AFRICANISMS
IN THE AMERICAS
By Valentine
Ojo*
The
poem "Coming of Age" by the 1991 Poet Laureate, Eric
C. Webb, opens with the following lines:
When I was younger
I
was a victim
a
victim
of
the
Tarzan
movies
I
knew my people
as
savages swingin'
through
trees.
An article in a recent edition
of The
Washington Post, titled "The Case for Black Colleges,"
concluded with the following statistics:
In other words, from 1900 to
1992--in less than a century--
Americans of African origin have graduated from Negroes, through at
least four
changes of identity, to African Americans. This
frequently remarked "identity crisis" is of
course precipitated on the lament of the poet quoted above: the fate of a people, whose ancestors,
it has been claimed, were "savages, swinging through trees," a people
with no history and no culture.
But,
simply because the culture of a people has not consisted of
the domination and dehumanization of others, of their brutalization and
of the
looting and exploitation of the wealth of other people and nations,
does not
make their way of life and their beliefs less of a culture. The fact that the history of a people
is not written in blood and does not leave a trail of blood, inhuman
exploitation, and sufferings in its wake does not mean that such a
people do not
have a history--history can not and should not be construed only as an
anthology, a record of wars, destruction, and looting.
Now
that I am older
some
notions
still
remain
but
the
time
has
finally
come
for
me
to
break
my
chains.
It is my intention to take a
modest step in the direction of
breaking these mental chains that still fetter our thinking about
ourselves, by
presenting here examples of Africanisms--examples of African cultural
influences--that have left their indelible imprint on the Americas. Many of these cultural traits and
contributions are subconscious, and some are so subtle, we tend to take
them
for granted, being so much part of our daily lives.
The examples are taken from the spheres of Language and
Literature; Cultural Artifacts and Religion; Kinship, Marriage and
Family
Structure; and the Mundane, in the form of Music, Dance, Salutations
and
Comportments--the way and manner we carry ourselves. Even the manner in which American women of
African descent
carry babies on their hips, is a cultural particularity.
Those who have attempted to
describe black speech patterns and the
creoles and pidgins of the Caribbeans have been, by and large, people
without
any knowledge of the structures of the languages of the areas where the
first
speakers of these derived language forms acquired their primary
linguistic
socialization. These scholars are,
therefore, unaware of the fact "that there are systems observable in
communication among present-day Caribbean people that are derived from
observed
systems in the communication of sub-Saharan African nations" [Allsopp,
1995: 91].
Put differently, many of the features,
if not most, that characterize and distinguish the creoles and pidgins
spoken
by sizable populations in the Caribbean from standard English or French
are to
be traced back and found in the structures of the African languages
spoken in
the slave basin of West Africa, since those who gave the initial
impetus for
the formation of these new languages derived from this area. Furthermore, it has long been
established through the comparative studies of their individual
grammars, that
the languages of the West African coast, "despite their mutual
unintelligibility and apparent variety of forms," [Herskovits, 158: 280] are basically similar in
structure, and share those features which linguists employ to classify
languages as belonging to the same stock.
Some of these characteristics
include the fact that most of the
languages of this area, being spoken in oral cultures (this feature
also
resurfaces in black literature), rely partly on kinesic for the
transmission of
communication. This in part makes
for the often remarked reduction in morphosyntactic features observed
in these
creoles and pidgins, and in the languages of the West African coast.
Many of these languages - Ibo,
Yoruba, Ewe, etc. - are tonal or
tonemic, i.e. the use of variation in pitch "to differentiate...meaning
of
otherwise identical word-forms" and to perform syntactic functions is
systemic in these languages [Allsopp, 1995:
96]. Such a
system does not operate in any European languages, but it is operative
in the
Caribbean creoles. Other features
of these new languages which abound in West African languages, and
which play
little or no roles in the structures of European languages include: the frequency of ideophones
('sound-concept'
words); the prototypical open syllabic structure (CV-) of West African
Languages, where even borrowed words with consonant clusters have to be
'opened' up: church - sóbsX;
Christmas - KérésXmésX, etc.;
non-inflectional morphology, with a corresponding reliance on
word-order to
signify syntactic relations, etc.; absence of verb-noun concordance;
tense
relations usually signalled by independent verbal elements; absence of
passive
transformation; questions do not usually require a change in word-order
(preference for question markers); and use of reduplication, among
others.
