition, "The African Heritage of White America" by John Phillips has been revised to take note of many more instances of African cultural survivals in white America and to present a new synthesis of approaches.

- (Indiana University Press)

An important work in the field of diaspora studies for the past decade, this collection has inspired scholars and others to explore a trail blazed originally by Melville J. Herskovits, the father of New World African studies. Since its original publication, the field has changed considerably. Africanism has been explored in its broader dimensions, particularly in the area of white Africanisms. Thus, the new edition has been revised and expanded. Joseph E. Holloway has written three essays for the new volume. The first uses a transnational framework to examine how African cultural survivals have changed over time and readapted to diasporic conditions while experiencing slavery, forced labor, and racial discrimination. The second essay is "Africanisms in African American Names in the United States." The third reconstructs Gullah history, citing numerous Africanisms not previously identified by others. In addition, "The African Heritage of White America" by John Phillips has been revised to take note of many more instances of African cultural survivals in white America and to present a new synthesis of approaches.

- (Ingram Publishing Services)

In addition, “The African Heritage of White America” by John Phillips has been revised to take note of many more instances of African cultural survivals in white America and to present a new synthesis of approaches. - (Perseus Publishing)

Biografía del autor

Joseph E. Holloway, Professor of Pan African Studies at California State University, Northridge, is a specialist in cross-cultural studies relating to Africa and Afro-Americana. He is a former Ford and Fulbright Scholar, and author of Liberian Diplomacy in Africa, Neither Black Nor White: The Saga of An American Family, and An Introduction to Classical African Civilizations. He is co-author (with Winifred K. Vass) of The African Heritage of American English and editor of The Noble Drew Ali and the Moorish Science Temple Movement and has published widely on New World Africanisms.

- (Indiana University Press)

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Acknowledgments ix
Introduction 1(17)
Joseph E. Holloway
One: The Origins of African American Culture 18(21)
Joseph E. Holloway
Two: "What Africa Has Given America": African Continuities in the North American Diaspora 39(26)
Joseph E. Holloway
Three: African Elements in African American English 65(17)
Molefi Kete Asante
Four: Africanisms in African American Names in the United States 82(29)
Joseph E. Holloway
Five: The Case of Voodoo in New Orleans 111(41)
Jessie Ruth Gaston
Six: Gullah Attitudes toward Life and Death 152(35)
Margaret Washington
Seven: The Sacred World of the Gullahs 187(37)
Joseph E. Holloway
Eight: African Religious Retentions in Florida 224(25)
Robert L. Hall
Nine: Sacrificial Practices in Santeria, an African Cuban Religion in the United States 249(34)
George Brandon
Ten: Kongo Influences on African American Artistic Culture 283(43)
Robert Farris Thompson
Eleven: Africanisms in African American Music 326(30)
Portia K. Maultsby
Twelve: Africanisms and the Study of Folklore 356(16)
Beverly J. Robinson
Thirteen: The African Heritage of White America 372(25)
John Edward Philips
Fourteen: The African Character of African American Language: Insights from the Creole Connection 397(30)
Selase W. Williams
Contributors 427(2)
Index 429

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