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T O P I C     R E V I E W
Clyde Winters
Member # 10129
 - posted
Manchester University Programme


Egypt in its African Context 3-4 October 2009

Saturday 3rd October
9am Registration, tea and coffee

9.25am Dr Karen Exell
Curator, Egypt and the Sudan, The Manchester Museum
Welcome

9.30am Dr Shomarka Keita The Peopling of the Nile Valley: Geography, Linguistics, Archaeology and Human Biology
Research Affiliate, Howard University and Smithsonian Institution

Session 1: The 'African-ness' of ancient Egyptian culture (Chair: Kimani Nehusi/Karen Exell)

10.15am Dr Kimani Nehusi Egypt in Afrika and Afrika in Egypt
University of East London

10.50am Dr Alain Anselin Some Notes about an Early African Pool of Cultures from which=2 0Emerged Egyptian Civilization
University of Antilles-Guyane

11.10am Dr Amon Saba Saakana
Karnak House Publishers and Intef Institute
The Contested Nature of Ancient Egypt

11.30am Dr Ana I. Navajas-Jiménez The Pre-dynastic bos primigenius as a Royal Image of Territory, Boundaries and Power in its African Context
Oxford University

11.50pm Dr Abdul Salau Did Yoruba Originate from Ancient Egyptians? A Response to Detractors of J.O. Lucas
Michigan State University

12.10pm Ferg Somo The Bantu Rosetta Stones
Kiswahili-Bantu Research Unit for the Advancement of the Ancient Egyptian Language

12.30pm Lunch break

Session 2: Egypt from an African Perspective (Chair: José Lingna-Nafafé /Karen Exell)

1.30pm Dr José Lingna-Nafafé West African Perspectives on Ancient Egypt: African Renaissance
Birmingham University

2.05pm Dr Dellé Odeleye How Impartial Are Modernist Perspectives of Ancient Egyptian Town Planning?
Anglia Ruskin University

2.25pm Solange Bumbaugh Meroitic Pilgrimage and Worship at the Temple of Isis located on Philae Island
University of Chicago

2.45pm Dr Linda Hulin Reclaiming Libyan Archaeology
Oxford University

3.05pm Tea and coffee

Session 3: Interpretations of Ancient Egypt in the West (Chair: Sally-Ann Ashton/Karen Exell)

3.30pm Dr Sally-Ann Ashton Curating Kemet
The Fitzwilliam Museum,
Cambridge

4.05pm Lyra Monteiro Ancient Egypt as an Ancestor Culture in Early 19th Century Black American Thought
Brown University

4.25pm Dr Clyde Ahmad Winters Public Understandings of Ancient Egypt in the Formation of Dalit and African American Identities and History
Curriculum
Governors State University, University Park, Illinois

4.45pm Dr Bill Manley Petrie's Revolutions: The Case of the Qurneh Queen
National Museums Scotland

5.05pm Charles A. Grantham Unwrapping of Egyptology
Northeastern Illinois University

5.25pm Professor Gloria Emeagwali Ancient Egypt in World History Text Books
Central Connecticut State University

6.15pm Professor Adebayo Folorunso
Contesting Egypt: Facts, Rhetorics or Sentiments
University of Ibadan

7.00-9.00pm Reception

Sunday 4th October
11.15am-11.35am
Robin Walker Selling Ancient Nubia to the Black Community: An Exercise in Damage Limitation
Director of Education, Black History Studies Ltd

11.35am-12.45pm
Public discussion with the key speakers, chaired by Robin Walker

1.45-3.45pm Nubian Spirit: The African Legacy of the Nile Valley - film screening followed by a Q&A session with the Director, Louis Buckley
 
LocDiva
Member # 13393
 - posted
This sounds like a wonderful and educational seminar. However, since I am in the US and I have no hope of traveling to the UK in Oct., I will imagine what it's like to participate in the discussion. To anyone who attends: Take notes, tell us all about it when you get back!!!!!!!!!!
 
mentu
Member # 14537
 - posted
Could you post video of the event vlyde.
 
KING
Member # 9422
 - posted

 
Clyde Winters
Member # 10129
 - posted
quote:
Originally posted by mentu:
Could you post video of the event vlyde.

Yes if I can get someone to record the proceedings.

.
 
Sundjata
Member # 13096
 - posted
Any updates? The conference has came and went already. I was looking very forward to any potential recordings.
 
Myra Wysinger
Member # 10126
 - posted
Dr. Alain Anselin (University of Antilles-Guyane) Some notes about an early African pool of cultures from which emerged Egyptian civilization.

Abstract

Using primarily linguistic evidence, and taking into account recent archaeology at sites such as Hierakonpolis/Nekhen, as well as the symbolic meaning of objects such as sceptres and headrests in Ancient Egyptian and contemporary African cultures, this paper traces the geographical location and movements of early peoples in and around the Nile Valley. It is possible from this overview of the data to conclude that the limited conceptual vocabulary shared by the ancestors of contemporary Chadic-speakers (therefore also contemporary Cushitic-speakers), contemporary Nilotic-speakers and Ancient Egyptian-speakers suggests that the earliest speakers of the Egyptian language could be located to the south of Upper Egypt or, earlier, in the Sahara. The marked grammatical and lexicographic affinities of Ancient Egyptian with Chadic are well-known, and consistent Nilotic cultural, religious and political patterns are detectable in the formation of the first Egyptian kingships. The question these data raise is the articulation between the languages and the cultural patterns of this pool of ancient African societies from which emerged Predynastic Egypt.
 
Sundjata
Member # 13096
 - posted
^Myra, you are a goddess!
 
Myra Wysinger
Member # 10126
 - posted
quote:
Originally posted by Sundjata:
^Myra, you are a goddess!

Thank you.

Shomarka Keita talking at the Manchester Museum ... He is discussing the biological ethnicity of the ancient Egyptian population

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

Part Five
 
Truthcentric
Member # 3735
 - posted
quote:
Originally posted by Sundjata:
^Myra, you are a goddess!

I second this!
 
Clyde Winters
Member # 10129
 - posted
You can read a copy of my paper " Public Understandings of Ancient Egypt in the Formation of Dalit and Afro‐American Identities and History Curriculum" from the Conference here:

http://olmec98.net/dalit.pdf


Enjoy

.
 
Asar Imhotep
Member # 14487
 - posted
Does anyone have access to the paper by Dr Abdul Salau Did Yoruba Originate from Ancient Egyptians? A Response to Detractors?
 
Djehuti
Member # 6698
 - posted
I'm mad I missed this thread a couple years ago.

I guess that makes Manchester University "Afrocentric" as well along with Cambridge and Oxford! LOL [Big Grin]
 
beyoku
Member # 14524
 - posted
^
 



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