Introduction Brandon D. Lundy
Part I. Situating Africa: Concurrent-Divergent Rubrics of
Meaning
1. Introducing "Africa" Jennifer E. Coffman
2. Africa: Which Way Forward?: An Interdisciplinary Approach Todd
Cleveland
3. Why We Need African History Kathleen Smythe
4. Answering the "So What" Question: Making African History
Relevant in the Provincial College Classroom Gary Marquardt
5. From African History to African Histories: Teaching
Interdisciplinary Method, Philosophy, and Ethics through the
African History Survey Trevor R. Getz
6. Treating the Exotic and the Familiar in the African History
Classroom Ryan Ronnenberg
7. Postcolonial Perspectives on Teaching African Politics in Wales
and Ireland Carl Death
8. Pan-Africanism: The Ties that Bind Ghana and the United States
Harry Nii Koney Odamtten
9. The Importance of the Regional Concept: The Case for an
Undergraduate Regional Geography Course of Sub-Saharan Africa
Matthew Waller
10. Teach Me About Africa: Facilitating and Training Educators
Toward a Socially Just Curriculum Durene I. Wheeler and Jeanine
Ntihirageza
Part II. African Arts: Interpreting the African "Text"
11. Inversion Rituals: The African Novel in the Global North
Catherine Kroll
12. Teaching Africa through a Comparative Pedagogy: South Africa
and the United States
Renée Schatteman
13. Stereotypes, Myths, and Realities Regarding African Music in
the African and American Academy Jean Ngoya Kidula
14. What Paltry Learning in Dumb Books!: Teaching the Power of Oral
Narrative Caleb Corkery
15. Teaching about Africa: Violence and Conflict Management Linda
M. Johnston and Oumar Chérif Diop
16. Contextualizing the Teaching of Africa in the 21st Century: A
Student-centered Pedagogical Approach to Demystify Africa as The
Heart of Darkness Lucie Viakinnou-Brinson
Part III. Application of Approaches: Experiencing African
Particulars
17. Shaping U.S.-Based Activism Towards Africa: The Role of a Mix
of Critical Pedagogies
Amy C. Finnegan
18. The Model AU as Pedagogical Method of Teaching American
Students about Africa
Babacar M'Baye
19. The Kalamazoo/Fourah Bay College Partnership: A Context for
Understanding Study Abroad with Africa Daniel J. Paracka, Jr.
20. Teaching Culture, Health, and Political Economy in the Field:
Ground-level Perspectives on Africa in the 21st Century James
Ellison
21. Beyond the Biologic Basis of Disease: Collaborative Study of
the Social and Economic Causation of Disease in Africa Amy C.
Finnegan, Julian Jane Atim, and Michael Westerhaus
22. Educating the Educators: Ethiopian IT PhD Program Solomon
Negash and Julian M. Bass
Conclusion: Knowledge Circulation and Diasporic Interfacing Toyin
Falola
References
Contributors
Index
Innovative strategies for teaching about Africa
Brandon D. Lundy is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at
Kennesaw State University.
Solomon Negash is an Associate Professor of Information Systems at
Kennesaw State University.
"A valuable resource for any teacher of African topics, stimulating new ways of thinking about the study of Africa and providing useful ideas about how to improve one's teaching, enhance student engagement with the continent, and expand Africa's presence within the curriculum." Stephen Volz, Kenyon College
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