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The Past, Present and Future in Critical Afrofuturisms

Terry, J.

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Authors



Contributors

C. Bailey
Editor

F. Okoye
Editor

Abstract

As contributors to this collection think imaginatively about the future, and what it might mean to be black in the future, an accompanying question is what kind of relation to the past will there be? In the area of culture termed Afrofuturism (a label first used in the 1990s), alongside an orientation towards futurity, artists and critics have negotiated this question in several ways. To what extent does a history of colonisation and slavery, which produced constructions of race and understandings of progress still felt today, inform images of the future, concepts of temporality and the envisioning of alternatives to ‘now’? In this piece I will focus on how a handful of Afrofuturist critics have addressed the interlinking of past, present and future.

Citation

Terry, J. (2016). The Past, Present and Future in Critical Afrofuturisms. In C. Bailey, & F. Okoye (Eds.), The future of us : an anthology (47-55). Afrofutures_UK

Acceptance Date Nov 1, 2015
Online Publication Date Jul 3, 2016
Publication Date Jul 3, 2016
Deposit Date Jan 20, 2017
Publicly Available Date Jan 23, 2017
Pages 47-55
Book Title The future of us : an anthology.
Publisher URL https://issuu.com/afrofutures_uk/docs/afrofutures_uk_anthology_issue

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