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Oppressive Even As It Inspires

Approaching Black American Centrality in the Age of the Black European Renaissance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2024

Laura Visser-Maessen*
Affiliation:
Department of Modern Languages and Cultures and Radboud Institute for Culture and History, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
Jorrit Van den Berk
Affiliation:
Department of Modern Languages and Cultures and Radboud Institute for Culture and History, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands
*
Corresponding author: Laura Visser-Maessen; Email: Laura.Visser-Maessen@ru.nl
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Abstract

In this article, we trace the evolution of the connections between Black America and (Black) Europe since the mid-twentieth century and the study thereof. We do so through the lens of ‘Black American centrality,’ referring to the ways in which perceptions of Black America serve as an outsized reference point in European understandings of race, ‘Blackness,’ and Black (European) emancipation struggles. This allows for exploring the dilemmas that the, at times overwhelming, visibility of ‘Black America’ poses to Black Europeans, particularly during the current moment of flourishing Black European culture, politics, and scholarship. In that context, we show how both U.S.- and Europe-based scholars of Black American history and Black European history have approached Black American-European connections differently. The article concludes with suggestions for how these fields can engage with each other to develop academic approaches that account for but do not privilege the position of Black Americans within diasporic exchanges in the North Atlantic region, which is currently an underexplored area in diaspora studies.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Hutchins Center for African and African American Research

Introduction

The Movement for Black Lives presents a dilemma to Europe. Beginning in 2013 and culminating in the 2020 George Floyd sympathy protests across the continent, the U.S.-originated movement challenges Europeans to grapple with structural racism in their own societies. Its global resonance draws unprecedented numbers of primarily young Europeans into a renewed, dynamic grassroots movement for racial equality; allows them to express their solidarity for the plight of Black Americans; and, most fundamentally, provides an auxiliary framework to call attention to homegrown anti-Black racism (Balogun and Pędziwiatr, Reference Balogun and Pędziwiatr2023; Kelly and Vassell, Reference Kelly and Vassell2023a; King Reference King2020; Younge Reference Younge2020). As the latest major example of Black transnational anti-racism activism—part of a long history that goes back to slavery and abolitionism and climaxed during the 1960s—the worldwide scope of ‘Black Lives Matter’ (BLM) is a testament to the international impact of the Black freedom struggle and the effectiveness of diasporic politics.

In the European context, however, the movement can be used to reconfirm the centrality of the Black American experience and in that way curtail public debates on racism. For instance, the U.S. origins of BLM allow for the wholesale dismissal of European anti-racism as an import of divisive American identity politics. The visibility of the American movement, and the outrage generated by the deaths of Michael Brown or George Floyd, can overshadow the problems of police brutality and racism—often defined by its American manifestations, such as Jim Crow apartheid—within Europe itself (Beaman and Fredette, Reference Beaman and Fredette2022; European Network Against Racism 2020; Onishi Reference Onishi2021; Özdil Reference Özdil2014; Small Reference Small and Ratuva2019). Above all, it risks obscuring the agency and longevity of homegrown Black European resistance, specifically the ways in which Black Europeans assert their voice and presence as part of what Reni Eddo-Lodge (Reference Eddo-Lodge2017) terms a “renaissance of black critical thought and culture” in twenty-first century Europe, which emerged in conjunction with and separate from its American counterpart (p. 235).Footnote 1

Today’s Movement for Black Lives accordingly represents the latest phase in a longer history of Black American-European connectedness that serves as a double-edged sword for Black Europeans.Footnote 2 However, this continuing currency of Black America precisely at a moment when a revitalized, self-conscious Black European culture, politics, and scholarship is in full swing puts this relationship on edge in unprecedented ways. Among contemporary scholars and activists, the prevalence of what we call ‘Black American centrality’ in Europe—that is, the ways in which perceptions of Black America serve as an outsized reference point in European understandings of race, ‘Blackness,’ and Black (European) emancipation struggles—is increasingly put into question and regularly factors, explicitly or implicitly, into their course of action.

Yet despite the routinely cited exasperation with Black American centrality and models deriving from African American Studies, a comprehensive analysis of their impact within Black transnational exchanges across time and space remains underdeveloped.Footnote 3 While the existence of such a centrality is undisputed and awareness of it meaningful and necessary, pinpointing its exact significance is harder. What exactly does ‘Black American centrality’ mean in theory and practice? In what contexts and through which dynamics and means of agency has it come about? What do activists and scholars do with this given in their analyses of various localities and eras and for what purposes, including when they decide not to (fully) engage with it at all?

While answers to such questions diverge across the many settings of the Black Diaspora, this article seeks to define and categorize the unique dynamics of Black American centrality in Europe. It focuses on the post-World War II era to the present and on the different ways in which that centrality relates to the origins, goals, and recent scholarship of African American Studies, Black Europe Studies, and the works of European-based Americanists, which are rarely studied in relation to each other. In doing so, our central argument, with regard to current scholarship, is that we must understand and acknowledge the very different roles that Black American centrality has played and continues to play in these academic fields in order to develop joint approaches to the analysis of diasporic connections between Black America and Europe that account for but do not privilege the Black American experience. As such, this article builds on recent calls by scholars from both sides of the Atlantic to expand the study of Black global activism and articulations of ‘Black internationalism’ by developing multiple analytics for different geographies and historical eras (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020; Bressey Reference Bressey2018; Faymonville Reference Faymonville2003; Perry Reference Perry2012). After all, due to Europe’s singular historical experience with the global Black American presence, Black American centrality poses a number of challenges that are specific to the experiences of Black Europeans.

However, bearing in mind Jacqueline Nassy Brown’s (Reference Nassy Brown, Hine, Keaton and Small2009) warning not to turn Black Europe “into the newest entry in the encyclopedia of the global Black experience,” the objective is not to further over-theorize the diaspora nor to elevate particular geographical contexts or Black lived experiences over others (p. 201). Rather, by following her admonition to prioritize the “situated encounters in which people actually express some form of desire for connection,” the emphasis lies on the ways in which ‘Black America’ operates—as an object of European desire and rejection—in historically specific encounters between America and Europe as expressed in and through the literature on this topic (p. 201). The first section starts with an analysis of the origins and meanings of ‘Black American centrality’ in Europe and the challenges it poses for Black Europeans. The second section explores how the fields of (African) American and Black Studies, particularly in Europe, have historically developed along different tracks, in order to contextualize section three, in which recent scholarly approaches to Black American centrality in Europe are compared in order to define trajectories for future research into Black Europe and the study of Black transnational exchanges between the United States and Europe.

Black American Centrality in Europe

African American ‘centrality,’ or ‘exceptionalism,’ means something else in Europe than it does in the United States, where the term refers to the tendency to center the African American experience in accounts of American race relations at the expense of other racial and ethnic minorities.Footnote 4 The meanings it obtained in Europe are the result of complex historical developments and struggles over who can determine its meaning. In Reference Nassy Brown1998, Nassy Brown already captured the essence of what Black American centrality means to Black Europeans when she posed the question: “[W]hen does the unrelenting presence of black America actually become oppressive, even as it inspires?” (p. 297). Yet rather than looking for hypothetical ‘breaking points’ or dual positionalities between frustration and inspiration, a more systematic analysis of the historical origins, power dynamics, and realities of the relationships between Black America and Europe can help illuminate what informs, and enables, a broad response spectrum that ranges from inspiration to agitation all at once.