The Gullah 'dialects' of English
spoken by the black population of
the Sea Islands off the coast of Georgia and the Carolinas have
retained many
of these features. And in addition,
many linguistic usages among mainstream African American can ultimately
be
traced back to unconscious retentions of Africanisms, since such usages
are
rarely encountered among the white population.
A good example is the frequent use of 'Hi, Brother,' 'Hi,
Sister,' 'you all,' etc. among African Americans.
One important factor that is
often ignored in the initial phase of
African presence in the New World regarding language evolution and
usage is
that the Africans who managed to reach the New World alive had to
acquire as
much of the vocabulary of their masters as they needed to survive, and
as was
taught to them. Being a
preliterate people, they pronounced these unfamiliar sounding words the
best
they could, and reorganized them (instinctively) into their African
speech
patterns. Considering that the
conditions under slavery were not ideal for learning (and that any
serious
learning was often discouraged), that the early Africans were able to
fashion
languages of survival must be seen as a testimony to the creative
ingenuity of
the African. One need only to
observe the language performance of recent immigrants into this
country,
regardless of their racial background, and especially the ones with
little formal
education, to imagine the feat enslaved Africans had to perform.
In the literary arena, various
recent studies are beginning to
unearth Africanisms (sometimes under the guise of postmodernistic and
feminist
writings) in the literary productions of African American writers.
Holloway [1987] for example
posits in New Dimensions of Spirituality,
that "the linguistic or
mythic vehicles, in the voices of Black women...enable African values
to
survive in the chaos of Western culture." Her
propositions are informed largely by the African and Black
American female values portrayed in the works of Toni Morrison, as when
she
sees reflections of African values in Claudia's description of a
conversation
with her mother and a friend in The Bluest
Eye as a "gently wicked dance" [Holloway, 1987: 38]; or the elements of African
spirituality, mythology, and ethos, "an explicit thematic interplay
basic
to an African view of the universe," which she identifies in the novel Tar Baby [Holloway, 1987:
117-118]. Holloway actually
asserts that language (Black language that
is) has served as "response to the indignities of racism" by helping
to draw boundaries around black cultural identity:
"Whether we call it a dialect, Black English, Ebonics,
or numerous other terms, the language of the black community has
African roots
and maintains African identity in a world where identity is constantly
threatened by cultural assimilation and dissemination" [Holloway,
1987: 38].
She
pursues this theme further in Moorings
and Metaphors [1992], where she endeavors to demonstrate the
unbroken
African heritage of African American female writers by juxtaposing
their
thematic concerns and orature influenced styles with those of
contemporary
female writers of the African continent.
Holloway suggests that "the imaginative literature of these
women
may be a significant source of cultural continuity" [12], and endeavors
to
identify "a dimension of the intertextual, shared traditions in African
and African-American women writers' text" [13], as against those of
white
female writers. This cultural
continuity she has tried to demonstrate under the concept of (re)membrance in recognition of the fact
that the "spiritual point of origin for these works was oral and poetic
at
a time when oracy and poetry were not distinct modes of expressions but
were
intimately linked" [13].
When a Toni Morrison writes the
following lines in the novel, Jazz [p.
52]:
Alice
Manfred stood for three hours on Fifth Avenue marveling at
the cold black faces and listening to drums saying what the graceful
women and
the marching men could not,
she
was describing the African drums of her cultural
heritage. And "...watching
Bud and C. T. abusing each other at checkers..." [p. 68], as Sekoni
[1995]
showed in his study of this theme in the works of other
African-American
writers, is an African pastime.
