18
Afrocentricity and the American Dream
Lee D. Baker
Over the pase fifteen years many African Americans have come to em
brace rather broadly defined ideas of Afrocentrcity. These popular ne.
tions of Afrocentricty loosely integrate and routinely police certain be.
lief, practices, uals, or other cultural activities that signify loyalty to
{and the unity of) a community of African descent. Although the per,
formance and intellectual cite have made Afrocentrcty “altos ubigur
tous in the public discourse on race and African American identity,” the
activities are indeed performed across class lines, ranging from sorority
theme parties on college campuses to study groups in the housing projects
of Louisville Ransby 1994:31; Mullings 1994:28; Jones 1996149),
From the pulpitto the vendor, inthe classroom and in the cll block, on
Peoples’ heads and onthe Internet, African Americans ate consuming and
reproducing notions of Afrocentrciy to cultivate a collective identity and
challenge the ascendancy of Whiteness in U.S. society. President Bill Clin.
tom has even chimed in by ating, "White Americans and black Ames
cans often see the same world in drastically different ways” (Clin
1995) Withsone ele milion popleebating Kwanza Twuly te
merit of Afrocentrciy lies in the Afrocentrie values embraced by a
swath of US. society. si eteebinareat tere
Anthropological Silence: The Power and
Politics of Space and Place
A shift from indusery to service production di
production during the last two and one-
hhalf decades has left U.S. central cities in a wake of desperate poverty that
Afrocentricity and the American Dream 225
has been compounded by an erosion of gains made during the war on
poverty and the civil rights movement, fueling despair and displacement
and fostering what Cornell West calls nihilism. These decades, however,
also witnessed a horizon of unparalleled opportunities for African Amer:
icans and the largest growth of the black middle class inthis nation’s his-
tory. And it has been within this context that Afrocentricity has gained
currency and generated considerable debate in and outside the academy.
Anthropologists, however, have been strangely absent from both the
forceful assertions and rigorous critique of Afrocentric discursive and cul-
tural practices. Whether or not scholars weigh into the academic debate,
fone cannot dismiss the cultural significance of Afrocentricity during the
final decades of the twentieth century.
My rationale for this anthropological silence is actually related to the
many reasons why ideas about Afrocentricity have emerged in this con-
textas a particularly salient US. discourse. Anthropologist Eric Wolf has
Jong asserted that anthropology should actually be the “study of human
freedom and liberation, of human possibility and necessity” (Wolf
1987:xi). Similarly, Stanley Diamond has emphasized that anthropolo-
sists need to explore how “human beings not only reflect cultural events
but synthesize experience and have the capacity to react in creative and
unexpected ways” (Diamond 1987:341). Even though participants in the
Afrocentrie project, explicitly, make, recreate, and affirm ideas of culture
and history as a form of resistance and liberation, anthropologists have
not been compelled to engage Afrocentricty, even though it clearly lies
within the outlines painted by these venerable anthropologists.
‘The issues generated from the high-stakes debate land squarely within
the purview of anthropological inquiry, since the contested terrain is after
all, culeure—a culture “through which communities interpret their past,
understand their present, and imagine their future” (Mullings 1994:28),
but also a culture that “stresses its contextual, heuristic, and comparative
dimensions” (Appadurai 1997:13).
find it curious that very few anthropologists have attempted to ex-
plore, ethnographically, why notions of Afrocentricity resonate with the
experience of so many African Americans or why certain African Ameri
cans gravitate to the principles of Afrocentricity to help negotiate contem-
porary society. While her findings will be published soon, Yvonne V. Jones
is one of the only anthropologists to actually conduct ethnographic feld-
work that explores how people use ideas promoted by advocates of Afto-
ccentricity to foster empowering notions of identity and culture.226 Lee D. Baker
‘The academic “space” where this silence becomes deafening is the dis-
course on place and space: the politics of identity, nationalism, and so-
7) - Melba Joyce Boyd, "Afrocentrics, Afro-Elitists, and Afro-Eccentrics - The Polarization of Black Studies Since The Student Struggles of The Sixties"