Historically, these responses must be understood within the context of two interrelated post-World War II developments. First, they were shaped within the larger framework of U.S. hegemony in Europe. The concurrence of Cold War rivalry and anti-colonial revolutions against European imperialism pushed race to the fore of global politics and forced Washington to make concessions to domestic civil rights activists while pushing a narrative of racial progress in its global public diplomacy. Simultaneously, Europeans encountered Black American soldiers during the war and after, as the United States expanded its military bases, thereby spreading Black American culture and politics (Borstelmann Reference Borstelmann2001; Dudziak Reference Dudziak2011; Höhn and Klimke, Reference Höhn and Klimke2010; Smith Reference Smith1987; Von Eschen Reference Von Eschen2004). Such developments arguably shaped massive European interest in the 1950s–1970s Civil Rights and Black Power Movements and conditioned European receptions of Black American activists such as Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, or Angela Davis, who visited Europe in search of their own global audiences (Gerund Reference Gerund2013; Höhn and Klimke, Reference Höhn and Klimke2010; Tuck Reference Tuck2014; Ward Reference Ward2017). Finally, as American cultural preeminence became a fact of life in postwar Europe, the visibility of Black American culture also took flight. Due to the singular ways in which it intersects with Black diasporic connections as well as longstanding European understandings of ‘race’ and ‘Blackness,’ however, that process of ‘African Americanization’ should be understood as “a distinctive factor in transatlantic cultural traffic which requires to be explored in its own right” (Gerund Reference Gerund2013, p. 12).Footnote 5

Second, European interest in Black America dovetailed with the growth of Black communities in Europe, albeit mainly in urban areas of western nations, due to the arrival of immigrants from former colonies, refugees, and economic migrants from Africa and other areas of the ‘Global South.’ The number of Europeans who identify as Black reached seven million in 2017 but remains low compared to the 770 million Europeans overall and the 46 million Americans who identify as Black. This created a double bind in which their numbers increased sufficiently to stir unease in certain segments of the European population, while being low enough to maintain a sense of invisibility. Crucially, such perceptions are spurred by their lack of cultural, political, and academic representation as well as literal absence in many European nations’ official statistics. This, combined with the difficulties related among others to questions of (self-)identification, makes these numbers tentative at best (Blakely Reference Blakely, Hine, Keaton and Small2009, Reference Blakely and Stovall2012; Small Reference Small2018, Reference Small and Ratuva2019). In France, for instance, many creoles and mixed-race peoples reject ‘Blackness’ as a self-identification marker, and in Italy and Portugal, African migrants such as Cape Verdeans and Ethiopians all relate differently to the term vis-à-vis each other (often on hierarchical grounds of ‘old’ migrants from former colonies and ‘new’ ones) and across time and generations. First generation Cape Verdeans in Portugal especially “distance themselves from other black Africans” while second-generation ones are “becoming more politicized” (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 4). Likewise, second-generation migrants of African descent in Sweden use ‘Afro-Swedes’ for self-empowerment and to avoid any negativity associated with terms like ‘Black.’ This also reflects these groups’ East African origins “where ethnicity, nationality and religion rather than race” define identity as well as internalization of Swedish notions of colorblindness (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 4, 6; McEachrane Reference McEachrane2014; Sawyer and Habel, Reference Sawyer and Habel2014; Skinner Reference Skinner, Einhorn, Harbison and Huss2022a, Reference Skinner2022b). Despite the long presence of Black populations, historically and in European imaginaries, Barnor Hesse (Reference Hesse, Hine, Keaton and Small2009) finds, “‘Europe’ and ‘European’ remain so articulated with assumptions of whiteness, disavowals of its coloniality, and hallucinations of ethical universalism, that to posit even the idea of Black Europe seems heretical, if not perverse” (pp. 300-301).

What Black American centrality means in Europe is therefore not somehow inherent to the nature or intentions of a ‘Black America’ (although it is partly a consequence of African American actionsFootnote 6) or merely located in the makeup, agency, and desires of a ‘Black Europe.’ Historically, it is also partly a creation of predominantly White European citizens and scholars and part of the larger epistemological battle waged by, and within, the larger Black freedom movement over whose knowledge is valued. This complex dynamic shapes Black Europeans’ position and response spectrum, which can be plotted along four separate but intersecting axes.

First, ‘Black America’ serves as one of many means by which Black Europeans challenge their invisibility, but it also reinforces it. For instance, many first- and second-generation Black Germans in the late twentieth century made Black America “a focal point of identification” (Campt Reference Campt2002, p. 109). According to Tina Campt (Reference Campt2002), this flowed from a mix of authentic affinity, a lack of other ‘diasporic resources’ for creating shared narratives of belonging, and its usefulness as a paradigm through which they could relate their experiences to White Europeans. Yet it left “little, if any, discursive space for black German articulations of self…in ways that might not necessitate reference to black America” (Campt Reference Campt2002, p. 109). Black America’s outsized visibility also means that Black European communities are measured against Black American standards. Afro-German identity and history, she observes, are often portrayed patronizingly as being “at the beginning of a long journey toward ‘real’ or ‘true’ Black consciousness, a model assumed to be exemplified by the African-American community” (Campt Reference Campt2005, p. 4). The European tendency to view America as the height of modernity was also transferred to African Americans, leading to their perception as more ‘sophisticated’ than their African or European counterparts among elements within Black and White European communities alike (Alexander Reference Alexander2018; Naumann Reference Naumann, McBride, Hopkins and Blackshire-Belay1998; Rice Reference Rice and Raphael-Hernandez2004). Pragmatism additionally influenced consumer choices. For example, in Switzerland, North African and Middle Eastern women at times gravitated towards Black American authors because they were the most easily available (Ohene-Nyako Reference Ohene-Nyako, Emejulu and Sobande2019b).

Yet, Rob Berkeley (Reference Berkeley, Lerman and Belong?2017) argues that Black America’s hypervisibility is also a logical result of institutionalized racism in Europe: “People of African descent in Europe negotiated the failure of European broadcast media to reflect our existence by immersing ourselves in American media and pop culture” (p. 50). American popular culture reinforced Europeans’ often flattened notions of Black America, and by extension, of Black Europe. “African American culture is often marketed as a consumable, homogeneous whole,” Michelle Wright (Reference Wright, Diedrich and Heinrichs2011) notes, as a “people bound together by a common worldview, cultural values, black pride and, of course, innate musical and athletic abilities” and as “self-assured and attractively stable” (p. 268). Moreover, the myth of European colorblindness—which is reinforced in juxtaposition to the widespread European attribution of race essentialism to America due to its ‘one drop rule’ history—exported ‘Blackness’ outside Europe’s borders.Footnote 7 Subsequently, as Priscilla Layne and Kira Thurman (Reference Layne and Thurman2022) note for Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, claims of ‘quality’ get transferred to White cultural products, and of ‘authenticity’ to African American ones. Sometimes such “rigid authenticity boxes” of tying ‘Blackness’ to slavery and Black America forced local Black European artists to perform Black American cultural expressions, like jazz, to gain employment (p. 366). In a telling example of the Dutch Black Renaissance, the story-collection Zwart! (Sherif and Rouw, Reference Sherif, Rouw, Sherif and Rouw2018) was explicitly compiled to showcase Black Dutch and Belgian authors’ talent and counter Dutch publication houses’ obsession with ‘superior’ African American literary products.

The recent activism of Black Italian youth, many of them children of immigrants but born and raised in Italy, shows that these dynamics can also become a source of strength. Their identification with Black America inspired activism against police brutality and for citizenship rights at home. Yet holding themselves and being held by outsiders to an imaginary yardstick of American ‘Blackness’—one largely begotten from popular culture in the absence of knowledge about homegrown Black history—simultaneously invited dismissive responses from within and outside their community. But these debates over what Black America can and should mean for Black Italians allowed new senses of self to emerge. “[N]ascent black Italian cultural politics,” Camilla Hawthorne (Reference Hawthorne2017) argues, is indeed characterized by a simultaneous desire for connections with Black America and “an insistence on difference.” The realization that “Blackness cannot be reduced to a single, universal condition” after Italy’s BLM protests became “the second chapter of the ‘coming to consciousness’ narrative that began with seeing oneself as solely Italian” by “looking to the other side of the Atlantic for guidance, and eventually realizing that what used to serve as a mirror no longer offers a perfect reflection” (Hawthorne Reference Hawthorne2017, p. 164).Footnote 8

Second, Black American visibility has enabled the relegation of racism and anti-racism to the United States, and the fact that Black Americans came to Europe to escape American racism often serves as the closing argument (Beaman and Fredette, Reference Beaman and Fredette2022).Footnote 9 This dangerous trope delegitimizes and harms local emancipation movements, serves as a powerful tool for defenders of the racial status quo, and prevents the development of homegrown European models and theories. Importing American race politics “signals that race and racialization is somehow fundamentally foreign,” Akwugo Emejulu and Francesca Sobande (Reference Emejulu, Sobande, Emejulu and Sobande2019, p. 5) therefore forcefully charge, which among other things “robs European Black feminists of a key analytical tool to name and act on our oppression. If racial injustice is understood on American terms and as an American export, there is no incentive to dismantle the distinct European racialised social order” (p. 5). For instance, the “radical practice of ‘talking back’” by European women of color is regularly framed, and then rejected, as copycatting the (perceived) racial essentialism of African American identity politics (Emejulu and Sobande, Reference Emejulu, Sobande, Emejulu and Sobande2019, p. 8).Footnote 10

