African Decolonization Essays and Term Papers
Last update: August 24, 2014-
The Magnificent African Cake by Basil Davidson
In the video, "The Magnificent African Cake" by Basil Davidson, Africa was divided up into new colonies by Europeans. After the end of slavery in Africa, Europeans wanted to expand their empires for industrialization and commerce. This period of time was called the "scramble for Africa" because many European countries were claiming as much land from Africa. In 1884, the Berlin Congress was held and these European countries "sliced" up the African countries like a
Rating:Essay Length: 914 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: November 21, 2009 -
Substance Abuse in African American College Students
Abstract This paper looks at substance abuse as it relates to African American college students. Some of the factors under consideration are the causes and ramifications of substance abuse. The growing problem of substance abuse has not gone unnoticed by respective college administrations and this paper also looks at what colleges and universities are doing to educate students on and prevent substance abuse. The primary theme of the paper will be the messages about substance
Rating:Essay Length: 903 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: November 22, 2009 -
The Articulation of Pan-Africanism
This week’s theme is the articulation of Pan-Africanism. The readings on which this response paper will focus are “Pan Africanism” by Jeremiah Dibua, “from The Autobiography of Malcolm X”, by Malcolm X, and “’Negro Women Are Great Thinkers As Well As Doers’: Amy Jacques Garvey and Community Feminism in the United States, 1924-1927” by Ula Taylor. This essay will briefly summarize each reading as well as offer my response to the authors’ readings in relation
Rating:Essay Length: 621 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: November 22, 2009 -
African Traditional Religion
In this paper I wish to examine the place and the role of women according to African Religion. The paper focuses on three areas: mythology, proverbs and prayers. In the area of mythology we are confronted with the picture of women in the early state of human existence. This is not history. The myth is broader than history in explaining some aspects of society. It is a language of expressing truths or realities for which
Rating:Essay Length: 5,558 Words / 23 PagesSubmitted: November 23, 2009 -
African History
African History The pre-colonial African past is a subject that everyone should know about. Africa is where we originated from, and that is why I think it is very important to know about this subject. In order to know what happened in this time period the work of historians, archaeologists, and paleontologists is critical. I think historians are very important in the study of the pre-colonial African past. If historians didn't do their job than
Rating:Essay Length: 1,068 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: November 28, 2009 -
Has the Amount of Information on African Americans Increased in Secondary School American History Books?
With new discussions and debates about the changes needed to the curriculum of the United States Education System, especially in the area of history which scholars say that the curriculum leans toward an euro-centric model of teaching with information about European Countries and the Anglo-Saxon move to the United States. I wanted to look at American History and analyze it to see how much information is in books about African Americans and the details
Rating:Essay Length: 811 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: November 30, 2009 -
African History
I think it is very important for us to learn about our African history. As John Herrick Clarke states in African people in world history, “History is a clock that people use to tell their political and culture time of day. It is also a compass the people use to find themselves on the map of human geography”. As African people we have been misinformed and mis educated about great African leaders and some of
Rating:Essay Length: 572 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: November 30, 2009 -
African History
African History The pre-colonial African past is a subject that everyone should know about. Africa is where we originated from, and that is why I think it is very important to know about this subject. In order to know what happened in this time period the work of historians, archaeologists, and paleontologists is critical. I think historians are very important in the study of the pre-colonial African past. If historians didn't do their job than
Rating:Essay Length: 1,068 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: November 30, 2009 -
Being an African American Woman
As stated in Webster’s II Dictionary, a woman is defined to be an adult female human. In today’s society being an African American woman is a rigid task to live up to. It means to reside to what their ancestors have left behind, which means to be stronger than ever. Rosa Parks was strong, Harriet Tubman was also strong, and Jezebel was even stronger. So what exactly does it mean to be a woman? It
Rating:Essay Length: 893 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: December 1, 2009 -
Augustne the African
Augustine the African Augustine was born in Tagaste (modern Souk Ahras, Algeria) in 354 and died almost seventy-six years later in Hippo Regius (modern Annaba) on the Mediterranean coast sixty miles away. In the years between he lived out a career that seems to moderns to bridge the gap between ancient pagan Rome and the Christian middle ages. But to Augustine, as to his contemporaries, that gap separated real people and places they knew, not
Rating:Essay Length: 5,146 Words / 21 PagesSubmitted: December 1, 2009 -
African Americans and Youth Violence
Over the decades, the perspective of juvenile delinquency has seemed to intensify, as it has been regarded as an epidemic. Youth violence has appeared to proliferate in many areas, but specifically in Chicago, Illinois. Quite often what is missing in conceptually understanding youth violence is the acknowledgement that certain factors place children, youth, and families at risk for violence. Special attention is directed at the effect of poverty, character of the neighborhoods, character of the
Rating:Essay Length: 956 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: December 2, 2009 -
African American Women
From Africa to America, African American women have embraced the spirit of creativity and survival. For years the black woman has been the backbone of our culture. It was our faith and positive spirits that played a great part in surviving slavery and being treated as second class citizens during the Civil Rights Movement. Now as we enter the 21st century, it is time to exert our strengths at a new level. The African American
Rating:Essay Length: 621 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: December 3, 2009 -
African American Women in Hollywood
African American Women in Early Film In early film many African American actresses portrayed roles as mammies, slaves, seductresses, and maids. These roles suppressed them not allowing them to show their true talents. Although they had to take on these degrading roles, they still performed with dignity, elegance, grace and style. They paved the way for many actresses to follow both blacks and whites. These women showed the film industry that they were more