As
a follow-up to his examination of Africanisms in the
Postmodernist expressions of Hurston, Sekoni [1995] has endeavored to
show the
specific "appropriation and reuse of traditional African and African
American cultural aesthetic forms...especially of the joking
partnership and
trickster narrative mode" by Langston Hughes in his Jesse B. Semple
stories [64-65]. The African
origin of these literary devices that played such crucial roles in, and
"characterized cultural discourse during the Harlem Renaissance," is
not in doubt.
Cultural
Artifacts and Religion
That people of African origin
are deeply religious (even when they
do not subscribe to any formalistic religion) has often been remarked,
even by
the worst detractors of African cultures, who, however, then go on to
apply
such labels as 'fetishism,' 'animism,' 'ancestor worship,' etc. to the
religious convictions and practices of African peoples, both on the
continent
and in the Diaspora. We again see
the tendency to denigrate anything African at play, whenever attempts
are made
to describe African-influenced variants of even orthodox Christianity. Yet, the myriads of Euro-American
Christian sects would hardly ever be described in such negative terms.
Our main focus here, however, is
to briefly outline how the
intense religious life in African culture has characterized African
culture in
the New World, the intimate connection between life and religion, and
the
concomitant intimate connection between religion and what is ordinarily
construed as objects of art in European cultures.
The Yoruba culture of Western
Nigeria and of Dahomey would appear
to have been the major contributor to African religions that "survived
the
vicissitudes of the Atlantic Trade" [Thompson, 1983: xv]. "The
impact and spirit of millions of Yoruba in West
Africa on key urban population areas in the Americas, most notably in
Havana,
Salvador, Brazil, and the heavily Hispanic barrios of certain cities of
the United
States, especially Miami and New York" (we may also include
Philadelphia
and New Orleans) is nowhere better attested to today than in the
proliferation
of such Yoruba deities as "Eshu, spirit of individuality and change;
Ifa,
god of divination; Ogun, lord of iron; Yemoja, goddess of the seas;
Oshun,
goddess of sweet water, love, and giving; Oshoosi, god of hunting;
Obaluaiye,
dread spirit of disease and earth; Nana Bukuu, his mother; Shango, the
fiery
thunder god, who has inspired thousands of Afro-Americans (two
Afro-American
religions - Shango in Trinidad and Xango in Recife in Brazil - bear his
name)" [Thompson, 1983:
xv]. There are other minor
Yoruba deities that are actively worshipped in various localities in
the New
World, such as "Obatala, deity of creativity; Orisha Oko, a celestial
judge and restorer of fertility," and other areas observe the Egungun
cult
of ancestral spirits. Besides
there is a major revival of Yoruba culture and religious observances
currently
underway at Oyotunji Village in South Carolina [Hunt, 1979].
In addition to these, many
religions have taken the forms of
syncretism between African and Christian beings in predominantly
Catholic areas
like Brazil and Cuba, and even in New Orleans.
These include the macumba religious groups of Rio, the
Yoruba-inspired candomblé rites of
Brazil, and the voodoo cult of New Orleans.
Commenting on this phenomenon, Ojo-Ade [1989: 91-92] aptly observed that "unlike
the continental Africans who, in their large numbers, continue to
worship at
the altar of the white God, their brothers and sisters of the diaspora
have
moved away from the white altar to the black shrine...Syncretism is at
best the
co-existence of Africa and Europe, the harmonization of two practices
to form a
viable whole in which neither constituent is made to feel strange. In reality, many an African community
of the diaspora has successfully supplanted Christianity by
assimilating it
into the religion brought across the Atlantic."
Even orthodox Christian
religious sects have not remained
completely untouched by the influence of the religion brought by the
enslaved
Africans. The phenomenon of
"spirit possession" in the "shouting" churches of the United
States, the concept of the 'devil' as an agent of 'good and bad,' and
thus to
be 'appeased,' as found among Black Christian sects, and American
religious
revivalism, including those of the white churches, may ultimately be
traced
back to the Africanisms in Negro religious practices in the United
States
[Herskovits, 1958: 222].