Such disconnects with local racial realities have deep historical roots. Tiffany Florvil (Reference Florvil2020) and others note how White Germans after World War II “were more concerned with improving” American race relations than their own, as doing so “allowed them to be ignorant about their own homegrown racism,” even as the United States provided an avenue for local Black communities to raise the issue (p. 18; El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2022). As in other western European nations, particularly the American Civil Rights Movement—read superficially as “a movement with a ‘just cause’ and a ‘successful ending’” (Hirschfelder Reference Hirschfelder2020, p. 38)—served that purpose. Approaching it through “a particular, white-dominated, German gaze,” Nicole Hirschfelder (Reference Hirschfelder2020) argues, facilitated “an imagination of solidarity that did not interfere with Germans’ day-to-day life [regarding homegrown racism]—a pattern that should also be critically applied to the current [German] protests against police brutality in the U.S.” (pp. 38, 56-57).Footnote 11 This fits a larger pattern of predominantly White Europeans misrepresenting Black American activists, like Martin Luther King and Black Power advocates, and copying rhetoric from the latter’s conservative opponents in the United States to quell anti-racism and immigrant rights movements at home, while Black Europeans turn to such figures to help make their case partly because their countrymen lack knowledge of local Black history and anti-racism figureheads (Tuck Reference Tuck, Waldschmidt-Nelson, Chatelain and Monteith2015; Visser-Maessen Reference Visser-Maessen2019; Ward Reference Ward2017).

Third, Black American centrality complicates Black diasporic solidarities. Despite Black European readiness to set up local BLM chapters and utilizing its discourse, the large-scale sympathy of European progressives for Black American social justice movements—in contrast to support for their Black European equivalents—simultaneously pushes some to embrace pan-African European identities instead (Berkeley Reference Berkeley, Lerman and Belong?2017). The editors of Black France/France Noire likewise note how two centuries’ worth of Black American “positive reception in France—real, perceived, and utilitarian—has amplified intergroup tensions and unmasked presumptions of solidarity already questioned within Black populations” (Keaton et al., Reference Keaton, Sharpley-Whiting, Stovall, Tricia Danielle Keaton and Stovall2012b, p. 3). Black America’s hypervisibility also fuels tension over the existence of hierarchies in the reciprocity of solidarity. “While black Germans…were often aware of larger struggles in Africa and even more so those in the United States,” Fatima El-Tayeb observes, “black populations elsewhere rarely questioned Germany’s (self)representation as a white nation” (Reference El-Tayeb2011, p. 66).

The common and deliberate usage of ‘Blackness’ as a social and/or political identity or “an all-inclusive term for all who experience racism” by a broad spectrum of European citizens—as well as negative reactions to this usage—also factors into Black Europeans’ simultaneously open and ambivalent responses towards African America (Obasi Reference Obasi, Emejulu and Sobande2019, p. 233). The adoption of ‘Black’ as a strategic choice by South Asian immigrants to the United Kingdom or Dutch citizens of Moroccan and Indonesian descent; the addition of the prefix ‘Afro’; the deliberate rejection of such practices; or attempts at new identification markers such as ‘Afropean’ and ‘luso-Africanos’ showcase the instability of meanings of ‘Blackness’ among various national, racial, and ethnic groups within Europe across time and space (Angelo Reference Angelo2018; Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020; Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017; Guadeloupe Reference Guadeloupe2022; Pitts Reference Pitts2020). During the 1980s, for instance, a hallmark of Black European feminism was its rejection of race essentialism, which partly explains these women’s openness to African Americans who shared such views, like Audre Lorde. Many among the generation of post-colonial immigrants considered essentialist categories they associated with African American politics too ‘radical’ as well as reminiscent of European colonial oppression. Attraction to ‘Pan-African solidarity’ also flowed logically from the fact that many immigrants hailed directly from Africa (El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2003; Grégoire and Ntambwe, Reference Grégoire, Ntambwe, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Ohene-Nyako Reference Ohene-Nyako2019a). Elements within younger generations, born in Europe and politicized by the Black European Renaissance, however, may relate differently to essentialist notions, including as a (strategic) means to distinguish between forms of racism and anti-Black racism that have become diluted due to the widespread usage of political Blackness on the continent.

Fourth, the singular ways in which Black America was and is received, appropriated, or rejected by the larger, predominantly White, European populace complicates what Black America could mean for Black Europeans. Such receptions and their consequences vary across time and space, but several recent studies suggest that images of Black America played important roles in the construction of White European identities, including White nationalism.Footnote 12 While the outsized presence of Black America also challenged Europeans’ racial assumptions, Americanization simultaneously created distinctions between ‘Black’ and ‘Black American,’ which enabled Europeans to embrace the latter, but to continue to reject the former.Footnote 13 Admiration for the Civil Rights Movement and criticism of U.S. race relations allowed Europeans to (re)construct a positive self-identity in the aftermaths of fascism and empire and to challenge U.S. hegemony by defining itself as a moral counterpoint to American racism. White Europeans’ embrace of specific, often perceived as moderate, Black Americans—like Jesse Owens, Martin Luther King, and Barack Obama—served as tools to enable the treatment of Europe’s darker pages—from slavery to the Holocaust and post-9/11 Islamophobia—as incidental. Europeans also romanticized and appropriated Black American culture and politics in their own fights against Communism, capitalism, or for personal freedoms.Footnote 14

Crucially, this imagined distinction between a racist United States and colorblind Europe obscures both the history of White Europeans’ responsibility for the transatlantic slave trade and colonialism and the current reality of racial politics that fundamentally shape the societies of liberal democracies on both sides of the Atlantic. As Charles W. Mills (Reference Mills2017) and Michael G. Hanchard (Reference Hanchard2018) have shown, implicit but deliberate assumptions of White supremacy exist at the core of the social and political organization of Europe and the United States. We therefore suggest that, in Europe, racial politics and Black American centrality enable a unique, mutually reinforcing relationship: receptions of Black America facilitate the erasure of European racism and Black European invisibility.

Despite these sizeable consequences of Black American centrality for Black Europeans, Paul Gilroy’s plea to more thoroughly examine “how US hegemony complicates power relations between black people” in all areas of life has yet to be realized (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 2). Instead, the study of the singular vortex created by Americanization and mass migration in postwar Europe has largely remained in separate lanes, with Americanists mostly focusing on (African) Americanization and Black Europe scholars on diaspora. This is partly the result of how African American Studies in the United States and in Europe and Black Europe scholarship developed during this time, and the role that (African) Americanization implicitly or explicitly played in these trajectories.

Disciplinary Differences: African American and Black Europe Studies

Black diaspora scholarship and African American Studies in the United States relate differently to each other than the same fields in various European nations due to the socio-historical contexts in which those fields developed. Transnationalism has always been a cornerstone of Black American approaches to African American history (Kelley Reference Kelley1999). Subfields such as African American Studies, Black Studies, and Africana Studies are therefore, by and large, interwoven in the United States, whereas in Europe, alliances or mergers between Black Europe scholarship and African American Studies are as yet more rare due to their divergent origins and objectives. Accordingly, and as the scholars in question have often noted, it matters where the history of the Black diaspora is written, as well as by whom. This is true in terms of the stake that various authors might have in the topic, as well as in scholarly traditions, methodologies, and subject choices (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020; Del Pero et al., Reference Pero, Mario, Klimke, Helle and Tuck2014).

Yet the distinct origins and disciplinary developments of European-based African American and Black Europe Studies after World War II are both tied to the lack of (non-racist) knowledge production on race within European academia, albeit in different ways. European educational institutions often had ties to slavery and/or colonialism, which fundamentally influenced the resources for and content of teaching and research. Subsequently, Stephen Small (Reference Small2018) finds, “when it comes to the study of racism and the experiences of Black people most European universities are limited in scope, narrow in methodologies and restricted in access” (p. 165). The general absence of a scholar-activism tradition in Europe; the focus on nation state-centered approaches and Eurocentric knowledge paradigms; and the low number of students and academics of color at universities reinforced this (Essed Reference Essed2013; Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017; Small Reference Small2018).Footnote 15 The overall marginal attention to colonial history then created a triple erasure for those with roots in this history: not only were their stories overlooked, but the belief in European colorblindness also rendered their experiences void as it fed “the notion that black people in Europe should be grateful to live in Europe, where racism is not as pervasive as in the United States,” and then they were transplanted by studies on “Muslims, refugees, and migrants” (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 3).Footnote 16 Because of the European practice of discussing ‘race’ through the prisms of culture, class, and ethnicity or replacing it with terms like ‘minority,’ ‘race’ as a concept and recognition of it as an “organizing principle” of European societies was largely absent from twentieth century European historiography (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 9; Hondius Reference Hondius2017; Salem and Thompson, Reference Salem and Thompson2016).

