I hope that this group and the Afro-American Group will be joined next year with an Asian and a Hispanic group. |
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The rock music of the 1960s had been a synthesis between Afro-American rhythm and blues and various European traditions of popular music. |
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Understanding the role of women in the African-American community starts by examining the roles in Afro-American literature. |
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As Hispanic Americans and Spanish speakers, we are, also, Indo-European and Afro-American. |
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A highly regarded scholar of African culture and philosophy, he held joint appointments in Afro-American studies and the philosophy departments. |
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North Americans rediscovered Native American traditions and the Afro-American traditions of Santeria, Candomble and Voudoun. |
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She greets them with sweet singsong cockneyisms that bear no resemblance to her smoky Afro-American jazz singing voice. |
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Auguste Reymond's Jazz collection of automatic watches takes on a refreshingly new look with this evocation of jazz's Afro-American roots. |
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She is the daughter of a Native American man and an Afro-American woman, and so much of her acquired consciousness arises from an appreciation of their origins. |
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The author's writing combines her West Indian and Afro-American heritages. |
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He received a master's degree in English literature from Columbia University and a Ph.D. in American and Afro-American literature from Emory University. |
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Haitian language and culture are preserved at home, which makes it possible for Haitian immigrants to separate themselves from the Afro-American culture around them. |
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He earned a master's in English literature from Columbia University and a doctorate in American and Afro-American literature from Emory University. |
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When you were a teenager, Bechett and Armstrong were potent symbols of Afro-American music for you. |
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Afro-American populations in Brazil and elsewhere greeted the occasion with added enthusiasm. |
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Only 4percentt of the border patrol is Afro-American. |
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At the time, the Afro-American spotlighted racial discrimination. |
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Daughter of a German mother and an Afro-American father, she grew up in Frankfurt's Bonames district, an area that might be described as a social hotspot. |
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African Screens presents these current developments and creative visions in contemporary African film. Manthia Diawara, the famous specialist of Afro-American and African Film, is curating the festival. |
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Since their first decisive meeting in the homeland of the Central African Republic's Aka pygmies, Aka Moon has turned to various African, Indian, Maghrebi, Cuban, Arab, Afro-American and European traditions. |
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He specializes in American literature, African-American culture from 1940 to 1960, Afro-American autobiography, nonfiction prose, and popular culture. |
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On some occasions these performers also performed secular dances of Afro-American origin like capoeira, rumba, carnival dances, or Afro-Uruguayan candombe. |
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The fracas between Harvard's new president and its top Afro-American studies profs highlights black academia's fixation on victimhood and double standards. |
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Rich, rhythmical patterns and grooves represent roots in African culture, or to be more exact, Afro-American music in the realm of jazz, soul and funk. |
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I have never gone to another Afro-American person. |
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It is utterly ahistorical to suggest that he might have privileged the expressive culture belonging to Afro-American slavery. |
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Her determination will lead her to become the first Afro-American to compete for and win the Wimbleton Cup in this fine biographical story of a winner. |
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