It was remarked at the beginning
of this section that religion and
art are closely linked in African culture. Consequently,
the mainstay of many a museum and private art
collections in the New World today comprises of "the richness of
detail,
moral elaboration, and emblematic power that characterize the sacred
art of the
Yoruba in transition to Brazil, Cuba, and the United States" [Thompson, 1983:
xv]. This section will close
on the pertinent observation made by
Allsopp [1995: 93-4] that "in
notable contrast to the European's preference for the medium of
stone...the
strongly preferred medium of the African sculptor and carver is
wood...of which
there is voluminous evidence, in the Caribbean, in the wood carvings of
Haiti
and of the so-called Bush Negroes of Suriname."
Kinship, Marriage and Family
Structure
It is not my intention here to
go into any detailed treatment of
the African family structure, nor of the forms it has taken and the
evolution
it has of necessity undergone in the New World in general, and in the
United
States in particular. Following
the eminently readable Myth of the Negro
Past by Herskovits [1941; 1958], several other studies
essentially
reaffirming the connection and continuity between traditional African
family structures
and African American family structures have since appeared, culminating
in the
more recent studies by Sudarkasa [1980, 1988, 1995]. These studies have introduced new dimensions to
the
discussions about the African American family.
These include the total refusal to accept that the African
American family is 'aberrant' and 'crisis-ridden' simply because it
does not
conform to the Euro-American nuclear family based models [Sudarkasa,
1980: 55].
Another important development is
the introduction of the concept
of the Seven Rs - respect, responsibility, restraint, reciprocity,
reverence,
reason and reconciliation - which as she rightly observes, "represent
African family values that supported kinship structures...that lasted
for
hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years" [Sudarkasa, 1995: 218].
A few confirmatory observations
are, therefore, in order. True
enough, "African patterns of
family organization survived among enslaved blacks and some of these
patterns
are still manifest in the present day" [Sudarkasa, 1980: 57]. Most
differences in the two structures can be explained
largely "in ways that reflected the influence of slavery and of
Euro-American values"
[Sudarkasa, 1988: 39]. Sudarkasa further aptly observed, that
"the operation of various factors associated with Westernization and
urbanization in contemporary Africa are leading to the emergence of
family
patterns similar to those found among blacks in the U.S." [1980: 57], a factor which merely serves to
underscore the essential similarities between African and African
American
family structures, based on their common heritage.
Some terminological
clarifications may serve to reinforce some of
the arguments. The African concept
of family (Yor. 'ebí') is strictly
consanguinal, that is, based on blood relationship.
Thus in a patriarchal set-up, the mother of a child is not,
as a rule, considered a member of the child's family, from the point of
view of
the father's side. Though children
can be, and are necessarily, considered as belonging (also) to their
mother's
family, especially if the marriage was not sanctioned by the bride's
family.
The Rs, irrespective of their
actual numbers, are the real
cornerstones of the African family structure, and are reflected in such
Yoruba
usages as 'Xtéríba,' 'XwbntúnwbnsX,'
'Ptó,'
etc. and similar observances, in regulating the affairs of an extended
family. Many of these features
have always characterized the African American family [Herskovits, 1958: 143-206], and are still very much
present today in African American families, in areas like child-rearing
practices, and in the central role of women in the family, giving rise
to the
false notion of female-headed families as aberrations.
Actually, the currently
fashionable "It takes a village to
raise a child," is an African thing--the extended family has always
been a
village, and the village has always been the extended family in the
African
context.
The Mundane: Music, Dance and Salutations
When a General Colin Powell
recalls that as he grew older, he
started "to decode the sly double entendre" of the calypso songs he
had heard as a youth in family gatherings, he was, unconsciously maybe,
reliving facets of his African heritage [Powell, 1996: 14]. The
General remarked further that he continued to play
calypso tapes in his office even after he became Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs
of Staff, and noted that his aides (presumably mostly white Americans)
did not,
however, get the pidgin lyrics
and missed most of the innuendo in many of the tunes. And he concluded that "but then, you do not hear
much
calypso music in the Pentagon's E-Ring" [Powell, 1996: 14].
