African studies
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African studies is the study of Africa, and can encompass such fields as social and economic development, politics, history, culture, sociology, anthropology or linguistics. A specialist in African studies is referred to as an Africanist.
A related discipline is Pan-African Studies.
[edit] Renowned Africanists
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
Muammar al-Gaddafi · Molefi Kete Asante · Steve Biko · Edward Wilmot Blyden · Amílcar Cabral · David Comissiong · Cheikh Anta Diop · W.E.B. Du Bois · Frantz Fanon · Marcus Garvey · Sankofa Juba · Maulana Karenga · Kenneth Kaunda · Jomo Kenyatta · Akwatu Khenti · Patrice Lumumba · Bob Marley · Malcolm X · Thabo Mbeki · Zephania Mothopeng · Abdias do Nascimento · Kwame Nkrumah · Julius Nyerere · George Padmore · Dr Motsoko Pheko · John Nyathi Pokela · Runoko Rashidi · Walter Rodney · Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia · Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe · Burning Spear · Henry Sylvester-Williams · Ahmed Sékou Touré · Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael) · I.T.A. Wallace-Johnson · Omali Yeshitela ·
Philosophies and concepts: United States of Africa · Afrocentrism · Kwanzaa · Pan-African colours · Pan-African flag · Négritude · African nationalism · African socialism ·African Century · Africanization· African Code· Kawaida
Organizations and movements: African Union (preceded by the Organization of African Unity) · AAPRP · Uhuru Movement · UNIA-ACL · AllAfrica.com · African Unification Front · African diaspora