African-American Culture Term Paper

¶ … connect the African cultural roots and the Black experience in America. What experience would you gain from viewing a traditional African community in modern America that retains strong cultural roots? (South Carolina!) To view a traditional African community, such as exists in South Carolina, within the context of an America environment, is not simply to see a remnant in what is, to many African-Americans, a lost part of their past or a foreign culture. Rather it is an illustration to the culture at large, given the profound cultural differences of this community, that 'black' that is experience of color is not a seamless cloth. The African-American experience of slavery is a unique and profound one, of history and the overcoming of struggle. However, unlike, for instance, the experience of American Jews, or Africans, as illustrated at the Museum of Tolerance, Los Angeles, the experience of a cohesive immigrant group, however oppressed, is profoundly different than that of an enslaved, transported minority that is merged and stripped of its culture and linguistic coherence and must create a new one, through music such as jazz, and the foods and words and dialects in combination with Africans they would never have encountered, had slavery not occurred.

Question 2. Compare and contrast the modern African and modern African-American experience/perspective. Where can a student find this information first-hand and connect with the modern African-American experience?

The modern African experience is one of nation building. As witnessed at the African-American Museum of Philadelphia Exploring Africa at a temporary Exhibit during February 2004, it is one of overcoming the legacy of colonialism, and occasional...

...

But he modern African-American experience, as noted by Ralph Ellison in his novel Invisible Man, is how to define one's selfhood in a nation that constantly attempts to erase one's identity as anything positive. The colonialism upon the African-American psyche is psychological as well as physical, and one must be of the oppressing nation as well as resist it, as in post-colonial literature and art of the African subcontinent.
Question 3. Compare and contrast the historical African and historical African-American experience/perspective. Where can a student find this information first-hand and connect with the historical African-American experience?

Through museum exhibits one may physically connect with artifacts from various periods of American history. Through narratives of great Black Americans such as Equiano, Douglass, and Dubois one may draw not a seamless line, but does an intellectual legacy of experience and thought of the history of slavery for the reader and student. And many African-Americans haven gone so far as to retrace the infamous 'middle passage' to see what it was like, to experience slavery, giving them a physical sense of what slavery was like.

Do not see "Gone with the Wind," in other words, or even digest the experience of slavery through fictionalized prose or television, such as "Roots." Instead, go to the preserved plantations and see the vastness of what was once cotton fields, feel the heat upon one's neck that slaves labored through all day long, and visit reconstructed examples of slave shacks and shanty towns, imagining the music that slaves used to communicate and keep themselves psychologically strong through the…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

The African-American Museum of Philadelphia: Exploring Africa." Temporary Exhibit, Feb. 2004. http://culture.ohio.gov/project.asp?proj=afro http://www.artcom.com/Museums/nv/mr/45384-05.htm

The National Afro-American Museum Wilberforce, OH: Permanent Exhibit: From Victory To Freedom: Afro-American Life in the Fifties and Temporary Exhibit: The Legacy of American Slavery." August 2004.

Seminole Reservation (Ah-Tah-Thi-Ki Museum) Museum: Hollywood Florida. http://www.aampmuseum.org/

Simon Weisenthal Center for Tolerance. 2004. http://www.wiesenthal.com


Cite this Document:

"African-American Culture" (2004, September 27) Retrieved April 24, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/african-american-culture-177521

"African-American Culture" 27 September 2004. Web.24 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/african-american-culture-177521>

"African-American Culture", 27 September 2004, Accessed.24 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/african-american-culture-177521

Related Documents
African-American Culture
PAGES 2 WORDS 677

African-American Culture Culture comes into existence with the development of various beliefs and values shared by people living together. Many cultures take part in shaping and molding the life practices of people and construct a framework, which serves as a guidance in many aspects. A culture is what creates an identity of people, gives them a name to be known by people and delivers the characteristics solely attributed to that specific

SIX: How does your family culture affect the formation of gender roles? There are many families in the African-American community that consist only of a mother. It is no secret that in a large number of Black families, the father is gone. I am blessed because my parents have pretty much shared responsibilities for the home and our income; we have no gender issues. SEVEN: Is a language other than English

Without a doubt, the behavior of the basketball stars in the nineties heightened the reputation of the African-American community, and brought basketball into mainstream prominence. They proved their black masculinity through both leadership and statesmanship, and paved the road for the players of today's NBA. Despite the exceptional standards that the players of the nineties set, the basketball culture in the new millennium seems to differ drastically. The Kobe generation

African American Culture
PAGES 5 WORDS 1495

African-American people from a qualitative perspective. The literature review will provide a brief background on African-American people and leading health problems they face along with a brief inclusion of census data to create a general picture of health from the perspective of an African-American person. One African-American man was interviewed. His answers provide a means of generating a construct that will be used to draw conclusions for nursing practice and

1. What is your general impression of any 2 specific arguments Giddings makes in the essay (i.e, Jay-Z as cultural agents or "africanisms" in Jay-Z's lyrics)?  First, I was impressed by Giddings’ assessment of “the Africanist spiritual value of recognizing reality as a composite of both the tangible and the ethereal/illusive,” (p. 11). The spiritual dimensions of hip-hop are not discussed much, and it is refreshing to encounter this perspective. Second,

African-American Art
PAGES 5 WORDS 1476

African-American Art The art of African-Americans became a powerful medium for social and self-expression. Visual arts including sculpture carried with it political implications related to colonialism, oppression, and liberation. Along with other forms of creative expression, African-American visual arts particularly flourished during the Harlem Renaissance. Three exemplary pieces of art that represent the character, tone, and tenor of African-American art during the Harlem Renaissance include Meta Warrick Fuller's "Ethiopia Awakening," Palmer