There is much insight to be
gained into the pervasiveness of
Africanisms in contemporary life in the Americas today in this brief
citation. For one thing, Negro
songs and music of the U.S. form only part of a larger body of the New
World
Negro music which include Caribbean music forms like reggae and
calypso, and
Latin American forms like salsa and samba.
Regarding the influence of
African and African-derived musical
forms, Thompson [1983: xiii]
observes that "listening to rock, jazz, blues, reggae, salsa, samba,
bossa
nova, juju, highlife, and mambo, one might conclude that much of the
popular
music of the world is informed by the flash of the spirit of a certain
people
specially armed with improvisatory drive and brilliance," meaning of
course the people of African origin.
He observed further that "since the Atlantic slave trade,
ancient
organizing principles of song and dance have crossed the seas from the
Old
World to the New," where "they took on new momentum, intermingling
with each other and with New World or European styles of singing and
dancing."
Some of the principles that
distinguish African musical forms
include dominance of percussive elements including the tendency to use
most
instruments as percussions; a propensity for multiple meter;
overlapping call
and response - "interlock systems" between solo/chorus,
voice/instrument, etc.; centrality of the rhythmic element, a
"metronome
sense" generated through keeping a beat in mind as common denominator;
offbeat phrasing or syncopation; use of songs and dances of social
allusion
(i.e. music which no matter however danceable and funky, are primarily
intended
as social criticisms) from the Negro blues through the songs and lyrics
of
James Brown, Curtis Mayfield, Stevie Wonder, Bob Marley, Fela
Anikulapo-Kuti,
to contemporary rap phenomena; and "an interdependent and inseparable
combination of dancing, singing, and drumming"
[Herskovits, 1958; Thompson, 1983; Allsopp, 1995].
Many
of these Negro musical forms have informed and found their
way into such majority culture musical forms like Dvorak's "From the
New
World," and Gershwin's "Porgy and Bess." In
addition, they have exercised
profound influence on contemporary composers like Aaron Copeland and
others.
People of African descent have
often been remarked for what
Herskovits [1958] had termed "strict adherence to codes of polite
behavior," and which has often been misinterpreted as "Negroes being
obsequious" by detractors of Negro behavior.
As already noted above (and in agreement with views in
Sudarkasa [1995]; and as already noted by other scholars) reverence and
respect, especially for older people, and reciprocity and a sense of
responsibility towards other members of society are highly cherished
values in
traditional African and African American communities. As a result of this African tradition, Black
people tend to
exchange salutations more frequently among themselves than most other
ethnic
groups (note the frequency of 'Hi, Brother,' 'Hi, Sister'; and that of
student/student, student/faculty, faculty/staff salutations, even among
perfect
strangers).
And I have often noticed that
stopping at traffic lights or
meeting at the dentist's waiting room, Black people, perfect strangers,
tend to
exchange some form of recognition of each other.
These are clearly traditional African residual carryovers,
behavioral patterns that characterize cultures that lay emphasis on
communality. It may of course be
noted that this practice of mutual recognition through exchange of
salutations
would appear to be catching on, even in the majority culture.
Professor Arthur Ramos, the
highly respected Brazilian scholar and
authority on African cultural retentions in the Americas provides
innumerable
examples of Africanisms in the day to day life of Americans--Black and
White--that are often overlooked or taken for granted, or assumed to
have been
"borrowed" from European cultures, simply because similar phenomena
may be found in them. The list
extends from such familiar things as movement, songs and dance, mode of
dressing, forms of associations and family structure, to religious life
and
folklore. Professor Ramos insists
that the considerable influence of women on social and family life in
America
is due to the influence of African matriarchal culture. Music, especially jazz, America's most
significant contribution to world culture--besides jeans and
Coca-Cola--is a result
of African cultural influence.
Even, in the general behavior of
all North Americans, what he
calls the "Negro stamp" is easily discernible--"Theodore
Roosevelt's manner of laughing, the swaying motion of sailors at the
New York
port, the movement of the hips in the style of Mae West, the typical
American
camaraderie and sporting attitude to life, are believed by even
psychologists
and philosophers like Jung and Graf Keyserling to be the result of
Negro
influence on American life" [Ramos, 1946: 67].
