翻訳と辞書
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・ Afridi Colony
・ Afridun I
・ Afridun II
・ AfriForum
・ African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States
・ African-American architects
・ African-American art
・ African-American book publishers in the United States, 1960–80
・ African-American candidates for President of the United States
・ African-American Cemetery (Montgomery, New York)
・ African-American Civil Rights Movement (1865–95)
・ African-American Civil Rights Movement (1896–1954)
・ African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954–68)
・ African-American Civil Rights Movement (1954–68) in popular culture
・ African-American Civil Rights Movement in Omaha, Nebraska
African-American culture
・ African-American dance
・ African-American family structure
・ African-American Film Critics Association
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2003
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2004
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2005
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2006
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2007
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2008
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2009
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2010
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2011
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2012
・ African-American Film Critics Association Awards 2013


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African-American culture : ウィキペディア英語版
African-American culture

African-American culture, also known as Black-American culture, in the United States refers to the cultural contributions of African Americans to the culture of the United States, either as part of or distinct from American culture. The distinct identity of African-American culture is rooted in the historical experience of the African-American people, including the Middle Passage. The culture is both distinct and enormously influential to American culture as a whole.
African-American culture is rooted in West and Central Africa. Understanding its identity within the culture of the United States it is, in the anthropological sense, conscious of its origins as largely a blend of West and Central African cultures. Although slavery greatly restricted the ability of African-Americans to practice their original cultural traditions, many practices, values and beliefs survived, and over time have modified and/or blended with European cultures and other cultures such as that of Native Americans. African-American identity was established during the slavery period, producing a dynamic culture that has had and continues to have a profound impact on American culture as a whole, as well as that of the broader world.
Elaborate rituals and ceremonies were a significant part of African Americans' ancestral culture. Many West African societies traditionally believed that spirits dwelled in their surrounding nature. From this disposition, they treated their environment with mindful care. They also generally believed that a spiritual life source existed after death, and that ancestors in this spiritual realm could then mediate between the supreme creator and the living. Honor and prayer was displayed to these "ancient ones," the spirit of those past. West Africans also believed in spiritual possession.〔Clayborn Carson, Emma J. Lapsansky-Werner, and Gary B. Nash, ''The Struggle for Freedom: A History of African Americans, Vol 1 to 1877'' ( Prentice Hall, 2012) p.18〕
In the beginning of the eighteenth century Christianity began to spread across North Africa; this shift in religion began displacing traditional African spiritual practices. The enslaved Africans brought this complex religious dynamic within their culture to America. This fusion of traditional African beliefs with Christianity provided a common place for those practicing religion in Africa and America.〔
After emancipation, unique African-American traditions continued to flourish, as distinctive traditions or radical innovations in music, art, literature, religion, cuisine, and other fields. 20th-century sociologists, such as Gunnar Myrdal, believed that African Americans had lost most cultural ties with Africa. But, anthropological field research by Melville Herskovits and others demonstrated that there has been a continuum of African traditions among Africans of the Diaspora. The greatest influence of African cultural practices on European culture is found below the Mason-Dixon line in the American South.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=South Carolina – African American Culture, Heritage )
For many years African-American culture developed separately from European-American culture, both because of slavery and the persistence of racial discrimination in America, as well as African-American slave descendants' desire to create and maintain their own traditions. Today, African-American culture has become a significant part of American culture and yet, at the same time, remains a distinct cultural body.
==African-American cultural history==
From the earliest days of American slavery in the 17th century, slave owners sought to exercise control over their slaves by attempting to strip them of their African culture. The physical isolation and societal marginalization of African slaves and, later, of their free progeny, however, facilitated the retention of significant elements of traditional culture among Africans in the New World generally, and in the U.S. in particular. Slave owners deliberately tried to repress independent political or cultural organization in order to deal with the many slave rebellions or acts of resistance that took place in the United States, Brazil, Haiti, and the Dutch Guyanas.〔Price, Richard (1996). ''Maroon Societies: Rebel Slave Communities in the Americas''. Anchor Books. pp. 1-33.〕
African cultures, slavery, slave rebellions, and the civil rights movements have shaped African-American religious, familial, political, and economic behaviors. The imprint of Africa is evident in a myriad of ways: in politics, economics, language, music, hairstyles, fashion, dance, religion, cuisine, and worldview.
In turn, African-American culture has had a pervasive, transformative impact on many elements of mainstream American culture. This process of mutual creative exchange is called creolization.〔 Over time, the culture of African slaves and their descendants has been ubiquitous in its impact on not only the dominant American culture, but on world culture as well.〔Geneviève Fabre, Robert G. O'Meally (1994). ''History and Memory in African-American Culture''. Oxford University Press. pp. 12-208.〕

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