However, the reluctance of European academia to support critical race studies notably excluded African American Studies. This is partly due to the U.S. government’s active promotion of American Studies departments as part of its campaign to counter Soviet propaganda about American racism (Boesenberg Reference Boesenberg, Greene and Ortlepp2011). But it was also attractive to European scholars because it allowed them to explore, by proxy, issues of exclusion and racism at home as there were few other options for doing so in European academia. German attention to African American history could indeed be read, Sabine Sielke (Reference Sielke2006) suggests, as a “mediated interrogation of Germany’s own history of racial discrimination and genocide” (par. 15). Stephen Tuck and Clive Webb (Reference Tuck and Webb2020) likewise observe widespread British academic interest in the Jim Crow South and the Civil rights and Black Power Movements precisely when debates about immigration were heating up at home. American academia’s exemplary pluralist and intersectional approach to social movement history also resonated with an increasingly multicultural Europe (De Pero et al., Reference Pero, Mario, Klimke, Helle and Tuck2014).

It was, however, exceedingly rare during the twentieth century for European-based African Americanists to explicitly address the relevance of their field for Europe. This was partly due to its orientation towards the United States, as the preeminence of American academia created pressures to publish in English for U.S. journals and disincentivized discussions from a European angle (Del Pero et al., Reference Pero, Mario, Klimke, Helle and Tuck2014).Footnote 17 Cultural-linguistic factors partly explain why European scholars have also been reluctant to apply concepts from U.S.-based Black Studies to European contexts. For various reasons, terms such as ‘race’ and ‘racism’ (and their equivalents in European languages) were purged from postwar public discourse in many European countries in favor of ‘colorblind’ terminology (Berg et al., Reference Berg, Schor and Soto2014; Hondius Reference Hondius2017; Morrison-Reed Reference Morrison-Reed2022). Subsequently, Berg and colleagues (Reference Berg, Schor and Soto2014) argue, “[r]acial problems, it seemed, occurred only in other societies, most notably in the United States,” and usage of the term ‘race,’ defined as an essentialist or biological category, confirmed it (p. 802). Therefore, “European historians will be more comfortable using ‘race’ to talk about racial tensions in the United States than as a way of describing social groups [or] their own countries” (Reference Berg, Schor and Soto2014, p. 807). This fundamentally influences descriptions and interpretations of Black European activism to this day (Bleich et al., Reference Bleich, Pollard and van der Veen2023).Footnote 18

Approaches to American ‘race’ terminology then exemplify and reinforce ambivalence towards Black American centrality in Europe. European Americanists, trained in English and imbued in American terminology, do work with these concepts that harbor an entire, politically charged “worldview that travels with it” that can miss the mark when applied to European contexts and separate them from race scholars who study Europe in other disciplines. U.S.-based scholars interested in Europe, whose numbers have grown in recent years, in turn “also act, unwittingly, as transmitters of American meanings of key concepts such as race” (Berg et al., Reference Berg, Schor and Soto2014, pp. 801, 807). Yet scholars who are versed in European languages face difficulties in getting published when they do not write in English, and language barriers limit European and American scholars alike when researching the experiences of specific groups within larger transnational frameworks (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020).

Despite its synergy with similar research fields in Europe and the United States, the emergence of Black Europe Studies must be viewed as a separate development, which, as Kwame Nimako argues, “should be understood as an emancipatory project for black communities that were historically situated as migrant groups but now must be analyzed through their European citizenships” (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 3). Contemporary scholars of Black Europe, predominantly those who identify as Black and who constitute its main driving force, generally trace its conceptual and scholarly roots to pioneering works such as The Centre for Cultural Studies’ The Empire Strikes Back (1982), Katharina Oguntoye and colleagues’ Farbe Bekennen (Reference Oguntoye, Ayim and Schultz1986), Paul Gilroy’s There Ain’t No Black in the Union Jack (Reference Gilroy1987), and Philomena Essed’s Understanding Everyday Racism (Reference Essed1991); the homegrown anti-racism movements and cross-European networks of Black feminists and Black queer collectives of the 1980s–1990s; and the (often short-lived) research institutions devoted to race and ethnicity in Europe during that era (El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2011; Nimako Reference Nimako, Grégoire, Fila-Bakabadio and Mazzocchetiforthcoming; Perry and Thurman, Reference Hammond and Thurmond2016). They understand it, Kennetta Hammond Perry and Kira Thurman (Reference Hammond and Thurmond2016) state, as an independent “unit of analysis and as an epistemological approach” (par. 4), even as they acknowledge their indebtedness to methods and paradigms from Africana, African American, and Black Diaspora Studies and to U.S. scholars and publishers for groundbreaking work on Black Europe, such as Darlene Clark Hine and colleagues (Reference Hine, Keaton and Small2009), Tricia Danielle Keaton and colleagues (Reference Keaton, Sharpley-Whiting and Stovall2012a), and many works on Black Germany (Layne and Thurman, Reference Layne and Thurman2022).

Such scholars accordingly seek to foreground Black Europeans’ history, needs, and priorities. These include questions regarding meanings of citizenship; commonalities and differences on a European-wide basis; the formation of Black European identities; their relationality to other social groups; uncovering homegrown Black movements for social change; and European practices of racism and processes of racialization (e.g., Balogun Reference Balogun2024; Beaman Reference Beaman2017; Hawthorne Reference Hawthorne2022; McEachrane Reference McEachrane2014; Pinto et al., Reference Pinto, Ohene-Nyako, Lavancy, Lüthi and Patricia Purtschert2022; The Black Mediterranean Collective 2021). Particularly works on the centuries-old Black human, cultural, and intellectual presence in, and contributions to, Europe from antiquity and early Middle Ages onwards have proliferated in recent years. These showcase Black Europeans’ lives and experiences as, among others, scholars, literary figures, philosophers, soldiers, knights, artists, flamenco dancers, craftsmen, activists, and in positions of power, including within dynasties such as the British Tudors, and discount popular notions that their numbers in Europe were marginal and limited to roles such as slaves, servants, or human zoo exhibits (e.g., Earle and Lowe, Reference Earle and Lowe2005; Fletcher Reference Fletcher2016; Germain and Larcher, Reference Germain and Larcher2018; Kaufmann Reference Kaufmann2017; Matera Reference Matera2015; Nubia Reference Nubia2019; Olusoga Reference Olusoga2016; Otele Reference Otele2020; Ramey Reference Ramey2014; Valeri Reference Valeri2010, Reference Valeri2016). Because this total body of work thus “complicates, unsettles, and disrupts racialized imaginaries of Blackness and Europeanness,” Perry and Thurman argue, they fulfill an existentialist drive to resist “White global hegemonies” of history-telling, ascertain personal survival, and create an opportunity for intervening in the future trajectory of European history (Reference Hammond and Thurmond2016, par. 6, 10; Araújo and Rodríguezo Maeso, Reference Araújo and Maeso2016; El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2022; Kelly and Vassell, Reference Kelly and Vassell2023a, Reference Kelly, Vassell, Kelly and Vassell2023b; Samples Reference Samples, Essed, Farquharson, Pillay and Joy2019; Unterweger Reference Unterweger2016).

