In the first book which deals entirely with the subject of time in Africa and the Black Diaspora, Adjaye presents ten critical case studies of selected communities in Africa, the Caribbean, and the American South. The essays cover a wide spectrum of manifestations of temporal experience, including cosmological and genealogical time, physical and ecological cycles, time and worldview, social rhythm, agricultural and industrial time, and historical processes and consciousness. The studies confirm the continuity of temporal experience among Africans from pre-colonial times, through the colonial period in Africa, across continents through slavery and Maroon societies, to present-day communities like the Gullah of the Sea Islands of South Carolina. The subject of time, now recognized to be relative rather than uniform, draws together evidence from a variety of disciplines, specifically history, linguistics, political science, anthropology, and philosophy.
The first work to deal entirely with temporal perceptions among Africans and those of African descent in America with discussions of cosmology, genealogy, colonialism, agriculture, slavery, religion, and linguistics.About the AuthorJOSEPH K. ADJAYE is Associate Professor of History in the Black Studies and History Departments of the University of Pittsburgh. His earlier book,
Diplomacy and Diplomats in Nineteenth-Century Asante (1984), won the Choice book award.
Book InformationISBN 9780313291180
Author Joseph K. AdjayeFormat Hardback
Page Count 248
Imprint Praeger Publishers IncPublisher Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Weight(grams) 567g