2011
DOI: 10.1017/s0021875810002410
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Challenging a Pan-African Identity: The Autobiographical Writings of Maya Angelou, Barack Obama, and Caryl Phillips

Abstract: In her 1986 book All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes, Maya Angelou reflected on the meaning of identity among the people of the African diaspora. A rich and highly reflective memoir, All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes recounted the author's experiences, relationships, and quest for a sense of individual and collective belonging throughout the African diaspora. At the core of Angelou's quest for individual and collective identity lay Africa, a continent whose geography and history loomed large in her v… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 8 publications
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“…Women, to a great extent, became the mothers of the revolution, of the struggle for the liberation of Africa and its people. The conditions of Black people in one part of the world could not be seen as different from other parts of the world, for there was a kinship by virtue of racial experiences (Smithers 2011). In many ways, Africa gave Blacks from the diaspora a sense of home, belonging, and family.…”
Section: Women and Pan Africanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women, to a great extent, became the mothers of the revolution, of the struggle for the liberation of Africa and its people. The conditions of Black people in one part of the world could not be seen as different from other parts of the world, for there was a kinship by virtue of racial experiences (Smithers 2011). In many ways, Africa gave Blacks from the diaspora a sense of home, belonging, and family.…”
Section: Women and Pan Africanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women, to a great extent, became the mothers of the revolution, of the struggle for the liberation of Africa and its people. The conditions of Black people in one part of the world could not be seen as different from other parts of the world, for there was a kinship by virtue of racial experiences (Smithers, 2011). In many ways, Africa gave Blacks from the diaspora a sense of home, of belonging, of family.…”
Section: Women and Pan Africanismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As some critics contend, "At the general and specific levels of African Diaspora formation, there is variation by geographical location, by generations, by material and institutional conditions, and by socio-economic and demographic patterns" (Hamilton, Simmons, Familusi, & Hanson, 2007: p. 8). In fact, more recent studies of the global black experience underscore the imperative of transcending both the traditional Diaspora and Black Atlantic frames, and the homogeneity-heterogeneity discourse (Smithers, 2011). The shift is towards acknowledging expansive and complex terrains of the human experience, as well as undertaking microanalytical studies of new forms of Diasporas within and without Africa; Diasporas that grew out of what Manger and Assal describe as "the decay in the contemporary African post-colonial state" (Manger & Assal, 2006: p. 10).…”
Section: Afrocentrism and Globalizationmentioning
confidence: 99%