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Afrocentrism


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Afrocentrism is a worldview or ideology that focuses on the lives and
creations of black people. More particularly, it often seeks to emphasize
the contributions of black African peoples and the African diaspora over
other peoples. Like any ideology or worldview, its proponents differ on many
specific points but universally hold certain broad concepts to be true.




Mainstream Afrocentric theory is critical of Eurocentrism. Afrocentrism
holds that Eurocentrism has led to the neglect or denial of the
contributions of Africa's original peoples and focused instead on a
generally European-centered model of world civilization and history.
Therefore, Afrocentrism aims to shift the focus from a European-centered
history to an Africa-centered history. More broadly, Afrocentrism is
concerned with distinguishing the influence of Arab, European and Asian
peoples from indigenous African achievements. Many Afrocentrists consider
the African identity of African-Americans to be more important than their
American nationality.

While Afrocentrism can be a scholarly approach, black civil rights movements
and anti-imperialist ideologies in the United States and the Caribbean have
been influenced by it. Critics of afrocentrism claim that it is often
dogmatic and unscientific.

Afrocentrists typically focus on black Africa and black contributions and
posits black, Nilotic origins for Western civilization. Philosophically,
Afrocentrism is often compared to eurocentrism; the validity of this
comparison is heavily debated.


Contents


*       1 Egypt and the argument of African cultural unity 
*       2 History of Afrocentrism 
*       3 The debate over Afrocentrism 
*       4 Egypt and black identity 
*       5 Black-centered history and Africa 
*       6 A different world-view 
*       7 List of notable Afrocentric historians 
*       8 See also 
*       9 External links 
*       10 References 

        

[edit]


Egypt and the argument of African cultural unity


Afrocentrists claim that early dynastic Egypt was a black
civilization.[citation needed] Modern geopolitics generally place Egypt in
the Middle East; however, geographically, the entirety of dynastic Egypt, as
well as the modern-day nation (except for the Sinai peninsula) fall within
the African continent.

Afrocentrists argue that the salient, cultural characteristics of ancient
Egypt are indigenous to Africa and that these features are present in other
African civilizations.[citation needed] Critical of mainstream Egyptology,
they are of the opinion that the study of ancient Egyptian culture
artificially disconnects it from other early African civilizations, such as
Kerma and the Meroitic civilizations of Nubia— particularly in light of the
fact that archaeological evidence clearly indicates a confluence among this
cultural triad. This perspective, championed by the Senegalese scholar
Cheikh Anta Diop, is known formally as the Cultural Unity Theory. This
theory has proponents outside Afrocentric circles, among them Bruce Williams
of the Oriental Institute of Chicago. Afrocentrists claim that these
civilizations made significant contributions to ancient Greece and Rome
during their formative periods.

The more conventional belief among mainstream archaeologists and
Egyptologist such as Frank J Yurco and Fekri Hassan and historians is that
the ancient Egyptian civilization was related, in terms of culture and
language, to the Afro-Asiatic language family spoken in Northern Africa,Chad
and the Horn of Africa and by the Beja of the Sudan.[citation needed]
Somewhat curiously, however, this assumption does not recognize any
significant similarities between a puportedly Semitic dynastic Egypt and
other Mediterranean cultures beyond the Crescent. In addition, the
conventional belief has been challenged by scholars who believe the cultural
similarities between Egypt and the Levant are due to the exportation of
cultural elements from the Nilotic civilizations, rather than the reverse.
As the predynastic period of Egypt, as well as all three dynastic periods
had origins in the non-Semitic south (Naqada, Nubian C, Upper Egypt),
Afrocentricists argue it is illogical to insist on a non-African, Semitic of
dynastic Egyptian civilization.

