![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Library Gateway | Library Catalog | Find: Articles Databases e-Journals | Ask a Librarian | ||
Thesis AbstractAuthor: Kalonji Lasana Niamke Degree Date: August 1999 Committee Chairperson: James Turner Call Number: Thesis DT 3 .5 1999 N533 Description: x,
204 leaves; 29 cm. Abstract: This thesis
examines the history, political struggles and social significance (to the
community) of the EAST, a self-determining cultural-educational institution
in Brooklyn, New York (1969-1986). The thesis explores the efforts of the
EAST to build and sustain viable community-based institutions and businesses
in the context of nation(alist) building. Nation building is defined here
as the conscious and focused application of African people's collective resources,
energies and knowledge to the task of liberating and developing the psychic
and physical space that Africans identify as theirs. Nationalist in the sense
that the EAST was a part of a continuum of Black nationalist thought and praxis
and sought to build upon this tradition. The activities and challenges of
the EAST experience in independent institution and nation(alist) building
are explored through a social-historical case study of the institution and
its cultural, educational and economic components. |
||
![]() |
||