Professor Ramos concludes that "on the surface, we
perceive the social picture of Western culture.
However, in the hidden folds of individual comportment, we
are able to discern traces that were clearly left by the influence of
the Dark
Continent."
By Way of Conclusion...
Let me round off this
presentation with some pertinent
observations as to why bother to identify the Africanisms that underlie
African
American behavioral patterns today.
DuBois in his pioneering study The
Negro American Family (first published in 1908, and quoted
by
Sudarkasa, 1980) provided part of the answer:
This is not because Negro-Americans are Africans,
or can trace an
unbroken social history from Africa, but because there is a distinct
nexus
between Africa and America, which, though broken and perverted, is
nevertheless
not to be neglected...(DuBois, p. 9)
Why not?
Sudarkasa
[1980] observed that although the captive African "people had to adapt
to
the realities of the savage system of slavery in which they
existed,...that did
not obliterate the fact of their origin.
If Israelites enslaved in Egypt for centuries could remain
Israelites;
if diverse European peoples in the twentieth century can still
acknowledge
cultural survivals from ancient Greece and Rome; I wonder why it is
considered
preposterous that Africans only a few generations removed from their
homelands
would show evidence of their cultural roots."
The case is stated succinctly in
the foreword to The Negro Impact on Western
Civilization
[Roucek and Kiernan, 1983]:
"Before the black American can feel he is an American in the
same
sense that the white man feels he is one, he must first understand his
blackness, just as the white man understands his whiteness." Part of that process of understanding
is that he must reconcile himself to his African heritage. Herskovits [1958: 185]
remarked already some four decades
ago that "a people without a past are a people without an anchor in the
present. And recognition of this
is essential if the psychological foundations of the interracial
situation in
this country are to be probed for their fullest significance, and
proper and
effective correctives for its stresses are to be achieved."
However, commenting on the
reality of today's Black experience
both in the Diaspora and on the original "Dark Continent," Ojo-Ade
[op. cit.] observes that "reactionary standpoint is often couched in
revolutionary rhetoric.
Subconsciously or otherwise, white superiority is espoused; at
least,
only a Black fool would doubt in whose hands lies today's real power. Most importantly, there is no saying
when, and if the slavery (cultural slavery that is ) will end. For now, the hope for a change for the
better remains just that, hope against hope, because white superiority
and
supremacy seem to be sacrosanct."
Nevertheless, let me state this
clearly: The African-American is not--I
repeat NOT--a
direct descendant of the Greeks or of the Romans, nor of any of the
European
stocks for that matter. He, like
his brothers and sisters on the continent of Africa and like the others
in the
Diaspora, is first and foremost, a person of African descent, whose
African
cultural mores and values, have, of necessity, been influenced and
modified
through contact to the cultures of Europe, especially to that of the
strong
Protestant variant to be found in North America.
He, nevertheless, shares this historical distinction with
the Chinese, the Japanese, Koreans, Indians, Jews and Arabs, people
whose
cultures have also come under massive European influence. We may now ask: If
these and other such people have not
totally lost their identity and completely renounced their cultures in
favor of
those of the Europeans, why is it then that Americans of African origin
must
lose theirs and renounce their culture, and thereby deny themselves a
sense of
self?
With our Poet Laureate, I would
like to conclude this presentation
with his closing lines:
I'll
free my mind
then
my soul
and
the world
will
be my quest.
*Dr.
Valentine Ojo
Center
for African Studies
Lincoln
University
\afrstu\afrinam
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Allsopp,
Richard. "African
Systems in Caribbean
Communication" in Niara Sudarkasa, et al. (eds.), Exploring
the African American Experience.
Lincoln University, PA: Lincoln
University Press, 1995, pp.
91-102.
Bascom, William. African
Art in Cultural Perspective: An
Introduction. New
York: W. W. Norton & Co.,
1973.