This Afrocentrist view finds itself in direct opposition to the conclusions
of mainstream scholars such as British historian Arnold Toynbee, who
regarded the ancient Egyptian cultural sphere as having died out without
leaving a successor, and who derided as "myth" the idea that Egypt was the
"origin of Western civilization." However, there are numerous accounts in
the historical record dating back several centuries wherein scholars have
written of a black Egypt and its contributions to Mediterranean
civilizations. The Greek historian Herodotus described the ancient Egyptians
as "black-skinned with woolly hair" (Histories Book 2:104).Also,the European
to earn the status of the first European philosopher,Thales,who hailed from
then Miletus, present day Turkey was known to have calculated the height of
the Egyptian Pyramid by its shadows, a proof that European philosophers went
to Egypt to study. Francois Champollion described in his book L'Egypte the
characteristics of the Egyptian people and their similarities to Nubians.
More recently, Afrocentrism has found sympathetic readings from mainstream
scholars such as Martin Bernal. In addition, Afrocentrism has growing
popular support in academia. Increasingly, American colleges are treating
Afrocentrism as a rigorous discipline of study open to peer review.

One of Afrocentrism's most prominent critics, Mary Lefkowitz, has
characterised Afrocentrism as "an excuse to teach myth as history."
Afrocentrists, however, level similar charges at what they charge is a
pronounced Eurocentrism in mainstream historical scholarship, and argue that
the Afrocentrist approach merely attempts to set the historical record
straight by overturning a false, racially skewed paradigm.

[edit]


History of Afrocentrism

A 1911 copy of the NAACP journal The Crisis depicting "Ra-Maat-Neb, one of
the black kings of the Upper Nile."
<http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/c/c0/Bois.jpg/200px-Bois.jpg
> 
Enlarge
A 1911 copy of the NAACP journal The Crisis depicting "Ra-Maat-Neb, one of
the black kings of the Upper Nile."

The beginnings of modern Afrocentric scholarship can be found in the work of
African-American and Caribbean intellectuals early in the twentieth century.
Publications such as The Crisis and the Journal of Negro History sought to
counter the prevailing view in the West that Africa had contributed nothing
of value to human history that was not the result of incursions by Europeans
and Arabs. These journals asserted the fundamental blackness of ancient
Egypt and investigated the history of black Africa. Editor of The Crisis
W.E.B. DuBois researched West African culture and attempted to construct a
pan-Africanist value system based on West African traditions. DuBois later
envisioned and received funding from then Ghanaian president Kwame Nkrumah
to produce an Encyclopedia Africana that would chronicle the history and
cultures of black Africa, but he died before the work could be completed.
Some aspects of DuBois's approach are evidenct in the work of Cheikh Anta
Diop, who claimed to have identified a pan-African protolanguage and to have
proven that ancient Egyptians were, indeed, black Africans.

Diop also drew from the ideas of George M. James, a follower of black
nationalist leader Marcus Garvey, who emphasised the importance of Ethiopia
as a great, black civilization, and who argued that black peoples should
develop pride in African history. James's book, Stolen Legacy (1954) is
often cited as one of the foundational texts of modern Afrocentrism. James
claimed that Greek philosophy was "stolen" from ancient Egyptian traditions
and that these had developed from distinctively African cultural roots. For
James, the works of Aristotle and other Greek thinkers were, in fact, poor
synopses of aspects of ancient Egyptian wisdom. According to James, the
Greeks were a violent and quarrelsome people, unlike the Egyptians, and were
not naturally capable of philosophy. This conclusion may have been based on
the fact that the period of Egyptian history regarded as the most prominent
(14th B.C.E.) was considered the early dark age of Greek culture. The early
sculptural and artistic achievements of pre-classical Greece had strong
similarity to Egyptian sculptural style and artistic design.

These ideas were not wholly new. 18th-century Masonic texts referenced
ancient writings that claimed Greek philosophers had studied in Egypt. The
poet William Blake had also attacked "the stolen and perverted writings of
Homer and Ovid, of Plato and Cicero," asserting that they were copies of
more ancient Semitic texts. Such views were associated with radical and
Romantic thought that rejected classical Greco-Roman culture as the model
for civilization. James's distinct contribution was to tie these claims to
an opposition between white European and black African identity, associating
these alleged ancient appropriations of black wisdom with white, imperialist
exploitation of black peoples and the theft of artifacts from black African
cultures. By claiming that the Greeks were barbaric and innately incapable
of philosophy, he inverted normative imperialist racial hierarchies, which
made the same claims about black Africans.

