Foreword | p. ix |
Preface | p. xi |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Historical Development and Introduction to the Academy | p. 3 |
Theoretical and Philosophical Perspectives | p. 13 |
The Field and Function of Black Studies: Toward an Accurate Assessment of the State of Black Studies in the 1970s and 1980s | p. 15 |
Paradigms in Black Studies | p. 25 |
Epistemological Considerations in Afro-American Studies | p. 39 |
Africana Studies and Epistemology | p. 59 |
Development and Institutionalization: The Twentieth Century | p. 77 |
Black Studies, Student Activism, and the Academy | p. 79 |
Africana Studies at Tennessee State University: Traditions and Diversity | p. 93 |
The Early Years of Three Major Professional Black Studies Organizations | p. 115 |
The Academy as an Institution: Bureaucracy and African-American Studies | p. 133 |
Education in a Multicultural Society: The Role of Black Studies | p. 147 |
Black Women and Africana Studies | p. 163 |
Black Women, Feminism, and Black Studies | p. 165 |
The Missing Link: Women in Black/Africana Studies | p. 177 |
Towards Integrating Africana Women into Africana Studies | p. 191 |
Africana Womanism: An Overview | p. 205 |
Social, Psychological, Political, and Economic Dimensions in Africana Studies | p. 219 |
Power and Group Identity among African Americans: A Sociopsychological Analysis | p. 221 |
In the Wake of Destruction: Ujamaa Circle Process Therapy and Black Family Healing | p. 247 |
Para-Apartheid: The Origins of a Construct for Understanding Organizing of the Black Ghetto | p. 267 |
Africana Studies in the Diaspora | p. 285 |
Black Studies and Historically Black Colleges and Universities: Towards a New Synthesis | p. 287 |
The Status of Africana/African-Brazilian Studies at Selected Universities in Brazil | p. 315 |
The Afro-Mexican: A History Relatively Untouched | p. 325 |
Humanistic Perspectives in Africana Studies | p. 335 |
Toward an Understanding of the Black Image in the Visual Arts as Seen through Filmic Metaphor | p. 337 |
African-American Humanism in an Age of Africana Studies | p. 357 |
African-American Folklore and the Diaspora | p. 369 |
Africanisms in African-American Music | p. 379 |
Black Theology, Black Churches, and Black Women | p. 407 |
Black Theology and the Black Woman | p. 427 |
Africana/Black Studies as an Agent of Empowerment for Student Development | p. 445 |
Political Philosophy and African Americans in Pursuit of Equality | p. 447 |
African-American Studies in Libraries: Collection Development and Management Priorities | p. 459 |
Public Education and African-American Studies | p. 471 |
Stop-outs: African-American Participation in Adult Education | p. 491 |
Computers and Black Studies: Toward the Cognitive Revolution | p. 507 |
Africana/Black Studies in American Higher Education: Yesterday and Today | p. 517 |
Status of Africana/Black Studies in Higher Education in the U.S. | p. 519 |
Prospectus on the Future | p. 537 |
Overview | p. 539 |
Rationale for Africana Studies | p. 540 |
Graduates and Careers | p. 542 |
Trends and Prognosis | p. 543 |
Summary and Conclusion | p. 544 |
Appendix | p. 545 |
Selected References | p. 549 |
Index | p. 553 |
About the Contributors | p. 581 |
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