Africana Studies Overview
Africana Studies is an interdisciplinary field that explores the life of people of African ancestry in Africa and the African Diaspora (especially the U.S. and Caribbean). In this vein, those who concentrate in Africana Studies approach topics, such as human rights, environmental degradation and renewal, democracy, revolution, and bioethics using a multidisciplinary lens. Our concentration prepares students with a cultural, political, social, and geographical awareness of the ways people of African descent in the diaspora and on the continent have lived, worked, played, and fought for self-definition. As Africa continues to be a point of economic interest, political conflict, and environmental activism, the study of the continent and those of African ancestry all over the globe remains central to understanding the modern world.
Because Africana Studies is an interdisciplinary concentration, its courses approach the lives of African people and those in the diaspora from a variety of perspectives and in different periods of time. Such interdisciplinarity is its strength, and students who take courses in Africana Studies will develop a deep understanding and appreciation for the culture, politics, art, and history of those of African ancestry living in Africa, North America, Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean.
Africana Studies Faculty
Barbara Beall-Fofana, Ph.D.
Nigel O.M. Brissett, Ed.D.
Ed Carr, Ph.D.
Eric DeMeulenaere, Ph.D.
Anita Häusermann Fábos, Ph.D.
Odile Ferly, Ph.D.
Ellen Foley, Ph.D
Lynn Frederikson
Janette Greenwood, Ph.D.
Eric Hofbauer
Esther Jones, Ph.D.
Willem Klooster, Ph.D.
James Murphy, Ph.D.
Nicole Overstreet, Ph.D.
Ousmane Power-Greene, Ph.D.
Raphael Rogers, Ph.D.
Shelly Tenenbaum, Ph.D.