In this Issue
Africa Today Africa Today publishes peer-reviewed scholarly articles, book reviews, and short features on topics related to contemporary Africa and its diasporas. It seeks to be a venue for interdisciplinary approaches, diverse perspectives, and original research across the arts, humanities, and social sciences that is accessible to a multidisciplinary readership. Africa Today welcomes contributions from scholars across the globe, and especially from Africa-based colleagues.
The journal welcomes submissions of individual manuscripts for open issues as well special issues focused on particular topics. Past special issues have covered themes such as the construction of political legitimacy in Mali, processes of refuge-seeking, ethnographies of postcrisis situations, politics and decolonization, and religious entrepreneurship. Africa Today was established in 1954. It has been edited and published four times a year at Indiana University since 1999. Please review our submission guidelines and contact the Managing Editor or any of the editors with any questions you might have about publishing in Africa Today.
published by
Indiana University Pressviewing issue
Volume 65, Number 4, Summer 2019Table of Contents
Articles
-
View Not Your Grandparents' Flâneur: The Afropolitan Detective in the Urban Crime Novels of Quartey and Crompton
-
Download
Not Your Grandparents' Flâneur: The Afropolitan Detective in the Urban Crime Novels of Quartey and Crompton
- Save Not Your Grandparents' Flâneur: The Afropolitan Detective in the Urban Crime Novels of Quartey and Crompton
Interviews
-
View "Everything captured; capture everything": Amma Darko's Alternative Library, Information Circulation, and Urban Re-Memory An Interview with Amma Darko
-
Download
"Everything captured; capture everything": Amma Darko's Alternative Library, Information Circulation, and Urban Re-Memory An Interview with Amma Darko
- Save "Everything captured; capture everything": Amma Darko's Alternative Library, Information Circulation, and Urban Re-Memory An Interview with Amma Darko
-
View Art of Survival: A Black Indian Culture in Post-Katrina New Orleans An Interview with Chief Shaka Zulu of the Golden Feather Hunters
-
Download
Art of Survival: A Black Indian Culture in Post-Katrina New Orleans An Interview with Chief Shaka Zulu of the Golden Feather Hunters
- Save Art of Survival: A Black Indian Culture in Post-Katrina New Orleans An Interview with Chief Shaka Zulu of the Golden Feather Hunters
Pedagogy
Forum on Art World City
Books Received
Previous Issue
Next Issue
| ISSN | 1527-1978 |
|---|---|
| Print ISSN | 0001-9887 |
| Launched on MUSE | 2019-10-14 |
| Open Access | No |