Other writers copied James's approach, which led to claims that black
Africans originated intellectual or technological achievements that later
were claimed by whites. Today, most of these writings are not considered
serious scholarship, and modern Afrocentrist writers have abandoned James's
more extreme claims to concentrate on the notion that modern black peoples
should center their understanding of culture and history on Africa. Molefi
Kete Asante's book Afrocentricity (1988) directly connected Afrocentrism to
radical black civil-rights politics, arguing that African Americans should
look to African cultures "as a critical corrective to a displaced agency
among Africans."

Other authors have adapted James's assertion that Egyptian culture's
influence on the Greeks has been underestimated. Among such scholars, the
most influential is Martin Bernal, whose book Black Athena stressed
influence of Afro-Asiatic and Semitic civilizations on Classical Greece.
Other writers simply have focused on the study of indigenous African
civilizations and peoples, with the aim of counteracting the emphasis placed
on European and Arab influence on the continent. These Afrocentric scholars
believe that historians must shift their attention away from European
accomplishments and Europe-derived racist assumptions and, instead,
emphasize the black origins of mankind and black contributions to world
history. They maintain that such a paradigm shift would result in
significant attitudinal shifts in the West and elsewhere. Indeed, many claim
that a dramatic shift already has occurred. As educational opportunities
have broadened for peoples of color over the years, non-white scholars from
many cultures increasingly have begun to examine anew the historical and
archaeological record. Some of their findings challenge the Eurocentric view
of world history which for so many centuries devalued and appropriated, or
simply ignored achievements by blacks and other non Europeans.

[edit]


The debate over Afrocentrism


Critics of Afrocentrism counter that much historical Afrocentric research
simply lacks scientific merit and that it actually seeks to supplant and
counter one form of racism with another, rather than attempt to arrive at
the truth. Among scholarly critics, Mary Lefkowitz's Not out of Africa is
widely regarded as the foremost critical work. In it, she contends
Afrocentric historical claims are grounded in identity politics and myth
rather than sound scholarship. Like most other classical scholars, she
rejects James's views on the ground that his sources predate the
decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs. Actual ancient Egyptian texts show
little similarity to Greek philosophy. She also contends that Bernal
underestimates the distinctiveness of Greek intellectual culture. Asante,
however, disputes her conclusions.

Afrocentrists tend to emphasise the racial and cultural unity of Africa as a
whole as the home of black, or Africoid, peoples. However, critics assert
that Afrocentrism relies on a projection of modern racial and geographical
categories onto ancient cultures in which they simply did not exist. It is
argued that in ancient Western culture, the distinction between Europe and
Africa was not as important as the notion that civilized peoples encircled
the Mediterranean sea. The farther from the Mediterranean they were, the
more alien they were considered to be. This applied to all peoples. The
equation of "African" with black identity has also been criticized, partly
because movement of populations around the Mediterranean in ancient times
makes any rigid distinctions among North African, Asian, and European
peoples of the area problematic; and partly because the notion of a unified
"black" or Negroid race is itself considered to be unsustainable by many
modern geneticists. Further, Diop's claim to have discovered a pan-African
proto-language is rejected by almost all linguists. Although the "bantu"
language theory is still considered valid, if not in agreement with Diop's
own.

However, the concept of race is not based on genetics, which is a far more
modern discipline, but on phenotypes. "Caucasians" range from Norway to
India and from blond hair and fair skin to dark skin. Black people range
from West Africa, to India, to Australia, with a wider range of brown and
wavy haired people to the darkest skinned people with the curliest hair.
Similarly, the Afrocentrist concept of a "global Africa community" has been
reinforced by findings by numerous anthropologists, historians and others,
who claim the blacks of New Guinea, Menalesia, the Indian subcontinent and
Southeast Asia are no less "Negroid" than the blacks of North and
sub-Saharan Africa.