Yet in contrast to African American Studies, Black Europe scholars and activists have been marginalized in European academia. In some countries what exists of knowledge on local Black experiences was largely written by scholars who came from elsewhere, like in Germany, Portugal, and France, and who often returned—or were forced to return—to their countries of origin afterwards. Europe’s sole Black Studies program (at Birmingham City University, U.K.) was not founded until 2017. Various European academic networks devoted to Black Studies, such as the Afroeuropeans Research Network (2004) and the Black Germany and Diaspora (2007) and Black Central European Studies (2014) networks, only recently emerged.Footnote 19 Black Studies in most countries, like Spain, Italy, Portugal, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Sweden, are still in their infancy. A key characteristic of Black European knowledge production then is its forced existence outside academia. Nonetheless, knowledge has broadened through an upsurge in seminars, conferences, summer schools, lecture series, curricula, publications, and independent outlets such as Pluto Press and Amrit Publishers (Andrews Reference Andrews2020; BDG Network Reference Network2018; Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017; Hine Reference Hine, Hine, Keaton and Small2009; Nimako Reference Nimako2012; Small Reference Small2018).Footnote 20

While the invisibility of Black knowledge within Europe is key to understanding Black Europe Studies, scholars like Wright, Florvil, and others also cite frustration with power imbalances regarding the Black experience in discussions of the ‘Black Atlantic’ (BDG Network Reference Network2018; El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2003; Fleming Reference Fleming2023; Florvil Reference Florvil2020; Wright Reference Wright2015). The sheer number of scholars who reference Black American centrality is telling of the singular role it plays in European scholarship. Yet ironically it was also made a central question, both intentionally and inadvertently, by and through the involvement of American-based academics in Black Europe scholarly venues, such as the 2005 BEST conference in Mainz, Germany, and the 2006 symposium at Northwestern University (U.S.), out of which the publication Black Europe and the African Diaspora emerged. “The Black diaspora in Europe,” Small (Reference Small, Hine, Keaton and Small2009) writes in its introduction, “is in large part, and always has been, dominated by the discussion of the Black diaspora in the United States,” leaving him to question whether constructs like ‘Black Europe’ may even be considered American inventions to begin with (p. xxv).Footnote 21

Black Europe scholars aim to problematize Anglo-American diasporic frameworks by revealing how “Europe’s relationship to the Black Atlantic was multi-directional, multi-purposeful, and often contradictory” and by changing the parameters of diasporic meaning (Perry and Thurman, Reference Hammond and Thurmond2016, par. 6). Particularly in nations that did not have colonies but often benefitted from their neighbors’ colonialism, like Luxembourg, Poland, and Switzerland, Black experiences cannot be as readily explained through what Wright calls the ‘Middle Passage epistemology’ upon which Gilroy’s Black Atlantic framework is based (Balogun Reference Balogun2024; Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017; Gilroy Reference Gilroy1993; Morrison-Reed Reference Morrison-Reed2022; Omolo and Kelly, Reference Omolo, Kelly, Kelly and Vassell2023; Pinto et al., Reference Pinto, Ohene-Nyako, Lavancy, Lüthi and Patricia Purtschert2022; Sawyer and Habel, Reference Sawyer and Habel2014; Small Reference Small2018; Tavares and Vieira, Reference Tavares, Vieira, Kelly and Vassell2023; Tisdel Reference Tisdel, Kelly and Vassell2023; Wright Reference Wright2015). In part to counter (White) European popular and scholarly obsessions with Black America and the overemphasis on the Black British experience and its connections to the Americas in defining ‘Black Europe,’ scholarship has begun to highlight the experiences of the majority of Black Europeans for whom memories of transatlantic slavery are not central to their identities; non-English speaking Black communities; and subgroups within them, like women, non-Christians, the LGBTQ+ community, and those living in rural areas. A key difference between Black Studies scholarship in the United States and in Europe then, Nimako (Reference Nimako, Grégoire, Fila-Bakabadio and Mazzocchetiforthcoming) argues, is the use of Africa as a central reference point, since, unlike in the United States, many contemporary Black Europeans came directly from Africa and because “the creation of Black Europe was based to a great extent on its development as a presumed antithesis to Black Africa” (p. 2). Subsequently, a “distinctive Africana intellectual tradition” is part of its methodological center, one “that revolves around, and integrate[s], issues of ‘race’, slavery, colonialism, humiliation, dignity and memory into the description, analysis and explanation in the position and status” of Black Europeans (p. 10).Footnote 22

The pronounced tension over Black American centrality in Black Europe scholarship can thus be explained through a convergence of all these factors, but it also helped accelerate the homegrown push for visibility and spurred calls to develop “appropriate, location-specific concepts” and methodologies (Small Reference Small, Hine, Keaton and Small2009, pp. xxix-xxx). It has even become a stepping stone for Black European scholars to foreground their own stories. In Black Europe and the African Diaspora, Small proudly notes how its contributors “have resisted the strong pull to analyze the Black diaspora in Europe primarily through the lens of the African diaspora in the United States” (Reference Small, Hine, Keaton and Small2009, p. xxxi). In To Exist Is To Resist, Akwugo Emejulu and Francesca Sobande (Reference Emejulu, Sobande, Emejulu and Sobande2019) likewise use Black American centrality to position their work as a means to “talk back against both American domination and European silence about Black feminism and create a space for a different kind of dialogue—one that is led by and for Black women in Europe” (pp. 5-6). Yet doing so can also risk flattening, mis-, or selectively representing the Black American experience and African American scholarship. An analysis of how scholars approach the Black America-Europe connection in recent work then reveals what could be won when scholarship moves towards a more ‘synchronic approach’ in which (U.S. and European-based) African American Studies integrates findings from Black Europe Studies and vice versa, even when they remain largely and justifiably committed to diachronic perspectives.Footnote 23

Black American Centrality in Europe in Twenty-First Century Historiography

Around the turn of the century, the publication of Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic (Reference Gilroy1993) and the ‘transnational turn’ in American Studies strengthened scholarly networks between U.S. and European-based African Americanists and Diaspora scholars, albeit often in nations with a noteworthy (African) American presence during the twentieth century. Several American-based scholars played key roles in this development, often due to a combination of scholarly and personal interests, including Tina Campt, Tricia Danielle Keaton, Michelle M. Wright, and Tyler Stovall. From a European perspective, Larry Greene and Anke Ortlepp (Reference Greene, Ortlepp, Greene and Ortlepp2011b) celebrated “the growing European interest in African American and African diasporic studies” and hailed the promising potential for analyzing “their interconnectedness and their relationship to Europe” rather than continuing to see “these diasporic cultures as separate research entities” (p. viii).Footnote 24 Since then, however, their prediction has only partially materialized, as European-based (African) Americanists and Black Europe scholars, in response to twenty-first century social and academic circumstances, each pivoted into a different direction.

Twenty-first century European-based Americanists largely moved away from their earlier position as “historians of America who ‘happened to live elsewhere,’” and shifted their focus to the ways in which Black America shaped Europe (Del Pero et al., Reference Pero, Mario, Klimke, Helle and Tuck2014, p. 787; Tuck and Boehmer, Reference Tuck and Boehmer2016).Footnote 25 Martin Klimke, Maria Höhn, and others uncovered how Black American G.I.s stationed in Europe significantly contributed to both the American Civil Rights Movement and European racial discourses, especially through the ‘mixed race’ children they fathered who undermined common notions about race and nationality (Bland Reference Bland2019; Fehrenbach Reference Fehrenbach2005; Höhn Reference Höhn2002; Höhn and Klimke, Reference Höhn and Klimke2010; Kirkels and Dickon, Reference Kirkels and Dickon2020; Smith Reference Smith1987). Several anthologies, such as Crosscurrents (McBride et al., Reference McBride, Hopkins and Aisha Blackshire-Belay1998), Blackening Europe (Raphael-Hernandez Reference Raphael-Hernandez2004a), From Black to Schwarz (Diedrich and Heinrichs, Reference Diedrich and Heinrichs2011), and Germans and African-Americans (Greene and Ortlepp, Reference Greene and Ortlepp2011a), and a number of monographs and articles on the twentieth century experiences of, and Europeans’ interactions with, individual African American writers, cinematographers, artists, athletes, and musicians in specific countries emphasized hybridity, agency in the process of cultural transfer, and mutually beneficial exchange.Footnote 26

Multiple studies from the 2000s and 2010s also investigated how Europe was one of the sites where the 1960s Civil Rights Movement’s battles took place or sought to define the impact of American Black activism on European understandings of ‘Blackness,’ protest, and racial justice. Focusing mostly on the ‘classical’ Civil Rights and Black Power eras and especially their leaders, such studies showed an asymmetric (mostly west to east) yet reciprocal exchange between the American Black freedom movement, Black European communities, and European society at large.Footnote 27 A good example is the literature on Malcolm X’s travels to Britain, which shows how the latter employed his reception in Europe to build his stature as an international leader; inspired the politics of Black and Asian communities in Britain; reconsidered his own mental map of the Black diaspora; and became a lightning rod of White British fears (Abernethy Reference Abernethy2010; Ambar Reference Ambar2014; Street Reference Street2008; Tuck Reference Tuck2013, Reference Tuck2014).

