African American Intellectual History

P. Dagbovie
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Abstract

Before and since the explosion of scholarship on Black historical subject matter during the latter part of the Black Power era, a voluminous amount of scholarship has been published by African Americanists on what today could be construed as African American or Black intellectual history. Focusing on the ideas of an assortment of scholars (mainly historians), this chapter is most concerned with discussing important scholarship, salient characteristics, and trends and key turning points in Black intellectual history during the first three quarters of the twentieth century and some of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Black intellectual history should not be viewed in vacuo, and, thus, this chapter also surveys some basic trends in mainstream US intellectual history, highlighting a group of its leading practitioners’ general disregard for African American intellectuals. Given the abundance of scholarship in Black intellectual history for close to a century, like all historiographies, some sagacious decisions are made about which of the field’s major practitioners and publications to include and showcase. Central to this approach is Adolph Reed Jr. and Kenneth W. Warren’s 2010 perceptive observation: “The academic practice of intellectual history is itself a historical phenomenon.”
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非裔美国人思想史
在黑人权力时代后期,黑人历史题材的学术研究爆发之前和之后,非裔美国人发表了大量的学术研究今天可以被理解为非裔美国人或黑人思想史。本章主要关注各种学者(主要是历史学家)的观点,主要讨论20世纪前四分之三以及20世纪末和21世纪初黑人思想史上的重要学术研究、显著特征、趋势和关键转折点。黑人思想史不应该被真空地看待,因此,本章也调查了美国主流思想史的一些基本趋势,突出了一群主要实践者对非裔美国知识分子的普遍漠视。考虑到近一个世纪以来黑人思想史上的大量学术研究,就像所有的历史编纂一样,对于该领域的主要实践者和出版物应该包括和展示哪些,需要做出一些明智的决定。这种方法的核心是阿道夫·里德(Adolph Reed Jr.)和肯尼斯·w·沃伦(Kenneth W. Warren) 2010年的敏锐观察:“思想史的学术实践本身就是一种历史现象。”
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