Temple University’s African American Studies PhD Program @ 30: Assessing the Asante Affect

2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 559-575
Author(s):  
Patricia Reid-Merritt

Temple University’s Department of Africology and African American Studies is celebrating its 30th year of operation as a PhD program. Since its inception in l988, the doctoral program at Temple has attracted and produced world-class scholars in the discipline of Africology. Initially started by students at San Francisco State University in l968 as Black Studies, the field has been called by many names, including Afro-American Studies, African American Studies, African World Studies, Africana Studies, Pan African Studies, and Africology. As this modern-day field of study marks its 50th anniversary, it is important that we examine the impact of the 30-year history of the establishment of the first PhD program in Black Studies in the nation, founded at Temple University in the City of Philadelphia. This article offers a preliminary assessment of the far-reaching impact of Temple’s academic leadership in establishing a fundamental base for innovative scholarship and the maturing of the discipline of Africology. More specifically, it focuses on Molefi Kete Asante’s influence, his vision for the discipline, and his extraordinary impact on the field of Africology.

2018 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 531-541
Author(s):  
Molefi Kete Asante

In this article, Molefi Kete Asante, the founder of the first PhD program in African American Studies gives a personal account of the aims, objectives, and the challenges he and his principal colleagues faced in the creation of the program. Asante recounts the political and campus cultural climate that helped to facilitate the pursuit. However, the article centers on the pursuit of discipline despite the ever-present attempts to divert the theoretical and methodological direction of the department. Asante saw the creation of the doctorate as the end of the process that was begun by Nathan Hare at San Francisco State University when he created the Department of Black Studies. Temple’s graduation of more than 180 doctorates has established its presence in the Academy as a dominant player in discipline development at the graduate level for Africology.


Daedalus ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 140 (2) ◽  
pp. 226-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha Biondi

The forty-year history of African American studies has led some scholars to take stock of its roots and its future. This essay examines the field's unexpected origins in black colleges, as well as at predominantly white ones, and assesses the early debates and challenges along the road to academic incorporation. Biondi takes up such questions as: Did the field's origins in the Black Power movement jeopardize its claims to academic legitimacy? If black studies is a discipline, what is its methodology? As an outgrowth of black nationalism on campus, to what extent was black studies U.S.-centric? How did the field relate to the rise of diaspora studies and black feminism? Who takes black studies classes and to what extent does the field retain a political mission? The essay concludes that African American studies remains a vital and dynamic field as it moves into the twenty-first century.


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