Such studies played a pioneering role in constructing methodologies, unearthing ignored histories, and locating or re-evaluating archives, which indeed allow for an approach to Black American-European connections that de-centers the United States and opens spaces for the Black European experience. Yet in their choice of players, settings, diasporic connections, and periodization, many scholars followed the examples set in the American ‘Long Movement’ approach rather than Black Europe Studies (Tuck and Webb, Reference Tuck and Webb2020). After ‘Long Movement’ historiography was criticized for ‘flattening’ historical and geographical differences within the Black freedom struggle, (African) Americanists in the United States and Europe moved toward a focus on overlapping and competing geographies of Black international activism. Such scholarship—including Black Power Studies and those foregrounding ‘Black Internationalism’—is partly defined by its conscious and explicit rejection of a U.S.-centered approach or an all-encompassing framework to study Black global activism.Footnote 28

From what could be said to be an intermediate position between United States and continental European academia, recent British scholarship already shows how insights from African American and Black Europe studies could reinforce each other in this regard.Footnote 29 As part of a process that Anne-Marie Angelo (Reference Angelo2018) calls “grassroots internationalism,” for example, the British Black Panther Party connected local fights to Black internationalism by forging fluid discourses on race that built on local knowledge as well as other activist traditions from the ‘Global South’ to suit specific local needs and offer Black Britons an auxiliary framework that provided a language to discuss British racism, multi-ethnic organizing, and anti-imperialism (p. 68).Footnote 30

However, the current literature on Black American-European ties continues to present challenges to the construction of a more unified, transnational, or comparative approach. Most studies follow the sojourns of African Americans in European metropoles, which exclude discussions of the history and the, sometimes vastly different, experiences of people of color elsewhere within a nation and the continent at large, or center European nations with solid historical connections to the United States and traditions of publishing in English alongside their native languages. In fact, much of the knowledge regarding the Black America-Europe connection is derived mainly from three nations—the United Kingdom, Germany, and France—while Southern, Eastern, and Scandinavian Europe remain largely untouched. Moreover, in these studies the limitations of Black America for understanding race, racism, and the Black diaspora in Europe are often noted but rarely fully or systemically investigated. The overemphasis on examples of African America as “the ultimate identification reference” or on the selective case studies of contacts between African Americans and Black Europeans also flatten images of Black Europe and Black European agency, tell only a selective portion, or misread them altogether (Bazenguissa-Ganga Reference Bazenguissa-Ganga, Tricia Danielle Keaton and Stovall2012, p. 145).Footnote 31 While studies which depart from the American Black freedom struggle and trace its global and European contours remain necessary, they thus risk affirming Black American centrality in the diasporic experience.

Tina Campt (Reference Campt2002) pioneered the call for a more critical investigation of the impact of that unique vortex created by Americanization and post-decolonial migration on Black Europeans. But Black Europe scholars’ interest in connections to Black America waned in the twenty-first century as a logical consequence, not cause, of the way Black Europe Studies developed. Following Black communities on their own terms simply revealed that many African American paradigms did not fit Black European experiences and self-reflections, and reinforced self-awareness of Black invisibility caused partly by (White) European public and scholarly obsessions with Black America.Footnote 32

The Black European Renaissance also forged a different relationship to, and need for, African America. Largely energized by younger people—many of whom are naturally-born citizens who have different ties to, and expectations from, their country than their (grand)parents—this decidedly homegrown movement focuses on challenging systemic racism and Black invisibility in European political, cultural, and educational institutions. This spurred interest in Black Europe scholarship and vice versa, with Black female scholars playing vital roles in its development. For some, engaging in it is considered activism (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017; Layne and Thurman, Reference Layne and Thurman2022; Kelly and Vassell, Reference Kelly, Vassell, Kelly and Vassell2023b; Small Reference Small2018, Reference Small and Ratuva2019; Visser-Maessen Reference Visser-Maessen2020). The adoption of ‘Black Europe’ then became a reflection of the permanent presence of Europe’s growing Black population and an opportunity, Perry and Thurman (Reference Hammond and Thurmond2016) state, “for thinking comparatively and transnationally about race politics and racial formation” (par. 6). Moreover, contemporary scholars and activists are acutely aware of the tightrope that Black American references present for Black Europeans. Especially after the George Floyd protests, reactionary and progressive forces in countries like France, Germany, and the Netherlands stepped up criticism of what they view as ‘divisive’ American identity politics, allowing them to frame the push for diversity in academia as part of the Black European Renaissance as ‘cancel culture’ (Byrd Reference Byrd2022; Onishi Reference Onishi2021).

‘Black Internationalism’ as practiced in U.S. academia today also presents pitfalls for some Black Europe scholars.Footnote 33 The latter’s move away from ‘Middle Passage epistemology’ does create space for further disciplinary cross-fertilization, as several American-based scholars likewise desire to move beyond approaches that center struggles against slavery and colonialism. Yet an overly broad application may become another source of tension, especially since the Black European Renaissance and BLM protests have rekindled debates between Black and non-Black Europeans of color regarding the use of political Blackness. This may affect how Black Europe scholars respond either openheartedly or apprehensively to Black Internationalism as, in Kim D. Butler’s words, “the deliberate extension of Black experience to work for, and collaborate with, all oppressed people” (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020, pp. 1730, 1731).

More significantly, the divergent origins and objectives of Black Europe scholarship legitimize skipping over ‘African America’ altogether. In contrast to U.S. and European-based (African) American Studies approaches, foregrounding Black Europeans on their terms means de-centering ‘Middle Passage epistemology’; focusing on the Africana intellectual tradition and the diversity of ‘diasporic resources’ for Black Europeans; uncovering a complex understanding of ‘Blackness’ and identity formations; and broadening the knowledge of the Black European presence beyond the players, localities, and periodization emphasized in African American Studies.

Subsequently, Black Europe scholarship offers a more contextualized understanding of the impact of Black America. The move away from ‘professional’ Black (male) activists and individual political leaders to ordinary citizens and their everyday practices of resistance—whom Florvil (Reference Florvil2020) calls ‘quotidian intellectuals’ and what in African American Studies became popularized simply as ‘the local people approach’—helped expand notions of diaspora and activism. A growing body of work is filling in the blanks on the politicization of (and cultural influences on) Black European women next to and before learning from, and about, Black American powerhouses like Audre Lorde, and informing their engagement with today’s Movement for Black Lives from their perspective (Beaman Reference Beaman2022; Beaman and Fredette, Reference Beaman and Fredette2022; Florvil Reference Florvil, Falola and Yacob-Haliso2017, Reference Florvil2020; McCormack and Legal-Miller, Reference McCormack, Legal-Miller, Crawford and Baldwin2019). The focus on the ‘quotidian’ additionally reveals the importance of non-traditional archival sources, like blogs and other digital spaces, book clubs, and festivals, for understanding the transnational flow of activist ideas and identities; the central role of women for sustaining Europe’s Black communities and protests; and ‘covert’ practices like motherhood, self-care, and the private home as meeting space as legitimate and effective forms of activism (Beckles-Raymond Reference Beckles-Raymond, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Boom Reference Boom, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Ellerbe-Dueck and Wekker, Reference Ellerbe-Dueck, Wekker, Bolaki and Broeck2015; El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2011; Guadeloupe Reference Guadeloupe2022; Hawthorne Reference Hawthorne2017; Heuchan Reference Heuchan, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Mirza Reference Mirza2015; Ohene-Nyako Reference Ohene-Nyako2019a, Reference Ohene-Nyako, Emejulu and Sobande2019b; Othieno et al., Reference Othieno, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Van de Velde Reference Van de Velde, Emejulu and Sobande2019). Creative use of existing archival sources also unearths new insights on Black Europe and invisible subgroups, like queer women’s activism (Frank Reference Frank2019).

Such new studies thereby expand and deepen knowledge regarding local and global Black activism, knowledge production, and organizing practices, but they can also function as new means for exploring Black (women’s) internationalism; the Black American-Europe connection; patterns, differences, and similarities in organizing strategies in Black activism over time; and theories and pragmatics of (African) Americanization in particular. For example, Florvil’s work (Reference Florvil2020) on ‘quotidian intellectuals’ and Pamela Ohene-Nyako’s work on the 1980s World Council of Churches programs in Europe detail how transnational Black women’s activism also became distinctly ‘European,’ even as one of its singular hallmarks was the expansion of “the scope of identifications and solidarity” to a transatlantic and global scale (Reference Ohene-Nyako2019a, pp. 220, 224). Applying the ‘local people’ approach to Black European activism and its transnational contours may prove a productive avenue for scholarship to understand and broaden its scope beyond its most well-known figures and organizational structures (Frazier-Rath Reference Frazier-Rath2022).

