Keith Josef Adkins

Keith Josef Adkins is an award-winning playwright, screenwriter and social commentator.

About On The Dig

In-your-face observations of art, entertainment and the world at large from someone who cares. Can you handle the truth?

CAN'T GET ENOUGH?

THE BLOG FAMILY

In-your-face observations of art, entertainment and the world at large from someone who cares. Can you handle the truth?

NOVEMBER 30 | NBC Heroes Employee Says There's Too Much Diversity in Hollywood

NOVEMBER 29 | Black Conservative Doesn't Want Oprah to Interview Obama on Christmas

NOVEMBER 28 | Peru Apologizes for Mistreatment of Afro-Peruvians

One man's opinion on very nearly everything. It's hard but it's fair.

DECEMBER 2 | Ten Things You Could Learn from Tiger Woods

DECEMBER 2 | Aunt Jemima and Politics in Darktown

NOVEMBER 24 | Meet The Parents

Manners and mores in modern life? It's about way more than where the fork goes.

DECEMBER 3 | Desiree Rogers' Teachable Moment

NOVEMBER 28 | The Tipping Factor

NOVEMBER 24 | The Turkey Is The Least of It

From finance to foreclosures, layoffs and lack of opportunity, a daily journal of the economic crisis and its effect on black professionals.

NOVEMBER 27 | Making The Most With Less This Christmas

NOVEMBER 25 | Young, Black, and Out of Work

NOVEMBER 24 | Have Blacks Been Shafted By The Stimulus?

Smart, up to the minute takes on politics--from the state house to the White House. Pull up a chair.

JANUARY 21 | Hillary Clinton Stands Up For Internet Diplomacy

JANUARY 20 | SATISFACTION, PRIDE OR DELIRIUM?

JANUARY 17 | Would Martin Luther King Get Out the Vote in Massachusetts?

Engaging commentary, interviews, and reviews that delve into and beyond the world of books. Get read.

NOVEMBER 25 | Conversation for the Dinner Table

NOVEMBER 19 | Reading List: The Poetry Edition

NOVEMBER 12 | Publishing with the Stars

A daily conversation on hot topic culture items. From Zora to Zane, True Blood to Tiny & Toya, TEWW covers high art, low-brow culture and everything in between.

FEBRUARY 5 | Thoughts on a Black Female "Living Legend": Mikki Taylor of Essence Magazine

JANUARY 26 | OMG Look at Your Hair!

JANUARY 25 | Tatyana Ali Misses the Target With "Love That Girl"

One woman's journey to shed 100 pounds in one year.

FEBRUARY 9 | Finding My Fitness Plan

KEITH JOSEF'S BLOG ROLL

    Ivan Van Sertima: Historian or Dreamer

    Yesterday a Facebook friend updated his page with the words Ivan Van Sertima. I thought he was just dropping knowledge; I didn't know he was paying homage.  Afrocentric anthropologist and historian Ivan Van Sertima died on May 25.  He had suffered with Alzheimer's disease.

    I discovered Van Sertima during a lecture at the University of Colorado at Boulder.  In his more popular They Came Before Columbus Van Sertima unearths the west African impact on the Olmec culture of early Mexico.  He claims prior to Columbus' 15th century expedition to the Americas, birds from west Africa traveled across the Atlantic on the trade winds to the Caribbean.  The birds, according to Van Sertima, brought plenty of seeds in their droppings and helped introduce African plantlife to the Americas.  Van Sertima also claims indigenous Americans told European adventurers that "black men" had already paid them a visit, decades ago.  From the Golden Age of the Moor to African Presence in Early Europe, Van Sertima provided nourishment to my-hungry-for-Africa youth.

    Then I read the criticisms.  In the 70s Welsh scientist Glyn Daniel called Van Sertima's findings "ignorant rubbish" and "booksellers should reshelve his works in myth and folklore".  Some believed Van Sertima "America" research dismissed the contributions of the indigenous culture.  Some believed Van Sertima was a marginalized black man who would do anything to integrate Africa into global history [including create theories that suggests African inspired the Aztec pyramids]. There was an extensive critique of Van Sertima's findings in the 1997 Journal of Current Anthropology.  Van Sertima allegedly never responded to the critique.

    Hey, I want to believe that Van Sertima's research is more than just manipulated racial fantasy.  I want to believe his life was a testament to how important African historical and anthropological inclusion is to the global consciousness.

    Thoughts?

    • Comments