RBG| Falsification of Afrikan Consciousness, Hornorable Dr. Amos Wilson_Video Lecture and eBook

2 Video Playlist

This book presents two ground-breaking lectures by Amos Wilson. The first, European Historiography and Oppression Exposed: An Afrikan Perspective and Analysis, was among the first contemporary analyses which delineated the role Eurocentric history-writing plays in rationalizing European oppression of Afrikan peoples and in the falsification of Afrikan consciousness. It explicates why we should study history, how history-writing shapes the psychology of peoples and individuals, how Eurocentric history as mythology creates historical amnesia in Afrikans in order to rob them of the material, mental, social and spiritual wherewithal for overcoming poverty and oppression. Moreover, this engrossing lecture fully exposes the relationship between the rediscovery and rewriting of Afirkan history and achievement of liberation and prosperity by Afrikan peoples.

The second lecture, Eurocentric Political Dogmatism: It’s Relationship to the Mental Health Diagnosis of Afrikan People. advances the contention that the alleged mental and behavioral maladaptiveness of oppressed Afrikan peoples is a political economic necessity for the maintenance of White domination and imperialism. Furthermore, it indicts the Eurocentric mental health establishment for entering into collusion with the Eurocentric political establishment to oppress and exploit Afrikan peoples by officially sanctioning these egregious practices through its misdiagnosing, mislabeling and mistreating of Afrikan peoples’ behavioral reactions to their oppression and their efforts to win their freedom and independence.

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Dr. Nathan Hare and TBS Journal, Feat. Contemporary Black Thought_The Best from The Black Scholar (1973)

Nathan Hare, 91, Forceful Founder of First Black Studies Program, Dies.

Dr. Nathan Hare is often called “the Father of Black Studies.”

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Nathan Hare (born April 9, 1933) is an American sociologist, activist, academic, and psychologist. In 1968 he was the first person hired to coordinate a Black studies program in the United States. He established the program at San Francisco State. A graduate of Langston University and the University of Chicago, he had become involved in the Black Power movement while teaching at Howard University…From Biography.

See: A CONCEPTUAL PROPOSAL FOR A DEPARTMENT OF BLACK STUDIES, Nathan Hare. April 29, 1968

3 Video Playlist

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Companion Post/Lesson:

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Dr. Julia Hare On Being Black First & Integration (Video Edu.) and The Black Woman’s Role In The Community Of Slaves, By Angela Davis (The Black Scholar December, 1971).pdf

SUPPLEMENTAL STUDY: TBS, November 1969

Learn more in RBG Communiversity eLibrary| Dr. Nathan Hare and The Black Scholar Journal Folder