Abstract

Professor Molefi Kete Asante is Professor and Chair of the Department of Africology at Temple University. Asante’s research has focused on the re-centering of African thinking and African people in narratives of historical experiences that provide opportunities for agency. As the most published African American scholars and one of the most prolific and influential writers in the African world, Asante is the leading theorist on Afrocentricity. His numerous works, over 85 books, and hundreds of articles, attest to his singular place in the discipline of African American Studies. His major works, An Afrocentric Manifesto [Asante 2007a], The History of Africa [Asante 2007b], The Afrocentric Idea [Asante 1998], The African Pyramids of Knowledge [Asante 2015], Erasing Racism: The Survival of the American Nation [Asante 2009], As I Run Toward Africa [Asante 2011], Facing South to Africa [Asante 2014], and Revolutionary Pedagogy [Asante 2017], have become rich sources for countless scholars to probe for both theory and content. His recent award as National Communication Association (NCA) Distinguished Scholar placed him in the elite company of the best thinkers in the field of communication. In African Studies he is usually cited as the major proponent of Afrocentricity which the NCA said in its announcing of his Distinguished Scholar award was “a spectacular achievement”. Molefi Kete Asante is interviewed because of his recognized position as the major proponent of Afrocentricity and the most consistent theorist in relationship to creating Africological pathways such as institutes, research centers, departments, journals, conference and workshop programs, and academic mentoring opportunities. Asante has mentored over 100 students, some of whom are among the principal administrators in the field of Africology. Asante is professor of Africology at Temple University and has taught at the University of California, State University of New York, Howard University, Purdue University, Florida State University, as well as held special appointments at the University of South Africa, Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, and Ibadan University in Nigeria.

Highlights

  • Professor Molefi Kete Asante is Professor and Chair of the Department of Africology at Temple University

  • Smith: Professor Asante, how did you find your path in re-theorizing the social situation and solution to the African condition? Why is the discipline of Africology the correct home for your work?

  • We have many Africans who have achieved world status as leaders, scholars, and intellectuals, yet as a continent and as a global people we are still being dispossessed of our power and our capability, and this leads to a sense of failure which is most cases is a faux failure

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Summary

A.X. Smith: Can you give a succinct definition of Afrocentricity?

M.K. Asante: Afrocentricity is a paradigm containing requirements for agency and subject placement for African people within the confines of African historical narratives; moving Africans from the margins to the center in African discourse. On culture, spirituality, language, history, and psycho-logy have become parts of a broad-based critical analysis. My students Victor Okafor [2017], Ana Monteiro-Ferreira [2015], Ibram Kendi [2019], and Michael Tillotson [2011] have written inte-resting books on this topic

A.X. Smith: What influences are strongest in your own work?
A.X. Smith: What are these assignments that you have given yourself?
A.X. Smith: What are your current projects?
A.X. Smith: What do you see as the future of Afrocentricity?
A.X. Smith: Is there anything else that you would like to say?
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