Black Culture and Business (original) (raw)

If Culture Is Software Of The Mind, Then Ours Needs An Upgrade: Lamentations On Our Illiteracy Of African Business And Culture

Journal of Business & Economics Research (JBER), 2010

Acknowledging culture as the "software of the mind" , this paper asserts that international business, management, and marketing scholars have done too little to address the practitioner community's need for a better knowledgebase regarding African cultures. Despite the importance of Africa to the global economy, transnational marketing, and even the prosperity of rising Asian economic powers, scholars have produced little practicable business knowledge on African national cultures. Over the last thirty years, three leading scholarly projects on national culture, including the work of Hofstede, Trompenaars and Hampden-Turner, and the GLOBE Study, have collectively provided empirical data on a total of only twelve African nations. This paper identifies basic deficiencies in the study of African cultures, highlights the impact of those deficiencies to the cultural knowledgebase, and suggests resolutions for upgrading intelligence on key African cultures vital to transnational business interests.

INTERDISCIPLINARY JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY RESEARCH IN BUSINESS The Image of the Africans in Heart of Darkness andThings Fall Apart

The paper examines two opposing images of African culture presented in both novels: Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Achebe's Things Fall Apart. Heart of Darkness depicts Africans as marginalized, voiceless and primitive, which is considered by many critics as an indictment of the hypocritical civilizing mission of the Europeans; whereas Achebe's Things Fall Apart repudiates the cultural assumptions presented by Conrad and delineates a totally different image of the African society in the process of change, which is aware of its past history and strives to control its future.

Africa and the Imperative for Black Studies; a Development Agenda

GLOBAL JOURNAL OF APPLIED, MANAGEMENT AND SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2015

This paper seeks a way forward by exploring into the historical and political economic conditions which has made Africa a beggarly continent and the black man in general a burden to the world. The paper identifies Africa’s doodling fortune in the midst or plenty as unfortunate. it sought to explain the role of African and black studies in salvaging the African predicament of under development. It identifies foreign investments in Africa as paradoxically translating to investments as avenues to develop the continent. In a cultural perspective, it analyzes the contributions of the African/black studies as having great prospects of repositioning Africa, the feats of the creative and enterprising black Agrarians who rose from the dust of slavery to prominence in America.The paper concludes that information is power, thus placing the responsibility of informing the black race on the African/black studies. It proffers possible recommendations which could help to place African and the blac...

The Africana Studies Effect: Creating Space and Viralizing Consciousness

The Journal of Negro Education, 2021

The phenomenon known as the “Africana Studies Effect” is gaining growing attention due to its relationship to student engagement on college campuses. The present study includes an examination of twelve empirical studies on the impact of Africana studies on Black students on college campuses. The most prominent features of the impact of Africana studies are identified. Moreover, the results are examined in light of Carter G Woodson’s call for a new educational program for Black education.

Black Culture

The migration of blacks in North America through slavery became united. The population of blacks past downs a tradition of artist through art to native born citizens. The art tradition involved telling stories to each generation in black families. The black culture elevated by tradition created hope to determine their personal freedom to escape from poverty of enslavement and to establish a way of life through tradition. A way of personal freedoms was through getting a good education that lead to a better foundation and a better way of life.

Harvard University Black Policy Conference

This year‘s conference, “Victory in Unity: Realizing the Dream Deferred” was a celebration of the success of Barack Obama‘s presidential campaign and the shifting tide in the outlook of the future of Black people domestically and throughout Africa and the Diaspora. The longing for fulfillment of a dream is common among all classes, ethnicities, and nationalities in America and beyond. Langston Hughes, an African-American poet and author, tapped into this powerful illustration by asking, ―What happens to a dream deferred? We believe Barack Obama‘s election symbolizes a step towards the realization of our dreams deferred. His power to unite across race, political ideology, gender, and class represents an alternative that each of us should consider when devising solutions to the troubled dynamics of race and inequality throughout the world. The 2009 5th Annual Black Policy Conference, ―Victory in Unity: Realizing the Dream Deferred,‖ reflected an extraordinary moment in our nation‘s political landscape and a critical point in the future of the conference as a vibrant and sustainable institution at the Kennedy School. The 2009 conference brought together over 200 students, policymakers, and professionals in law, business, health, media, international affairs and education.