The issue with the more respected mainstream viewpoint is that the
definition of a Negroid phenotype begins to take a back seat to the genetic
origins of those having negroid features. In addition, those people who fall
in the extreme range of "Caucasian" furthest from the blond, and who also
fall in the extreme range of Black, furthest from the darkest, are
contentiously placed in either one group or another. Afrocentricsts contend,
by pointing out that White society excluded mixed people from being
Caucasian, should not therefore lay historical claims to those who in
history share identical phenotypes and mixture with modern Black people.
Espeically when they live within the continent of Africa, and routinely
intermarried with the darker skinned and more overtly Black people of the
region. Therefore for the Afrocentricist, the Ancient Egyptian, (which
mainstream scholars insist made little contribution to western society
[citation needed]) who shares this characteristic of intermarrying with more
obviously Black Africans, would socially fit within the Black sphere, even
though they may genetically share less in common with West African Black
people than Afrocentricists are willing to admit.

It is important to note, this Afrocentric viewpoint had developed while
mainstream scholarship was seriously wrestling with the Eurocentric idea
that Nordic or contiental Europeans had founded Egyptian royalty and
established the dynastic leadership of Egypt. In addition, mainstream
scholarship tends to automatically categorize any Ancient Egyptian with
overtly negroid phenotype as a Nubian or non-Egyptian, thus creating a
cirucular argument.

People generally think of themselves and others as belonging to races
defined by skin color and physiognomy and link this to ancestry [citation
needed]. One of the impacts of this is that historical achievements are
ascribed to races with which modern peoples identify themselves. Some insist
that this approach violates the fundamental demand of history as a
discipline, which should aspire to understand events as they occurred, not
as they affect the self-esteem of modern people.

Afrocentrists, however, contend that race still exists as a social and
political construct. They argue that racist conventions propounded for
centuries– that blacks had no civilization, no written language, no culture,
and no history of any note before coming into contact with Europeans– make
the racial identity of ancient Egypt an important issue. Moreover, they
point out that these misconceptions have been consistently applied to a
particular, broad category of humanity based on the same "racial" phenotype
and lineages used by Afrocentrists in refuting such myths.

However artificial and discredited a construct, the matter of race became an
important and enduring issue, Afrocentrists argue, when whites and others
pronounced an entire segment of humanity inherently inferior on the basis of
it. Further, such biases persist today. As a result, Afrocentrists contend,
it is important to set the historical record straight within the context in
which the history of human civilizations heretofore has been framed, taught
and studied— and that is the context of race.

Crucial to this aspect of the debate are arguments about whether the ancient
Egyptians reasonably can be considered to have been black and the extent of
significant cultural links between the blacks of sub-Saharan and North
Africa.

[edit]


Egypt and black identity


        Main article: Controversy over race of Ancient Egyptians 

Many Afrocentrists insist that ancient Egyptians were black African peoples,
often emphasising that this black identity was strongest in early Egyptian
history, but waxed and waned over time.

[edit]


Black-centered history and Africa


The relationship among racial, cultural and continental identities is one of
the more difficult problems in Afrocentic thought. Despite the problems with
a Eurocentric approach to history, there has been a common European cultural
identity for many centuries. It is more difficult to make the same claim for
Africa, in which diverse cultures often were unaware of one another's
existence. For this reason, some Afrocentrists have been accused of
manufacturing "African" cultural values by cherry-picking from wholly
different peoples.

