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On this edition of Conversations with History, UC Berkeley's Harry Kreisler talks with Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka. In an extraordinarily prolific and rich body of work including plays, novels, poems, and essays, Professor Soyinka draws on both Yoruba and western culture to exquisitely weave a subtle understanding of the tragedy and comedy of the human condition. Series: Conversations with History [10/2002] [Humanities] [Show ID: 6797]
Dr. Anthony Browder: Your Second Education
Minister Louis Farrakhan, "To Save Ourselves," Howard University [2017]
Excerpt from the presentation of Molefi Kete Asante, Professor of Africology at Temple University in the USA, during Session Nine at the Multiversity International Conference on Decolonising Our Universities held in Penang, Malaysia, 27-29 June 2011. He outlined 'The Philosophical Bases of an African University,' pointing out that in the imposition of the Eurocentric worldview in higher education 'there was a Greek at every corner' but that the Greeks themselves 'were but children to Africa, and to India and to China.'
The complete presentation is available at the TV Multiversity channel on Vimeo:
http://vimeo.com/channels/tvmultiversity
Conference proceedings, as well as other Multiversity related programs, are part of the broadcast lineup for the TV Multiversity channel on TVU Networks:
http://pages.tvunetworks.com/w....atchTV/index.html#c=
Further information about the Penang conference and participants, including a selection of papers, is available at the conference webpage:
http://multiworldindia.org/events/
For related readings, visit the TV Multiversity blog, updated weekly:
http://tvmultiversity.blogspot.com/
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Knowledge needs people and it needs to be free.
H. Rap Brown: The Politics of Education
Mhenga Amos N. Wilson Lecture:
Educating the Black Child According to the Developmental Psychology of the Black Child
Statistics show that at least 70% of the Kenyan population still use traditional medicine. However, if this form of health care is to succeed and endure, especially when practiced in tandem with Western medicine, a serious look at legislation and the regulatory framework is needed.
Las puertas de la percepción 2. 'Iboga, los hombres de la madera sagrada
The Doors of Perception 2. 'Iboga, the men of sacred wood'
Doc for research purposes. By the way i don't understand a word that is being said but the images are very familiar.
translated text of the description on utube:
The root bark of Tabernanthe Iboga, in Africa and South America, contain ibogaine, an enteogen. The root is used there by the fang, mitsogo and others ethnic groups, in Gabon, Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea. Eboka is a sacred Entheogen, sacrament or power plant.
"Eighth Annual Senghor-Damas-Césaire Lecture in Africana Studies
Please join African Studies as we host Dr. Molefi Asante, Professor of African American Studies at Temple University.Dr. Asante will speak on "Negritude and the United States of Africa"on Tuesday, November 13, 2012 at 4:00 p.m. in
Falvey Library room 205.
Co-sponsored by The Cultural Studies Program and The Institute for Global Interdisciplinary Studies."
On February 15, 2018 Dr. Molefi Kete Asante, Professor and Chair of the Department of Africology and African American Studies at Temple University in Philadelphia, was a keynote speaker at the Michael J. Grant Campus. He discussed the idea of Afrocentricity and its impact on African Americans.