•  43
    Should we conceptualize domains like Black existentialism and phenomenology as Continental philosophy? Answering this question is difficult for a few reasons. First, Continental philosophy is both specific to a geographic region (Europe) while simultaneously producing theories with utility for many liberation and resistance projects. Second, Africana discourses are often developed in the wake of colonialism, racism, and oppression, making them connected to, and simultaneously a critique of, the …Read more
  •  39
    How can educational institutions, from primary to higher, engage in the development of Black students’ racialized self-knowledge? Research has shown that deeper self-realization (self-knowledge) in Black students yields positive results regarding student success (Miquelon and Vallerand 2006; Austin 2018). However, philosophically speaking, what self-knowledge (via one’s Blackness) is, and how we develop it across educational spaces, is still unclear. This article uses the terms Kujitambua (Swahi…Read more
  •  813
    When Black agents engage spaces and phenomena that suggest a racialized, potential danger, Black agents shift in their existential understanding of themselves and their phenomenological engagement with the world. This article describes that existential and phenomenological change, and examines the issue of hypothetical anti-Black racism. Utilizing Sartrean and Fanonian conceptions of existential phenomenology, this article explicates three terms: Black nausea, Black vertigo, and a phenomenology …Read more
  •  87
    Existential Patriarchy: Marginalized Men, Bad Faith, and Lived Experience
    Simone de Beauvoir Studies 34 (1): 121-140. 2024.
    How does patriarchy affect one’s conception of personal freedom? Patriarchy raises this existential question, not just for women but for other identities such as marginalized men. Using Simone de Beauvoir’s thoughts on patriarchy and existentialism, the author argues that an existential framework for patriarchy gives greater insight into the ways patriarchy is interconnected with other oppressions, affects marginalized men and others who do not identify as women, and alters people’s conception o…Read more
  •  72
    Signifying the Sound: Criteria for Black Art Movements
    The Journal of Aesthetic Education 57 (4): 36-59. 2023.
    Abstract:“Black art” is often understood as being inherently political. In examining two major Black arts movements, the Harlem Renaissance and the Black Arts movement, many of the works attributed to those periods fit the description of “political art” but not all of them. Black art movements are not defined exclusively by similar styles or methodologies, like Expressionism or Surrealism, either. Instead, Black art movements are complex movements that blend social, political, and aesthetic crit…Read more
  •  69
    For those who subscribe to a pro-Black political ideology, like that of Pan-Africanism or Black Nationalism, is there a specific moral obligation between Black agents to protect one another against intersectional/multidimensional oppressions? Africana people are often subjugated to other forms of domination outside of anti-Black racism exclusively. When examining offenses against Black women, queer Black people, poor Black people, etc., both Black Nationalist and Pan-Africanist ethics suggest a …Read more