Hello everyone! As many of us who study philosophy in some form are likely aware, people of color, especially black philosophers, are radically underrepresented in the field (composing only 1.32% of all philosophers in the US). In order to combat such marginalization, and in attempt to help amplify black voices within the field of philosophy, I have complied a series and links & information here for learning more about African/black philosophy, especially within the US. Please feel free to add to this post if you feel that anything is missing, esp if ur a black person!
Overview:
According to Wikipedia.org: “African philosophy is the philosophical discourse produced by indigenous Africans and their descendants, including African Americans. African philosophers may be found in the various academic fields of philosophy, such as metaphysics, epistemology, moral philosophy, and political philosophy. One particular subject that many African philosophers have written about is that on the subject of freedom and what it means to be free or to experience wholeness.”
Articles to start with:
“What African Philosophy Can Teach You About the Good Life.”
“A truly African philosophy.”
“African Philosophy.”
“Descartes was wrong: ‘a person is a person through other persons.’”
“Does Western Philosophy Have Egyptian Roots?”
“What You Should Know About Contemporary African Philosophy.”
“Philosophy in Africa - A Case of Epistemic Injustice in the Academy.”
“The African Enlightenment.”
“The Radical Philosophy of Egypt.”
“The first God.”
“African Philosophy Is More Than You Think It Is.”
And some introductory texts:
Barry Hallen, A Short History of African Philosophy. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press (2009).
Samuel Oluoch Himbo, An Introduction to African Philosophy. Lanham et al.: Rowman and Littlefield (1998).
Dismas Masolo, African Philosophy in Search of Identity. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press (1994).
Kwasi Wiredu, A Companion to African Philosophy. Malden, Oxford, Victoria: Blackwell Publishing (2004). (PDF version linked here.)
Key essays:
“The Struggle for Reason in Africa” by Mogobe Ramose in The African Philosophy Reader eds. P.H. Coestzee & A.P.J. Roux
“Appeal,” David Walker
“What to the Slave is the 4th of July?”, Frederick Douglass
“Ain’t I a Woman?”, Sojourner Truth
“The Black Woman’s role in the Community of Slaves,” Angela Davis
The Souls of Black Folk by W.E.B. DuBois (first chapter esp.)
“A Problem of Biography in African Thought” & “What Does It Mean to Be a Problem?” by Lewis Gordon in Existentia Africana
“Racism and Feminism,” by bell hooks in the PDF linked here
“Recognizing Racism in the Era of Neoliberalism,” Angela Davis
“Nonviolence and Racial Justice,” Martin Luther King, Jr.
“The Ballot or the Bullet,” Malcolm X
“The Uses of Anger: Women Responding to Racism,” Audre Lorde
“Whiteness as Property,” Cheryl Harris
Important contemporary black philosophers:
Cornel West (political philosophy, philosophy of religion, ethics, race, democracy, liberation theology)
Angela Davis (also a writer and social activist & just a general badass, really worth knowing about regardless of whether or not you have an interest in philosophy)
bell hooks (race, capitalism, sexuality & gender through a postmodern perspective)
Lewis Gordon (Africana philosophy, black existentialism, phenomenology)
Kwame Anthony Appiah (probabilistic semantics, political theory, moral theory, intellectual history, race and identity theory)
Patricia Hill Collins (sociology of knowledge, race, class, gender studies)
John H. McWhorter (linguistics)
George Yancy (Critical philosophy of race, critical whiteness studies, African philosophy, philosophy of the body)
Kwassi Wiredu (African philosophy)
Franz Fanon (20th century Marxism, psychoanalysis, colonialism)
Online podcasts, blogs, & videos:
Podcast on Africana philosophy (the website linked here also contains several useful links and resources for further reading)
Youtube series on African Philosophy
Award-winning blog run by a Nigerian-Finnish woman which “connects feminism with critical reflections on contemporary culture from an Africa-centred perspective.”
Other links & resources:
Journal on African Philosophy
Wikipedia page, which includes a list of African philosophers
History of African Philosophy
Online bibliography on African Philosophy
25 Black Scholars You Should Know
The Collegium of Black Women Philosophers
.
I just think instead of looking at views and reviews, show runners and producers should just come on Tumblr and see how many people collectively care about a show and don’t want it to end. So many of us watch shows that we can’t see on satellite because we don’t have it or don’t live in the place it is airing on something else, something that doesn’t show in the views while it’s on air. It isn’t right for things to get cancelled because of that, especially since we try our hardest to watch. Tumblr is a community of people who watch shows and care, so we should look at that instead.
I now wondered if the lullaby of death was not a lovely song, but the droning of flies. If flies and maggots were all Death’s handmaidens.
*walks through my dark room without tripping on anything*
Me: it is I, High Lady of the Night Court, I am not afraid of darkness, I am darkness
music should always be a space to just purely feel whether it’s joy or sadness or hope, I’m glad in the face of this pain there is a celebration reminding us all what music means
Moderator: “Your two minutes are-” Moderator: “Your two min-” Moderator: “Mr. Trum-” Moderator: “I’d like to ask the next-”
Lester Holt deserves a hug for putting up with Trump’s bullshit tonight.
I love hype for books because there’s no trailers, no pictures on grocery store products or brand tie-ins. Just a bunch of people saying things like, “This book DESTROYED me,” “I couldn’t sleep until I finished it,” “this book ensnared my soul with occult enchantments of ink and paper,” “I felt like a hollow shell of tears when I closed it for the last time.”
And more and more people go “Yes, yes, this sounds like exactly what I want.”
Aries: Elfen Lied
Taurus: Deadman Wonderland
Gemini: Hellsing
Cancer: Highschool of the Dead
Leo: Parasyte: The Maxim
Virgo: Corpse Party: Tortured Souls (OVA)
Libra: Mirai Nikki
Scorpio: Ajin: Demi-Human
Sagittarius: Devil May Cry: The Animated Series
Aquarius: Tokyo Ghoul
Capricorn: Akame ga Kill!
Pisces: Blue Exorcist
I though that Corpse Party: Tortured Souls” scared me, but then I finished “Elfen Lied”…. Wow.
Craziness has a lot of faces
Damn !!! That last gif !!!!
“Shh, shh, shh….Shush. It’s story time.”