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What is Afrofuturism, and why does it matter now? In this episode, Dr. Reiland Rabaka explores Afrofuturism as more than a cultural trend. It is a philosophy of freedom, a political imagination, and a practice of worldmaking rooted in the Black Freedom Struggle. It is what happens when Black artists, thinkers, and communities refuse the lie that the future belongs to someone else.
The future has never been neutral. For Black people across Africa and the African diaspora, the future has often been treated as something they were not supposed to have, not supposed to inherit, not supposed to build, not supposed to dream. But they did, they do, they will.
Dr. Rabaka traces Afrofuturism's evolution from the Harlem Renaissance to the Black Arts Movement to Hip Hop, examining key figures who shaped Afrofuturist thought: Sun Ra's cosmic jazz and ontological philosophy, George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic's funk futurism, Octavia E. Butler's survival ethics and speculative realism, Samuel R. Delany's expansion of the genre's philosophical range, Kodwo Eshun's theory of time as struggle, Alondra Nelson's intellectual infrastructure building, Drexciya's reimagining of the Middle Passage, Janelle Monáe's android narratives and queer futurity, and Wangechi Mutu's visual philosophy of embodiment.
See all of our shownotes and our specially curated playlist on our website
By Dr. Reiland RabakaWhat is Afrofuturism, and why does it matter now? In this episode, Dr. Reiland Rabaka explores Afrofuturism as more than a cultural trend. It is a philosophy of freedom, a political imagination, and a practice of worldmaking rooted in the Black Freedom Struggle. It is what happens when Black artists, thinkers, and communities refuse the lie that the future belongs to someone else.
The future has never been neutral. For Black people across Africa and the African diaspora, the future has often been treated as something they were not supposed to have, not supposed to inherit, not supposed to build, not supposed to dream. But they did, they do, they will.
Dr. Rabaka traces Afrofuturism's evolution from the Harlem Renaissance to the Black Arts Movement to Hip Hop, examining key figures who shaped Afrofuturist thought: Sun Ra's cosmic jazz and ontological philosophy, George Clinton and Parliament/Funkadelic's funk futurism, Octavia E. Butler's survival ethics and speculative realism, Samuel R. Delany's expansion of the genre's philosophical range, Kodwo Eshun's theory of time as struggle, Alondra Nelson's intellectual infrastructure building, Drexciya's reimagining of the Middle Passage, Janelle Monáe's android narratives and queer futurity, and Wangechi Mutu's visual philosophy of embodiment.
See all of our shownotes and our specially curated playlist on our website