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Translation as a Cultural Act: An Africological Analysis of Medew Netcher from a Jamaican PerspectiveSamuels, Tristan January 2021 (has links)
This study provides a foundational framework for Afrocentric translation. Afrocentric translation in which Afrikan languages and their Pan-Afrikan cultural context, transgenerationally and transcontinentally, are central in the interpretation of Afrikan texts (written or oral) and, thus, ensuring that Afrikan people are the subjects in the episteme of the translation process. The two languages of focus in this study are Medew Netcher, the Kemetic language, and the Jamaican language. The basic grammatical features of Medew Netcher will be explained from an Afrocentric perspective through Jamaican translations. More specifically, the analysis shows that the equational juxtaposition system reflects the Afrikan notion of ontological unity, the verbal paradigm is reflective of the Afrikan notion of time, and it also shows how Afrikan existential concepts of existence and knowledge manifest in the grammar of Medew Netcher and Jamaican. In addition, this study includes the first translation of a Kemetic text in an Ebonics language as an exemplar for large-scale Afrocentric translation of a text. Overall, this study provides a foundational framework for the Africological study of Afrikan language. / African American Studies
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LET OUR VOICES BE HEARD: BLACK MIDDLE-CLASS ABSTENTION AND POLITICAL MAROONAGE IN PHILADELPHIASimmons, Matthew Ellis January 2021 (has links)
What causes Black people in America to opt-out of voting in the American political process? Do racial or cultural markers play a part in their turning away from the political process? Do economic factors play a role? This question often raises ferocious arguments in America. Yet, there has been no thorough investigation of the motivations behind Black voting abstention. This dissertation seeks to fill that void by exploring why a sample of middle-class Philadelphians choose not to exercise their right to vote. Voter apathy, racial/communal interests, or other factors have historically been utilized to explain why individuals choose to sit on the periphery of the American political system. However, none of these studies examine the cultural factors that cause individuals of African descent to exercise abstention from voting. The purpose of this project is multi-fold: (a) to explore with a sample of Black nonvoters their reasons for not voting; (b) interrogate our current orientation that voting as a needed signifier for our existence, (c) to properly center Black nonpolitical engagement as a possible viable avenue for African-descended people in our pursuit of creating a milieu of resistance and liberation, (d) to help normalize nonvoting practices as valid and acceptable methods of Black political engagement within Africana Studies, the Academy, and the Africana community; and (e) to push back against the dominant discourse that voting is the only viable option for progress for African-descended people in America. This work explores the idea that abstaining from voting, which has been a source of shame and contention within the Black community, may serve as a practical and useful tool in resistance and liberatory fashion for our people. This study seeks to conceptualize and link Black nonparticipatory politics as a form of Political Maroonage. The value of this project is that it should add the academic discourse of the Black nonvoter’s critique of the American political process and add clarity to the politicians who are seeking these individuals’ support for political office. / African American Studies
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Geographies of Solidarity: Rethinking “Hidden” Histories of Socialist Internationalism for Transnational Feminism TodayShchurko, Tatsiana 30 August 2022 (has links)
No description available.
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Investigating Holistic Support Services for Black Male Student-Athletes at Private Midwest Predominantly White InstitutionsStanford, Henry A. 08 August 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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Social Equalization and Social Resistance: A Symbolic Interactional Approach to Strategies of African American Slave PopulationsSmith, Frederick H. 01 January 1994 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
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Stress reactions by Black females in viewing conflict and no-conflict videotapes of a Black male or female as a function of the subject's blood pressure level and of history of stressJames-andrews, andrea Jean 01 January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
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Creole Gumbo: Ingredients for Maintaining Creole Identity at Laura PlantationSchupp, Katherine W. 01 January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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African-American Influence on the Chesapeake Bay Log Canoe: Evidence from Nineteenth Century Probate Inventories and Population Census Records of York County, Virginia and Worcester County, MarylandMamary, Albert James M. 01 January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Colonial Williamsburg's Slave Auction Re-Enactment: Controversy, African American History and Public MemoryDevlin, Erin Krutko 01 January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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I'm Really Just an American: The Archaeological Importance of the Black Towns in the American West and Late-Nineteenth Century Constructions of BlacknessWinsett, Shea Aisha 01 January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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