Rating:Essay Length: 718 Words / 3 PagesSubmitted: December 6, 2009 -
Bamboozled and African Americans in Today’s Industry
The movie Bamboozled by Spike Lee is a very interesting movie which brings up a lot of different points. Although Bamboozled did not receive great reviews like some of Lee’s other movies, I think it brought up a lot of important questions regarding the media and the way film portrays African Americans on T.V. Lee’s movie brings to light the notion that to be black and on television you have to play a certain role
Rating:Essay Length: 1,491 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: December 6, 2009 -
African American Leaders
Ashley White General Writing Martha McCully 3/28/02 Jesse Jackson, Mumia Abu-Jamal, Booker T. Washington, and W.E.B DuBois are all African American leaders. All of these men were leaders in their own time and their own sense, living in different eras with different views, but they all shared common ground. All four were African Americans trying to overcome obstacles and become influential leaders in their society. Jesse Jackson was an African American civil rights activist
Rating:Essay Length: 980 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: December 6, 2009 -
The Element of Confinement by African-American Women Authors
It was and still is very common for African-American authors to write texts that reflect upon each other. In The Signifying Monkey, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. carefully and thoroughly explained the way that authors review the text of authors and make it their own. Similarities between texts help the reader to understand how texts are signified upon each other. African-Americans had to write themselves in to the American literary genre. In the process, they developed
Rating:Essay Length: 3,534 Words / 15 PagesSubmitted: December 8, 2009 -
Pan African Congresss
The meeting of the African congress in Manchester in 1945 could be viewed by many scholars as one of the most important event, if not the most important event in the history of the Pan African movement. What was it about this particular meeting that derived such notoriety versus other meetings? This essay will make an attempt to give an insight into what made this meting the "Turing point in the history in the 1945
Rating:Essay Length: 441 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: December 13, 2009 -
The Community of Enslaved Africans and Their Religious & Spiritual Practices
The Community of Enslaved Africans and their Religious & Spiritual Practices. During a most dark and dismal time in our nations history, we find that the Africans who endured horrible circumstances during slavery, found ways of peace and hope in their religious beliefs. During slavery, African’s where able to survive unbearable conditions by focusing on their spirituality. Christianity was amongst the slave community. Being that the vast majority of the slave community was born in
Rating:Essay Length: 1,738 Words / 7 PagesSubmitted: December 14, 2009 -
South African Affairs
South African Affairs In today’s world, everything moves at an extreme pace. Countries are trying to become global powers in the business world. Globalization is the topic of international affairs, and it is either having a positive or negative effect on developing nations. Globalization can be defined as, “the integration of economic, cultural, political, religious, and social systems through international and localization. (Dictionary)” A country that is being effect by these trends is South Africa.
Rating:Essay Length: 910 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: December 15, 2009 -
African-American Civil Rights Movement
African-American Civil Rights Movement Throughout the 1960’s, the widespread movement for African American civil rights had transformed in terms of its goals and strategies. The campaign had intensified in this decade, characterized by greater demands and more aggressive efforts. Although the support of the Civil Rights movement was relatively constant, the goals of the movement became more high-reaching and specific, and its strategies became less compromising. African Americans’ struggle for equality during the 1960’s was
Rating:Essay Length: 2,395 Words / 10 PagesSubmitted: December 15, 2009 -
The Meaning of Being African American for Richard Wright
Deanna Milano Writing 102 May 2, 2006 Research Paper The meaning of being African American for Richard Wright Racial discrimination has been rooted deeply in the United States and saturated into every aspect of society. A racist outlook assumes that the human species can be meaningfully separated into races, a viewpoint that is often coupled with hostility toward people of other races. For most of the 20th century, African Americans specifically experienced the worst kind
Rating:Essay Length: 2,593 Words / 11 PagesSubmitted: December 18, 2009 -
African American Athletes
African American Athletes American student athletes have always faced stereotypes in and out of the classroom, being seen as self-segregating or “dumb jocks” that really wouldn’t be at school if it weren’t for their athletic ability. Although these stereotypes are applied to both white and black athletes, African American students, especially men, feel it more than their white counterparts. African Americans are already, for the most part, seen as intellectually inferior, so when they are
Rating:Essay Length: 965 Words / 4 PagesSubmitted: December 18, 2009 -
West African Culture
Brief History From the 1500s to the 1700s, African blacks, mainly from the area of West Africa (today's Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Dahomey, Togo, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Gabon) were shipped as slaves to North America, Brazil, and the West Indies. For them, local and tribal differences, and even varying cultural backgrounds, soon melded into one common concern for the suffering they all endured. Music, songs, and dances as well as
Rating:Essay Length: 1,341 Words / 6 PagesSubmitted: December 18, 2009 -
African Art
The traditional art of Africa plays a major part in the African society. Most ceremonies and activities (such as singing, dancing, storytelling, ect.) can not function without visual art. It can also be used as an implement and insignia of rank or prestige, or have a religious significance.African art consists mainly of sculptures, paintings, fetishes, masks, figures, and decorative objects. Sculptures are considered to be the greatest achievement for African art. A majority of the
Rating:Essay Length: 447 Words / 2 PagesSubmitted: December 19, 2009 -
Claude McKay - African American Lit.
Claude McKay African American Lit. Claude McKay was one of the most influential figures in twentieth-century African American literature. He was known world wide from the West Indies to the United States to Africa all the way to his birth place Jamaica. When mentioning controversial writers, Claude McKay comes to mind. He was first of many African American writers who would become known for speaking their minds through literature during the early 1900’s. He also
Rating:Essay Length: 1,212 Words / 5 PagesSubmitted: December 19, 2009