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3.5: Futurity

  • Page ID
    181553
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    Closing Thoughts

    This chapter has covered tremendous ground charting Africana Studies’ fugitive knowledge and liberatory pedagogies. A deep and critical engagement with this chapter allows the reader to perform the following:

    • Classify the varying theories, theories movements, and principles within the discipline of Africana studies,
    • Analyze and contrast the multitude of positions within the discipline of Africana Studies, and
    • Identify the opportunities and possibilities of futurity within the discipline of Africana studies.    

    These learning objectives were accomplished through a thorough engagement with the context and foundation of Africana Studies, providing a genealogy of the discipline’s radical origins and activist disposition. To achieve this, the chapter: 

    • Explored  key theorists like W.E.B DuBois, Anna J. Cooper, Carter G. Woodson, and Zora N. Hurston,
    • Investigated movements like the Civil Rights and Black Power movements and their principles,
    • Delineated the positions in the field of Africana Studies Pan-Afrikanism, Black Study/Undercommon, Fugitivity, and the spiritual nature of Afrikan education
    • Identified the opportunities and possibilities of Africana Studies, hence the imaginative power of Afrofuturism  

              

    As parts of the country seek to wage war on Africana Studies through attempts to ban literature, ban AP African American studies courses, and engage in the continual process of colonizing Afrikan epistemologies. Africana Studies continues in the subversive legacy of producing fugitive knowledge. This work serves as a clarion call for all Africana Studies practitioners and activist intellectuals to further fortify themselves in the overarching mission, objectives, and goals of the discipline in an attempts to, "creating the truly multicultural, democratic and just society and good world based on mutual respect of the rights and needs of persons and peoples, mutual cooperation for mutual benefit and shared responsibility for building the good world all humans want and deserve to live in.[112]Until this truth is realized, the work continues.


    Endnotes 

    [112] Karenga, Maulana. IBS: Introduction into Black Studies. Los Angeles: University of Sankore Press, 2010. 27


    3.5: Futurity is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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