Babatunde, Emmanuel. "Cultural
Differences and Marital
Crisis Among Africans and African-Americans:
Case Study of Some Immigrants" in Sudarkasa, et al.
(eds.), Exploring the African American
Experience. Lincoln
University, PA: Lincoln University
Press, 1995, pp. 184-197.
Frazier,
E. F. "Traditions
and Patterns of Negro
Family Life in the United States" in E. B. Reuter, Race
and Culture Contacts. New
York: 1934.
Gray III,
William H. "The
Case for All-Black
Colleges" in The Washington Post,
"Education Review," Sunday, July 28, 1996, p. 4.
Herskovits, Melville J. Myth
of the Negro Past.
Boston: Beacon Press, 1958
(1969 Reprint).
Holloway, Karla F. C.
Moorings
and Metaphors: Figures of Culture
and Gender in Black Women's Literature.
New Brunswick:
Rutgers University Press, 1992.
Holloway, Karla F. C. and
Stephanie A.
Demetrakopoulos.
New Dimensions of
Spirituality: A Biracial and
Bicultural Reading of the Novels of Toni Morrison. New York: Greenwood
Press, 1987.
Howe, Todd. "African Cultural
Artifacts in the
New World" in Sudarkasa, et al. (eds.), Exploring
the African American Experience.
Lincoln University, PA: Lincoln
University Press, 1995, pp. 71-78.
Hunt,
Carl M. Oyotunji
Village: The Yoruba Movement in
America. Washington,
D.C.: University Press of America,
1979.
Lefkowitz, Mary. Not
Out
of Africa. New
York: Basic Books, 1996.
Nwachuku,
Levi A. "African-American
Studies: Significance and Meaning;
Revisited" in Sudarkasa et al. (eds.), Exploring
the African American Experience.
Lincoln University, PA: Lincoln
University Press, 1995, pp. 6-10.
Ojo-Ade,
Femi. Being Black, Being Human. Ile-Ife
(Nigeria): Obafemi Awolowo
University Press Ltd.,
1995.
____________. On Black Culture. Ile-Ife (Nigeria):
Obafemi Awolowo University Press Ltd., 1989.
Powell, Colin. My
American Journey. New
York: Ballantine Books, 1995.
Ramos, Arthur. Die
Negerkulturen in der neuen Welt, Erlenbachh-Zürich: Eugen Rentsch Verlag (Translation by
Richard Katz from the
Portuguese original: "As
Culturas negras no novo mondo").
Sao Paolo/Rio de Janeiro:
1946.
Roucek, Joseph S. and Thomas
Kiernan
(eds.). The Negro Impact on Western
Civilization. New
York: Philosophical Library, 1970.
Sekoni, Ropo. "Africanisms and
Postmodernist
Imagination in the Popular Fiction of Langston Hughes" in C. James
Trotman
and Emery Wimbish, Jr. (eds.), Langston
Hughes: The Man, His Art, and His
Continuing Influence.
New York: Garland
Publishing, Inc., 1995.
Sudarkasa,
Niara. "African
and Afro-American Family
Structure: A Comparison" in The Black Scholar, November/December 1980,
pp. 37-60.
____________. "Interpreting the
African Heritage
in Afro-American Family Organization" in Harriette P. McAdoo (ed.), Black Families, 1988, pp. 27-43.
____________. "African-American
Families and
Family Values" in Niara Sudarkasa, et al. (eds.), Exploring
the African American Experience.
Lincoln University, PA: Lincoln
University Press, 1995, pp.
198-219.
Sudarkasa, Niara, Levi A.
Nwachuku, et
al. (eds.). Exploring the
African-American Experience.
Lincoln University, PA:
Lincoln University Press, 1995.
Thompson, Robert Farris. Flash
of the Spirit: African and
Afro-American Art and Philosophy. New York: Random House, 1983.
Tillinghast, Joseph
Alexander. The
Negro in Africa and America.
New York: The Macmillan
Company, 1902.
:e
© Valentine Ojo, 2005