Patchin: Towards a theory and political history of Africana Agrarianism, 2011
Densu, Kwasi
2010-2019
This is a theoretical dissertation that seeks to explore the implications of using an Africana agrarian development philosophy to examine the historical evolution of African-American communities and social movements in the United States. The central theme of this study is the importance of recentering the land question as a theoretical tool used to construct narratives of the cultural development of African-American rural and farming communities. Particular emphasis is placed upon using the notion of an ecological revolution to explain African-Amencan responses to the socio-economic problems that have emerged from their relationship to the American state and, the resultant paradigms that have developed, within the tradition of African-American political philosophy, to both perceive and address these issues.
text
application/pdf
2011-07-01
dissertation
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Clark Atlanta University
School of Arts and Sciences, Political Science
Gibrill, Hashim Boone, William H. Umoja, Akinyela
Georgia--Atlanta
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12322/cau.td:2011_densu_kwasi