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Africaresource.com: Bridging the Digital Divide

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2016

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Extract

What will be more important... is how future access to the “information superhighway” is maintained, and what will happen when (or if) marginalized communities come more firmly under the domination of the “owners” of gigabits of memory, satellite telecommunications, and undersea fiber optic cables strung around whole continents.

I began this essay after an energizing meeting with a bright young scholar on starting a new journal for africaresource.com. The journal, we agreed, would address the knowledge concerns of a politically conscious generation engaged in transformatory critical scholarship. Its distinguishing feature would be the New Afrikan perspective that would offer radical readings of texts and cultural phenomena. Just as our discussion drew to a close the critical question came: So what exactly does africaresource.com stand for? The question was clearly prompted by histories of subversions of progressive initiatives that have made members of marginal communities wary of ventures that seem to owe their existence to shadowy financiers.

Type
Part IV: African Migrants in Europe and North America
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2002 

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References

Notes

1. Bastian, Misty L., “Nationalism in a Virtual Space: Immigrant Nigerians on the Internet,” West Africa Review 1, no. 1 (1999)Google Scholar; available at http://www.westarricareview.com/war/voll. 1/bastian.html.

2. Ibid.