41 East 11th Street, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10003-4602. (212) 998-9650.
Program Website
Director of the Program: Professor Amkpa
Associate Director of the Program: Robert Hinton
Director of Undergraduate Studies: Professor Dillard
The Program in Africana Studies, which is administered by the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, offers a wide range of courses on black experiences throughout the Diaspora—including Africa, the Caribbean and South America, Europe, and the United States—from a variety of disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches. The program maintains particular strengths in Pan-African history and thought and black urban studies. Pan-African history and thought incorporates the study of such literary and political movements as abolitionism, the Harlem Renaissance, Garveyism, the Negritude movement, black consciousness, and black feminism. Courses deal not only with the rise of such movements, but also with the social, economic, and political dynamics of slavery, colonialism, segregation, and post-colonialism that provided the impetus and backdrop of political struggle and cultural production. Black urban studies focuses on the analysis of black peoples’ relations to a wide range of social, cultural, political, and municipal institutions, from museums and public parks to music and sports industries, the mass media, the police, and public schools. Courses also explore patterns of black migration and black ethnic identities, creolization, black cultural production, and questions of class, gender, and sexuality within black communities as well as relationships with other ethnic communities.
The program offers both an undergraduate B.A. and a master’s degree. It also maintains ties to the Institute of African American Affairs and Africa House, both of which run cultural and educational programming throughout the school year as well as to NYU in Ghana, which provides summer and semester-long study abroad opportunities.
Faculty
Professors:
Dash, Willis (Tisch)
Associate Professors:
Blake, Amkpa (Tisch), Guerrero
Clinical Associate Professor:
Hinton
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