African cultures. One of the first art history departments to offer a focus
on the study of classical African art, the program has expanded to include
contemporary art, and colonial and postcolonial representations in the
arts and visual cultures of Africa and the African Diaspora. Recent courses
include Rethinking African Art History, Black Aesthetics and the Politics
of Representation, and Alternative Modernisms in African and African
Diaspora Arts. The program has secured significant funding for African
art history research which gives the program wider influence in the field
and promotes the study of African visual culture. Ogbechie has recently
initiated new research opportunities in the interface of African |
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cultures
and film technologies by organizing the First International Nollywood Convention
and Symposium (Los Angeles, June 2005), which is planned as an annual initiative.
Initiatives such as these offer students opportunities to actively participate
and familiarize themselves with a wide range of African responses to globalization. |
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