However, from the perspective of the dilemmas created by Black American centrality, ‘Americanization’ is rarely addressed as such in Black Europe scholarship. The U.S. angle is often mentioned fleetingly, overlooked (including its impact on White Europeans’ notions of ‘Blackness,’ (anti-)racism, White nationalism, and national identity), or limited to the realm of popular culture. Alternatively, it is often transplanted with broader theoretical categories and critiques featured in Black Studies, such as ‘Westernization,’ ‘globalization,’ ‘transnational solidarity,’ ‘diaspora,’ and ‘racial capitalism’ to service the goal of illuminating local Black identity formations and practices of ‘Blackness.’ Indeed, a crucial problem is how the imposing presence of ‘Black America’ can be studied without (re-)centering ‘America.’

In that context, a nuanced understanding of ‘African Americanization,’ a term coined by Tyler Stovall (Reference Stovall, Hine, Keaton and Small2009), might connect scholars working in African American and Black Europe Studies. Katharina Gerund (Reference Gerund2013) argues that due to the specific gendered and racialized lenses through which (primarily White) Germans received Black American culture, African American cultural exchange cannot simply be subsumed under a more generic ‘Americanization.’ However, the impact of African American culture is difficult to separate from fits and flows of American cultural hegemony, as it was often understood in Germany in relation to White American culture. Moreover, some of the mechanisms behind Black America’s cultural transfer to Black Europeans—like agency in reception, appropriation, and adaptation; ambivalence towards the United States in general; viewing American culture in terms of attraction and rejection and in relation to discourses on modernity; and the networks and infrastructures through which cultural transfer occur—are similar to those related to Americanization in Europe more broadly.

Departing from the perspective of Black Europeans, El-Tayeb and others have also shown that African American consumer culture often fulfills a ‘performative’ function; serves as a ‘safe’ space in White majority places; or is adapted by a variety of social groups to fit local circumstances and objectives, including in the service of political Blackness (Diallo Reference Diallo, Emejulu and Sobande2019; El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2003; Van Gaalen Reference Van Gaalen2020). As El-Tayeb (Reference El-Tayeb2011) notes for Germany, the African American presence was “transformed and adapted to the particular circumstances of the rather different (yet, perhaps, close enough) German situation, also…shaped by African migration and decolonization” (p. 65). Likewise, while Dutch Black urban popular artists outwardly support ‘strategic essentialism’ with “white and black as descriptive categories in line with North American usages, to combat anti-black racism,” their ‘underground work’ displays more intermedial approaches that fit the polyethnic realities of multicultural Holland (Guadeloupe Reference Guadeloupe2022, p. 83). African American culture in Europe, then, “neither exists primarily outside structures of Americanization nor can it be fully assessed through an exclusive focus on [its] position in the black diaspora” (Gerund Reference Gerund2013, p. 12).

The outsized attention for the African American presence in Europe in part also sparked new studies that help generate pride, empowerment, and new epistemologies by enhancing the visibility, agency, and longevity of Black European communities, their politicization, and cultural products. Research on African American artists in Europe like Josephine Baker is now gradually being matched by ‘New Negritude Studies’ (Hondius Reference Hondius2017) that center the networks, texts, oral histories, and artistic performances by Black Europeans (e.g., Thurman Reference Thurman2021). These can become fruitful sources for better understanding the nuances of Black local and transnational practices and collaborations and of Black American centrality in the identity formation of racialized Europeans. As ‘Black’ diasporic peoples facing discrimination and exclusion, Roma and Sinti in Eastern Europe, for instance, drifted towards Black American literature, musical forms, and activist organizations, specifically those related to Black Power, but these forms of “diasporic intersubjectivity” and their pragmatics have hitherto been understudied both in works on (African) Americanization and in Black (Europe) Studies (El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2011, p. 59, footnote 17). Other new, exciting scholarly work puts African American sources in dialogue with local Black accounts. Mark Morrison-Reed’s (Reference Morrison-Reed2022) article is an intriguing example of what could be done in future scholarly work for understanding the multi-directionality of the Black American-Europe connection, as he discusses various twentieth century literary accounts of African American visitors to Switzerland in relation to a 2021 book by a local Black woman who was prompted to write her story after the George Floyd protests.

The struggle over defining the meaning of ‘Black’ in Black activism and scholarship is in itself an inherent part of the Black European experience emerging from the social realities of low demographic presences; the myth of European colorblindness; the heterogeneity of Black European communities and their diasporic and migration trajectories; and their struggles to be accepted as citizens. Unlike in the work of most (African) Americanists, extensive theorizing on the meanings of ‘Blackness’ in specific national histories and activist circles feature heavily in Black Europe scholarship and constitute part of the attempt to create homegrown models and terminology.Footnote 34 African America and meanings of ‘Blackness’ emerging from this context are then rather used comparatively (if at all).

Further development of studies on the Mediterranean, for instance, could accordingly emerge as a site where European-based, African-based, and American-based scholars can deepen understandings of Pan-Africanism, the Black diaspora, and Black Europe in a way that re-centers the prominence of Africa as well as facilitates a more balanced incorporation of connections with the Americas beyond the United States. Indeed, Thurman points to the necessity of engaging explicitly with how “Black Europeans have turned to the Global South to generate art and find community in European spaces” in the past and present (Bedasse et al., pp. 1724-1725). However, when studying the experiences and responses to the racial status quo in Europe of Black migrants from Africa or those from former colonies in the Americas to Europe, it is vital, as Bill Schwarz (Reference Schwarz2003) noted for the latter, to incorporate the memories, “intellectual baggage,” and lived experiences of ‘Blackness’ they brought with them next to the ways in which these merged with knowledge from Black freedom struggles in, particularly, the United States and South Africa (Perry Reference Perry2014, p. 654). After all, in the Caribbean and South and Latin America, race, racism, and ‘Blackness’ have divergent meanings to those in the United States due to their different colonial trajectories and experiences with Indigenous peoples; Black demographic diversity and subsequent forms of activism; and the meanings of ‘race’ Southern European colonizers brought to the Americas. These, in turn, had been shaped by, among other things, the centuries-old physical and cultural presence of North Africans, such as the Moors, on the European mainland and by the historical attributions of ‘Blackness’ to Southern Europeans in general by Northern European citizens (Hanchard Reference Hanchard1999; Hawthorne Reference Hawthorne2017). Yet the plethora of works on identity and ‘Blackness’ in relation to various racialized groups in Europe and all their intersectional markers also increases disciplinary splintering and will likely de-center the inclusion of the African American presence and Black American centrality in future research further, even where it might prove informative.Footnote 35

However, the denial of race within European societies partly explains why its Black communities can identify with African Americans. Despite obvious differences, one feature that unites many racialized communities in Europe with those in the United States is the experience of ‘double consciousness’ arising from their lived experiences as European nationals with diasporic ties and as citizens living in nations that explicitly root their identity in the ideals of the Enlightenment and modernity (Faymonville Reference Faymonville2003; Gerund Reference Gerund2013; Gilroy Reference Gilroy1993). After all, Nimako notes, official segregation in the United States was matched by the de facto exclusion of Black people in Europe “amid the official rhetoric of social cohesion and inclusion” (Reference Nimako, Grégoire, Fila-Bakabadio and Mazzocchetiforthcoming, p. 3). Yet unlike Black Americans who, in the terminology of Michelle Wright (Reference Wright2003), to some degree are accepted as the ‘Other-from-Within,’ Black Europeans are perpetually treated as the ‘Other-from-Without’ despite being naturally-born citizens. This has meant that Black Europeans must rely on autobiography to “write oneself into the nation,” a tactic comparable to African American slave narratives (Wright Reference Wright2003, p. 299). The conflation of scholarship and biography has even become a regular feature in Black Europe scholarship in itself (Layne and Thurman, Reference Layne and Thurman2022).

