Where and with whom do we begin? In Part 2 of the #CaribbeanThought Summer 2024 Week 1 Lecture, Prof. Renaldo McKenzie at Jamaica Theological Seminary laid the foundation for the course. Prof. McKenzie reviewed the course outline and delved into some broad thinkers, texts, and general questions of the course. Rev. McKenzie begins the Lecture by making the point that, the realities of the dark ghettoes and or black and brown communities resemble the colonies and or former colonies within the caribbean. The socioeconomic realities of the black and brown peoples in the global north are similar to that of the black experience in the Caribbean which is largely made up of nations that are made of the predominantly black.
This course focuses on and explores the diverse currents of Caribbean Thought, which have influenced the development of Caribbean societies from colonialism to
independence and beyond. It traces the history of resistance and examines the quest for equality and the challenge of defining Caribbean identity within this
post-colonial and neoliberal Globalized world not just within the geographic sense but also in terms of a diasporic sense.
It challenges the students to develop and express their own critical thinking as a Caribbean people in a unique way that helps to realize further the hope of a free independent Caribbean that is bursting with hope and
opportunity. However, the course understands that it requires that students begin to critique and explore their own thinking in a deeply esoteric and critical way
that deconstructs history and philosophy. At the end they will create their own Caribbean thought leading to a Caribbean Academic Journal of Young academics
and future scholars. The Course will make you estranged from self, but it is geared towards getting you out of your bubble and considering issues that will
Frantz Fanon, Homi Bhabha, C. L. R. James, Bob Marley et al, and Christianity/Religion, music and sports are currents we will explore.
The episode has images of course resources; such as texts, maps, notable characters that will be referenced throughout the course, etc.
The Lecture is very informative and provides an introductory level to the discussions in postcolonialism with academia and Pan African Thought.
The Lecture is part of a course offered at Jamaica Theological Seminary and students seeking a 4-year degree at the seminary are required to sit the course. The course follows strict academic rigor and scrutiny. There is an exam at the end of the course. which students are required to sit.
The lecture episodes are a production of The Neoliberal Corporation and are made available on The NeoLiberal Round podcast and YouTube channel for educational purposes and to promote and facilitate access to critical thinking and learning. Hence, access to this lecture and others is free.
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