Early formulations of African American Studies in the United States
and elsewhere reflected the complex relationship between the African
source cultures and their adopted societies, as they interacted with
other influences in the new regions to which Africans were taken (see
négritude). The fact that the bulk of African peoples were shipped
under conditions of slavery makes the relationship between that
institution and the wider practices of imperialism central to an understanding
of the origins of African American culture. It also sheds light
on the violence that was often hidden beneath the civilizing rhetoric
of imperialism (DuCille 1996).Beyond this prime fact of oppression and
violence, however, the relationships between the newly independent
American societies,the wider diasporic black movement,and the modern
independence movements in Africa itself, remain complex.
The history of the struggle for self-determination by African
Americans is historically intertwined with wider movements of diasporic
African struggles for independence. For example, figures like
Jamaican born Marcus Garvey assumed a central role in the American
struggle for self-determination.The ‘Back to Africa’movement that he
initiated, and which has affinities with the modern West Indian
movement of Rastafarianism, supported the various movements
to return African Americans to Africa. The national flag of Liberia,
which was founded specifically to facilitate the return of freed black
slaves to their ‘native’ continent, still bears the single star of Garvey’s
Black Star shipping company.In addition,many of the dominant figures
in early African nationalism, such as Alexander Crummell, were exslaves
or the children of slaves who had their ideas formed in the struggle
for African American freedom (see de Moraes-Farias and Barber 1990;
Appiah 1992).
Of course, African American studies are also concerned much more
directly with the history and continuing effects of specific processes of
race-based discrimination within US society. In this regard, African
AFRICAN AMERICAN AND POST-COLONIAL STUDIES
5
American studies investigates issues that share certain features with
other US groups affected by racial discrimination, such as the Chicano
community.These studies have relevance to movements for the freedom
of indigenous peoples, such as Native American Indians or Inuit
peoples, despite their very different historical backgrounds (one group
being victims of invasive settlement and the other of slavery and exile).
Distinctions also need to be made between these various groups and
linguistically and racially discriminated groups such as Chicanos, a
great many of whom are part of a more recent wave of immigration,
though some, of course, are the descendants of peoples who lived
in parts of the US
long before the current dominant Anglo-Saxon peoples. Other groups, such as the descendants of French Creoles, also occupy places contiguous in some respects to these latter Spanish speaking peoples, though their history and their treatment within US society may have been very different.For this,and other reasons,critics have often hesitated to conflate African American studies or the study of any of these other groups with post-colonial theory in any simple way. The latter may offer useful insights, but it does not subsume the specific and distinctive goals and history of African American studies or Native American studies or Chicano studies as distinctive academic disciplines with specific political and social struggle in their own right
long before the current dominant Anglo-Saxon peoples. Other groups, such as the descendants of French Creoles, also occupy places contiguous in some respects to these latter Spanish speaking peoples, though their history and their treatment within US society may have been very different.For this,and other reasons,critics have often hesitated to conflate African American studies or the study of any of these other groups with post-colonial theory in any simple way. The latter may offer useful insights, but it does not subsume the specific and distinctive goals and history of African American studies or Native American studies or Chicano studies as distinctive academic disciplines with specific political and social struggle in their own right
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