Africanfuturism

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21st century African art
A01=Kimberly Cleveland
African Afrofuturism
African Futurism
African popular culture
African science fiction
African speculative fiction
Author_Kimberly Cleveland
Category=AFKV
Category=AGA
Category=DS
Category=NHH
Contemporary African art
decolonization and art and visual culture
decolonization in African art and literature
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
postcolonialism in Africa
technology in African art

Product details

  • ISBN 9780821411483
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Feb 2024
  • Publisher: Ohio University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In the past few decades, Western studies of Afrofuturism have grown to encompass examples deriving from multiple sites across the diaspora, as well as from the African continent. However, an increasing number of Africans and Africanists have voiced their concerns about grouping African work under the larger umbrella of Afrofuturism without distinction and have emphasized the need to investigate the differences between African American and African production. This book offers an introduction to Africanfuturism-a body of African speculative works that is distinguishable from, albeit related to, US-based Afrofuturism.
Kimberly Cleveland uses Africanfuturism as an intellectual lens to explore works that embody combinations of possibilities, challenges, and concerns related to what lies ahead for the continent and its peoples. This book highlights twenty-first-century film, video, painting, sculpture, photography, tapestry, novels, short stories, comic books, song lyrics, and architecture by African creatives of different nationalities, races, ethnicities, genders, and generations. Cleveland analyzes the ideas and opinions of African intellectuals and cultural producers, combining interviews with historical research. Each chapter features one of Africanfuturism’s most common themes: space and time exploration, creation of worlds, technology and the digital divide, Sankofa and remix, and mythmaking.
This investigation of Africanfuturism is geared toward students, academics, and Afrofuturism enthusiasts, and its included discussion questions facilitate classroom use. The book illuminates Africa’s place in the worlds of science fiction and fantasy and how Africanfuturist work builds on the continent’s own traditions of speculative expression. Because these creative works disrupt the history of Western domination in Africa, Cleveland also connects Africanfuturism with the process of decolonization and addresses specific ways in which African creatives (re)center indigenous beliefs, strategies, and approaches in their production. Africanfuturism encourages both imaginative possibilities and potential real-world outcomes, highlighting the rich contributions of Africans to the vision of future worlds.

Kimberly Cleveland is an associate professor of art history at Georgia State University. A specialist in both contemporary African and Afro-Brazilian art history, she explores questions of identity, ethnicity, and race in her teaching and research. Cleveland is the author of Black Art in Brazil: Expressions of Identity and Black Women Slaves Who Nourished a Nation: Artistic Renderings of Wet Nurses in Brazil.

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