In other instances, the concept of black racial identity has been used to
include among "African" peoples populations generally thought of as
non-Africans, such as the Australoid (sometimes called "Veddoid") peoples of
Australia and New Guinea and the Tamils (also called Dravidians) of India
and the people of the rest of the Indian subcontinent. Also included in the
African diaspora are the "Negritos") of the Far East (Thailand, Java,
Borneo, Sumatra and Malaysia, Vietnam and Cambodia); the Africoid,
aboriginal peoples of Melanesia, Micronesia andPolynesia; and,
speculatively, the Olmecs of what is now Mexico.[1]
<http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Classroom/9912/blackasia.html>
Afrocentrists who adopt this approach contend that such peoples are African
in a racial sense, just as the white inhabitants of Australia may be said to
be European. Critics would argue that such peoples were not recent emigrants
from Africa, and the entire population of the world might just as reasonably
be considered part of an African race according to the Out of Africa model
of human migration. Studies show that some members of these darker-skinned
ethic groups— with the exception, of course, of the Olmecs— and "Mongoloid"
East Asians are genetically closer to one another than they are to
indigenous Africans. However, Afrocentrists point out that such genetic
similarities are due to the fact that the aboriginal peoples of Asia were
Africoid Negritos and Australoid types, who later miscegnated and developed
in isolation with populations of the eventually more dominant Mongoloid
phenotype over time. This fact, they contend, does not change the
fundamental black racial identity of these peoples based on the traditional
metrics of the classic "Negroid" phenotype, physical similarities with other
peoples classified as Negroid, presumptive patterns of prehistoric
migrations and, in some cases, what they contend are cultural similarities.
Arguments advancing the notion of racial similarities between a Nubian and a
Dravidian, both classified as Negroid, Afrocentrists contend, are far more
credible than those of beween, say, a Swede and a modern-day Turk, both
classified as Caucasian. Traditional racial classifications, after all, are
not based on genetics, but on phenotype. In such matters, Afrocentrists
adopt the pan-Africanist perspective that such people of color are all
"African people" or "diasporic Africans." As Afrocentric scholar Runoko
Rashidi writes, they are all part of the "global African community."

In 2002, geneticist Spencer Wells completed a study of human out-migrations
from Africa utilizing the DNA of San Bushmen of the Kalahari who, according
to Wells, have the oldest human DNA on earth. Wells concluded from analysis
of DNA specimens that the earliest human emigration from Africa of which
there is definitive proof was that of San Bushmen to southern India (the
modern Tamils, also known as "Dravidians") and then along coastal routes to
Australia (the Aborigines), while shortly afterwards a second migration from
Africa, also by San Bushmen, reached Central Asia, and thence covered most
of the Eurasian continent.

The single origin hypothesis (also known as the "Out of Africa" hypothesis)
posits that the Homo sapiens evolved in Africa, later migrating and
populating other continents, out-competing other related species such as
that exemplified by Java man.

[edit]


A different world-view


        I am apt to suspect the Negroes...to be naturally inferior to the
White. There never was a civilized nation of any other complexion than
white.... — David Hume, noted 18th century European historian, philosopher
and essayist

        When we classify mankind by color, the only one of the primary
races...which has not made a creative contribution to any of our twenty-one
civilizations is the black race. — Arnold J. Toynbee, respected 20th century
scholar, historian and author

        A Black skin means membership in a race of men which has never
created a civilization of any kind. — John Burgess, 20th century scholar and
founder, Political Science Quarterly[2]
<http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Classroom/9912/africanhist.html> 

Afrocentrists argue that such ignorance and blatant racism were common among
mainstream scholars, educators and historians well into the 20th century,
and that what they consider to be the attendant appropriation of black
history make the study of world history with new eyes an important
undertaking. It is in this sense that the Afrocentrist paradigm legitimately
may be considered to be "therapeutic." That is not to say, however, that it
is necessarily, as Lefkowitz has charged, "an excuse to teach myth as
history."

While their findings may be sometimes tentative and often controversial,
Afrocentrist scholars do not approach Afrocentrism as artful storytelling,
or pseudo social science. In their eyes, Afrocentrism is a critical
historiographical approach to history, based on a weltanschauung which is
fundamentally and radically different from that of many of their relatively
recent, mainstream predecessors; but which harkens back to an earlier view
of the history of world civilizations. It is the examination and analysis of
existing scholarship, as well as the study of the original historical record
itself, grounded in scholarly inquiry and rigorous research.

