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Afrocentricity

"Afrocentricity is related to Pan-Africanism, its older cousin that sees a shared struggle and works for a shared future for people of African descent."

The East

The East
Brooklyn, NY
1970s - 1980s

The Name "Negro"

The Name 'Negro'
New York
1960

Greeting Cards

Greeting Cards
New York and Ohio
1970s

Kiswahili

Kiswahili
Columbus, OH
Winter 1969

African Cultures in the Americas

African Cultures in the Americas
Columbus, OH;
1973
Curator's Notes:

The items in this collection reflect on Afrocentricity and Pan-Africanism. Afrocentricity is a weighty term. It is both philosophy and practice. It is a challenge to the modern (since the 15th century or so) idea of a white Europe as the center of all that is noteworthy — all that is human. Afrocentricity is related to Pan-Africanism, its older cousin that sees a shared struggle and works for a shared future for people of African descent. Alongside their aims and aspirations, Afrocentricity and Pan-Africanism have their contradictions and both show up in everyday practices like naming traditions, language, music, dress, and, of course, politics.