Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Dancing the Afrofuture
View through CrossRef
Dancing the Afrofuture is the story of a dancer with a long career of artistry and activism who transitioned from performing Black dance to writing it into history as a Black studies scholar. Following the personal journey of her artistic development told in Dancing in Blackness, Halifu Osumare now reflects on how that first career—which began during the 1960s Black Arts Movement—has influenced her growth as an academic, tracing her teaching and research against a political and cultural backdrop that extends to the twenty-first century with Black Lives Matter and a potent speculative Afrofuturism. Osumare describes her decision to step away from full-time involvement in dance and community activism to earn a doctorate in American studies from the University of Hawai‘i. She emulated the model of her mentor Katherine Dunham by studying and performing hula, and her research on hip-hop youth culture took her from Hawai‘i to Africa, Europe, and South America as a professor at the University of California, Davis. Throughout her scholarly career, Osumare has illuminated the resilience of African-descendant peoples through a focus on performance and the lens of Afrofuturism. Respected for her work as both professional dancer and trailblazing academic, Osumare shares experiences from her second career that show the potential of scholarship in revealing and documenting underrecognized stories of Black dance and global pop culture. In this memoir, Osumare dances across several fields of study while ruminating on how the Black past reveals itself in the Afro-present that is transforming into the Afrofuture.
Title: Dancing the Afrofuture
Description:
Dancing the Afrofuture is the story of a dancer with a long career of artistry and activism who transitioned from performing Black dance to writing it into history as a Black studies scholar.
Following the personal journey of her artistic development told in Dancing in Blackness, Halifu Osumare now reflects on how that first career—which began during the 1960s Black Arts Movement—has influenced her growth as an academic, tracing her teaching and research against a political and cultural backdrop that extends to the twenty-first century with Black Lives Matter and a potent speculative Afrofuturism.
Osumare describes her decision to step away from full-time involvement in dance and community activism to earn a doctorate in American studies from the University of Hawai‘i.
She emulated the model of her mentor Katherine Dunham by studying and performing hula, and her research on hip-hop youth culture took her from Hawai‘i to Africa, Europe, and South America as a professor at the University of California, Davis.
Throughout her scholarly career, Osumare has illuminated the resilience of African-descendant peoples through a focus on performance and the lens of Afrofuturism.
Respected for her work as both professional dancer and trailblazing academic, Osumare shares experiences from her second career that show the potential of scholarship in revealing and documenting underrecognized stories of Black dance and global pop culture.
In this memoir, Osumare dances across several fields of study while ruminating on how the Black past reveals itself in the Afro-present that is transforming into the Afrofuture.
Related Results
Contemporary Thai Southern Dance (Manora Dancing): A Story of Nakha
Contemporary Thai Southern Dance (Manora Dancing): A Story of Nakha
Creative research: A Story of Nakha, the purpose of this performing art was to create dancing postures with storytelling from Manora’s white fingernails. This study was an action r...
SPECIFICITY OF THE CONTENT OF PHYSICAL TRAINING IN THE PROCESS OF SPORTS BALLROOM DANCE CLASSES
SPECIFICITY OF THE CONTENT OF PHYSICAL TRAINING IN THE PROCESS OF SPORTS BALLROOM DANCE CLASSES
Introduction. The relevance of the topic is due to the increasing requirements for the physical fitness of athletes in sports ballroom dancing, which combines high aesthetic, techn...
Spinning the pole: A discursive analysis of the websites of recreational pole dancing studios
Spinning the pole: A discursive analysis of the websites of recreational pole dancing studios
Pole dancing is an activity that came to prominence in strip clubs. Despite its widespread reinvention as a fitness activity for women, pole dancing is still strongly associated wi...
The Trianon and On: Reading Mass Social Dancing in the 1930s and 1940s in Alberta, Canada
The Trianon and On: Reading Mass Social Dancing in the 1930s and 1940s in Alberta, Canada
Every Friday and Saturday night during the 1930s and 1940s in southern Alberta everybody danced, or so the story goes. And that is about as far as “the story” goes. Serious conside...
Welcome to the Robbiedome
Welcome to the Robbiedome
One of the greatest joys in watching Foxtel is to see all the crazy people who run talk shows. Judgement, ridicule and generalisations slip from their tongues like overcooked lamb ...
Making Traditions: Girls’ Carnival Morris Dancing and Material Practice
Making Traditions: Girls’ Carnival Morris Dancing and Material Practice
Girls’ carnival morris dancing holds a curious status in the canon of English folk performance. On the one hand, this highly competitive team-formation dance operates at a fundamen...
Dancing in Blackness
Dancing in Blackness
Dancing in Blackness: A Memoir explores a black female dancer’s personal journey over four decades across three continents and numerous countries. The author situates herself in th...