[edit]


List of notable Afrocentric historians


*       Dr. Molefi Kete Asante, professor, author: Afrocentricity: The
theory of Social Change; The Afrocentric Idea; The Egyptian Philosophers:
Ancient African Voices from Imhotep to Akhenaten 
*       Dr. Ishakamusa Barashango, college professor and lecturer; founder,
Temple of the Black Messiah, School of History and Religion; co-founder and
creative director, Fourth Dynasty Publishing Company, Silver Spring,
Maryland 
*       Dr. Jacob Carruthers, Egyptologist; founding director of the
Association for the Study of Classical African Civilization; founder and
director of the Kemetic Institute, Chicago 
*       Dr. Cheikh Anta Diop[3]
<http://www.nbufront.org/html/MastersMuseums/JHClarke/Contemporaries/CheikhA
ntaDiop.html> ,[4] <http://home3.inet.tele.dk/mcamara/antadiop.html> ,
author: The African Origin of Civilization: Myth or Reality; Civilization or
Barbarism: An Authentic Anthropology; Precolonial Black Africa; The Cultural
Unity of Black Africa: The Domains of Patriarchy and of Matriarchy in
Classical Antiquity; The Peopling of Ancient Egypt & the Deciphering of the
Meroitic Script 
*       Dr. H.B. ("Barry") Fell, Harvard professor, linguist, author: Saga
America, 1980 [5] <http://www.equinox-project.com/drfell.htm>  
*       Drusilla Dunjee Houston, lecturer, syndicated columnist, author:
Wonderful Ethiopians of the Ancient Cushite Empire, 1926. 
*       Dr. Yosef Ben-Jochannan, author: African Origins of Major "Western
Religions"; Black Man of the Nile and His Family; Africa: Mother of Western
Civilization; New Dimensions in African History; The Myth of Exodus and
Genesis and the Exclusion of Their African Origins; Africa: Mother of
Western Civilization; Abu Simbel to Ghizeh: A Guide Book and Manual 
*       Dr. Runoko Rashidi[6] <http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/runoko.html> ,
author: Introduction to African Civilizations; The global African community:
The African presence in Asia, Australia, and the South Pacific 
*       J.A. Rogers, author: Sex and Race: Negro-Caucasian Mixing in All
Ages and All Lands : The Old World; Nature Knows No Color Line; Sex and
Race: A History of White, Negro, and Indian Miscegenation in the Two
Americas : The New World; 100 Amazing Facts About the Negro With Complete
Proof: A Short Cut to the World History of the Negro 
*       Dr. Ivan van Sertima, author: They Came before Columbus: The African
Presence in Ancient Amerca, African Presence in Early Europe; Blacks in
Science Acient and Modern; African Presence in Early Asia; African Presence
in Early America; Early America Revisited; Egypt Revisited: Journal of
African Civilizations; Nile Valley Civilizations; Egypt: Child of Africa
(Journal of African Civilizations, V. 12); The Golden Age of the Moor
(Journal of African Civilizations, Vol. 11, Fall 1991); Great Black Leaders:
Ancient and Modern; Great African Thinkers: Cheikh Anta Diop[7]
<http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/sertima.html>  
*       Dr. Chancellor Williams, author: The Destruction of Black
Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. 
*       Dr. Théophile Obenga, author: Ancient Egypt and Black Africa : a
student's handbook for the study of Ancient Egypt in philosophy,
linguistics, and gender relations 
*       Dr. Asa Hilliard, III, author: SBA: The Reawakening of the African
Mind; The Teachings of Ptahhotep 

[edit]


