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Call for Papers

"Converging Identities: Blackness in the Contemporary Diaspora"
Proposed Edited Volume
by Julius O. Adekunle and Hettie V. Williams

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The interplay of ethnic, cultural, national, and “racial” identities
in the contemporary African Diaspora has almost reached the level of
crisis. It is difficult to identify the origins of many people with
the “black” color. Globalization has ensured the increased movement
of people of African descent around the world coming from such places
as Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean; settling in places such
as Canada and the United States. These sojourners of the contemporary
African Diaspora are fighting to maintain control over the defining
features of self and communal identities as they “clash” with
American blacks over essentialist notions of blackness. Given that
the most recent findings of geneticists, in regards to the meaning of
race, socio-historical relationships in terms of human identities
[particularly, racial, ethnic, and cultural] are now in the process
of a profound reconfiguration. The emergence of a new American and
global discourse on ethno-racial and cultural identity significantly
shape notions of blackness in the contemporary African Diaspora. The
proposed book will focus on questions such as: Is he black or black
enough? What does it mean to be African American? What vestiges of an
“African” culture survived the Middle Passage? Who is black? What
role does gender and class play in this crisis and convergence of
identities?

Papers that address the following themes will be accepted, but
related topics will also be considered.

I. Africans of the Contemporary Diaspora
Nigerian Immigrants in the U.S.; West Indians; East Africans

II. Africans and African Americans
Africa and Black Identity in America; African/African American
relations

III. Blackness in the Contemporary Diaspora
Afro-Latino; Black Puerto Ricans; Jamaican Americans; Haitians in the
U.S.

Interested contributors should submit an abstract of 250 words to the
editors by May 15, 2010. Deadline of receipt of papers is November
30, 2010.

All submissions and inquiries should be directed to:
[email protected]:


Contact:

Hettie V. Williams, Lecturer
Department of History and Anthropology
Monmouth University
Howard Hall C-34
400 Cedar Avenue
West Long Branch, NJ 07764
USA
Phone: +1 (732) 571-3400
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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