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African Intellectuals in the Belly of the Beast: Migration, Identity, and the Politics of Exile
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 May 2016
Extract
When W.E.B. Du Bois wrote of the “double consciousness” of Africans in America, he was reflecting on the complex identities of the “talented tenth,” the educated minority of a minority like himself who felt alienated because of their awareness that their qualifications meant little in a racist society. Though written in reference to the African American intellectual, this duality, this sense of “two-ness,” is even more acute for African exiles today because they have fewer social and cultural ties to the West than African Europeans and African Americans. The exiles are much closer to the African “soul” Du Bois referred to and are less prepared for the pervasive racism and second-class status that they have to overcome in the West.
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- Part IV: African Migrants in Europe and North America
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- Copyright © African Studies Association 2002
References
Notes
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