See also


*       Afro-asiatic languages 
*       Afrocentricity 
*       Axum 
*       Black Athena 
*       Cultural appropriation 
*       Egyptology 
*       Eurocentrism 
*       Great Zimbabwe 
*       Historiography 
*       History of Ancient Egypt 
*       Kush 
*       Meroe 
*       Nilotic 
*       Nubia 
*       Sub-Saharan Africa 
*       Tutankhamun 

[edit]


External links


*       [http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/9507/c-wh1-ane-yurco.htm
Frank Joseph Yurco Were the Ancient Egyptian Black or White BIBLICAL
ARCHAEOLOGY REVIEW for September-October, 1989 Yurco's perpective on the
race contrversey of the ancient Egyptians 




*       African by Nature Presents Your Eyes, an examination of black
African identity vs. Europeanized images of Egypt
<http://www.africanbynature.com/falseimages/bewarefalseimages.html>  
*       Afrocentrism from The Skeptic's Dictionary by Robert Todd Carroll
<http://skepdic.com/afrocent.html>  
*       Ancient Nubia & Egypt Summary of Cheikh Anta Diop's Work (in French)
La Nubie et L'Egypte Ancienne dans leurs Contexte Naturel Negro-Africain
<http://www.ankhonline.com/egypte1.htm>  
*       Afrocentrism: The Argument We're Really Having by Ibrahim Sundiata
<http://way.net/dissonance/sundiata.html>  
*       Afrocentrism in Rastafari <http://www.tektonics.org/qt/rasta.html>  
*       Afrocentrist multicultural pseudo-history by The Association for
Rational Thought
<http://www.cincinnatiskeptics.org/blurbs/afro-pseudo-history.html>  
*       Building Bridges to Afrocentrism by Ann Macy Roth, for the
University of Pennsylvania's African Studies Center
<http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Articles_Gen/afrocent_roth.html>  
*       "The Egyptians: Who Were They?"
<http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Classroom/9912/egyptians.html>  
*       "Egyptology: Hanging in the Hair," by Anu M'bantu and Fari Supia,
West Africa Magazine, July 8, 2001
<http://www.homestead.com/wysinger/hair2.html>  
*       Ex Africa Lux? <http://www.gfa.d-r.de/dr,gfa,002,1999,a,03.pdf>  by
T. A. Schmitz (PDF) 
*       Fallacies of Afrocentrism by Grover Furr, for the Montclair State
University <http://www.chss.montclair.edu/english/furr/afrocent.html>  
*       "The Global African Presence," by Runoko Rashidi
<http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/runoko.html>  
*       "Negro History and The Myth of Ham's Curse," by Babu G. Ranganathan
(an East Indian writes of the black identity of ancient Egypt, India, etc.)
<http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Afrocentrism&action=edit&section=
8>  
*       "Not Out Of Africa Excerpt," by Mary Lefkowitz
<http://www.historyplace.com/pointsofview/not-out.htm>  
*       Pride and prejudice By Dinesh D'Souza
<http://www.mugu.com/cgi-bin/Upstream/People/DSouza/dsouza-pride.html>  
*       "Race in Antiquity: Truly Out of Africa," by Dr. Molefi Kete Asante,
a critical assessment of Lefkowitz's Not Out of Africa.
<http://www.asante.net/articles/lefkowitz.html>  
*       Racism and the Rediscovery of Ancient Nubia
<http://www.pbs.org/wonders/Episodes/Epi1/1_retel1.htm>  
*       "Return to Glory," The Freeman Institute
<http://www.returntoglory.org/>  
*       Safari Scholarship Reinvents History by Ilana Mercer
<http://www.american-partisan.com/cols/2001/mercer/qtr1/print/0305.htm>  
*       UC Davis History Professor Clarence Walker's take on Afrocentrism
<http://www.dcn.davis.ca.us/go/gizmo/2001/clarence.html>  
*       Hubert Harrison
<http://www.iww.org/culture/biography/HubertHarrison1.shtml>  

[edit]


References


*       Asante, Molefi Kete (1990). Kemet, Afrocentricity, and knowledge,
Africa World Press. 
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