African-American Philosophers: 17 ConversationsGeorge Yancy African-American Philosophers brings into conversation seventeen of the foremost thinkers of color to discuss issues such as Black existentialism, racism, Black women philosophers within the academy, affirmative action and the conceptual parameters of African-American philosophy. |
Contents
one Angela Y Davis | 13 |
two Cornel West | 31 |
three Adrian M S Piper | 49 |
seven Albert Mosley | 139 |
eight Anita L Allen | 163 |
eleven Naomi Zack | 229 |
twelve Joy James | 245 |
thirteen Joyce Mitchell Cook | 263 |
fourteen Laurence Thomas | 287 |
fifteen Lucius T Outlaw Jr | 307 |
sixteen Bernard R Boxill | 327 |
seventeen Robert E Birt | 343 |
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actually Adrian Piper affirmative action African African Philosophy African-American philosophers Afrocentric Alain Locke Allen American Philosophical Angela Davis Appiah argue Birt Black experience Black philosophy Black women Born of Struggle Boxill concept context Cornel West course critical Critique culture Davis essay Ethics existential fact Fanon feminist gender George Yancy going Gordon graduate Harvard high school human idea identity impact influenced intellectual interested issues Kant kind Leonard Harris living look losophy Lott McGary mean metaphysics Moody-Adams moral Mosley mother Negritude notion Outlaw parents person Ph.D philo philoso Philosophical Forum philosophy department Piper political philosophy problem published question race racial racism role Sartre sense slavery social sophical Space and Survival talk taught teacher teaching texts theory things thought tion tradition trying Underclass W. E. B. Du Bois write Yale York Zack