This body of work and the (re)discovery of autobiographical narratives, family histories, and photographs (Campt Reference Campt, Hine, Keaton and Small2009) are thus rich resources that enable new insights into Black American centrality and Black Europe’s position within the diaspora; the importance of multilingualism and Africana traditions within Black Europe; and more locally appropriate terminology and conceptual frameworks. After all, the total of languages spoken by Black Europeans reaches into the hundreds (Small Reference Small and Ratuva2019). So, while the dominance of the English language helped Black Britain scholarship to emerge as an intermediary between African American and Black Europe Studies, it further disrupted continental Black Europe scholars’ comfort with Anglo-American frameworks for understanding Black Europe. The use of English—a marker of class and education—in itself reinforced hierarchies within Black knowledge systems (Cruel Ironies Collective Reference Emejulu and Sobande2019; Grégoire and Ntambwe, Reference Grégoire, Ntambwe, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Layne and Thurman, Reference Layne and Thurman2022). Emejulu and Sobande (Reference Emejulu, Sobande, Emejulu and Sobande2019) for instance lament how “the linguistic divides between English-speaking Black feminists of Britain and North America drown out the perspectives and experiences of Black women in Continental Europe” that must be “at the forefront” of work on Black European feminism (p. 5).Footnote 36 Such re-centering mirrors the broader self-conscious societal trends in twenty-first century Black Europe. Activists in some Black communities in France now “use the nomenclature ‘Noir’ instead of the once pervasive English word ‘Black’” to mark their homegrown experiences, existence, and visibility in a society that officially only recognizes ‘French people’ (Keaton et al., Reference Keaton, Sharpley-Whiting, Stovall, Tricia Danielle Keaton and Stovall2012b, p. 3). Moreover, using (African) American concepts can impede local antiracism movements’ dialogue with a broader, non-English speaking public, as for many Europeans they literally and figuratively are “part of a strange language” (Guadeloupe Reference Guadeloupe2022, p. 65).Footnote 37

Centering Black Europeans’ experiences and perspectives in their own words can additionally help nuance theoretical frameworks and definitions, like those related to Black Internationalism, diaspora, and (African) Americanization. In an example of the quest for more locally appropriate terms, some scholars have come to transplant the term ‘colorblindness’ with ‘race-blindness’ to indicate that, unlike in the United States, denials of the relevancy of race are widely shared by the Left and deeply entwined with the traumas of the Holocaust and fascism (Beaman and Fredette, Reference Beaman and Fredette2022; Goldman Reference Goldman2020; Keaton Reference Keaton2010). Emily Frazier-Rath (Reference Frazier-Rath2022) meanwhile points to the need for humanizing the Black European experience behind the theorizing on Black transnational exchanges. Chandra Frank’s (Reference Frank2019) analysis of the material of the 1980s Black Dutch queer women’s collective Sister Outsider in Dutch feminist archives and in Audre Lorde’s American-based ones similarly shows how individualizing the actors and the geographical spaces in which they operated is needed, as the “overuse of ‘transnational’ to analyse modes of exchange” risks the entrapment of political solidarity like that expressed by Sister Outsider “in a vacuum of ‘transnational’ without giving specific meaning to its use” (p. 12). According to Kristen Stern (Reference Stern2019), close analyses of translations of African American literary products provide another avenue for crystalizing the complexities of positionalities by serving as “a cautionary tale against thinking that transatlantic texts or authors are as fluid as descriptors like ‘transnational’ or ‘the Black Atlantic’ can lead readers to believe” (p. 215). Indeed, as exemplified by the works of Elisa Joy White (Reference White2012) on Black Dublin, Paris, and New Orleans; García Peña (Reference Lorgia2022) on the genealogy of ‘Black Latinidad’ in the United States, Caribbean, and Europe; and Maya Angela Smith (Reference Smith2020) on the use of strategic multilingualism by people of Senegalese heritage in Paris, Rome, and New York, the use of comparative methodology connecting various geographies and disciplines remains a fruitful and enriching means to better understand and appreciate locally specific diasporic sensibilities and practices as well as obfuscates the U.S.-Europe binary as a focal point for understanding Black Europe.

Conclusion

The study of transnational exchanges between Black America and Europe is rich with potential, but restricted by its confinements to distinct scholarly lanes and national historiographies. Divergent approaches to (Black) America reflect this splintering and hinder a more comprehensive understanding of the meanings and manifestations of Black American centrality in Europe. To move beyond, as Monique Bedasse put it, “analytical frameworks that center the United States and claim internationalism only in terms of how Americans interact with Black people in other places,” scholars on both sides of the Atlantic must begin by recognizing the historical moment of the Black European Renaissance (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020, p. 1706). This includes new insights emanating from Black Europe scholarship, particularly in regards to the ways in which Black America and Black Atlantic epistemologies interact with (post-colonial) Black European communities; the need to move away from periodization and localities based on African American history; adopting location-appropriate concepts, rather than borrowing terms and concepts derived from American academia; and recognizing the need for multiple languages and knowledge on different local and national settings.

Scholarship into these exchanges must account for and engage with Black Europeans’ specific, contentious history with Black American centrality even if it cannot be fully explained in terms of the actions or desires of either Black Americans or Black Europeans. The major challenge is to recognize how the imposing visibility of ‘Black America’ shapes both disciplinary inquiries as well as realities on the ground for Black Europeans in order to move beyond it. So while ‘diaspora’ might be the conceptual glue that can bring (European-based) African American and Black Europe scholarship closer together, Carmen Faymonville’s (Reference Faymonville2003) and Katharina Gerund’s (Reference Gerund2013) admonitions to account for the locally-specific ways in which diaspora functions for Black Europeans as “entailing movement and stasis, mobility and stability/settlement, roots and routes as well as mobility and immobility” needs to be heeded and crystallized further (Gerund Reference Gerund2013, p. 196). After all, it is precisely the struggle over the ‘stasis’ part that defines much of the Black European experience and outlook of twenty-first century scholarship on it, and any future research agenda into Black American-European transnational exchanges should reflect this.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank the Radboud Institute for Culture and History for supporting our research and the editors and anonymous reviewers at Du Bois Review for their helpful feedback. Any errors or omissions are our own.

Footnotes

1 The ‘Black Renaissance’ refers to the Black consciousness-waves in twenty-first century Europe and the United States that are characterized by celebrations of the self and demands for visibility and inclusion based on their own terms. See: Eddo-Lodge (Reference Eddo-Lodge2017), Kendi (Reference Kendi2021), Layne and Thurman (Reference Layne and Thurman2022), Skinner (Reference Skinner, Einhorn, Harbison and Huss2022a), Visser-Maessen (Reference Visser-Maessen2019, Reference Visser-Maessen2020).

2 We subscribe to Stephen Small’s fluid definition of ‘Black Europeans’ as referring to Europeans who “identify themselves (or are identified by others) as Black, African, African descent, African-Caribbean, Afro-European, African Americans, or some other national variation” (Reference Small2018, p. 34). However, due to local usages of ‘Blackness’ as a social and/or political identity marker, we refer to ‘Black Europeans,’ ‘Black Americans,’ etc. when it is analytically appropriate to discuss the complexities of the Black diaspora. By referring to regional or national situatedness in these ways, we do not imply that the people in question identified themselves by such labels. Likewise, ‘Black Europe’ is used as a fluid, analytical category that exists as much as a metaphysical “imaginary” or multiple “imaginaries” (Hesse, Reference Hesse, Hine, Keaton and Small2009, p. 301) and as referring to “a discourse on location” in which Black Europe emerges as “a racialized geography of the imagination even for non-European Blacks” and other outside groups (Nassy Brown Reference Nassy Brown, Hine, Keaton and Small2009, p. 209).

3 See the examples in subsequent sections of this article‥

4 ‘African American exceptionalism’ in the European context is often used narrowly to indicate frustration with the notions that the African American experience, models from African American Studies, or the transatlantic slavery prism can explain the entire Black diaspora. Using the term ‘centrality’ over ‘exceptionalism’ enables a broader analysis of the ways in which (perceptions of) Black America serve as an outsized reference point in Europe.

5 For European perceptions of ‘Blackness’ since the sixteenth century, see Hondius (Reference Hondius2017). Ege and Hurley argue that a dominant focus on ‘American’ Blackness replaced a more general ‘negrophilia’ in Germany after World War II (Reference Ege and Hurley2015, p. 18). Such shifts likely occurred across Europe, but continuities should not be ignored. Compare, for example: Perry (Reference Perry2014).

7 The myth of European colorblindness—the refusal to believe that race and racism are fundamental problems in Europe—results from the complex ways in which (imagined) notions of race and national identity developed among others in relation to the overseas contours of European colonization; the Enlightenment and democratic socialism; the Holocaust; and comparisons to the United States (Beaman and Fredette, Reference Beaman and Fredette2022; Salem and Thompson, Reference Salem and Thompson2016).

8 This also puts undue responsibility on Black Americans to function as ‘role models’ (Campt Reference Campt2005; Gerund Reference Gerund2013; Wright Reference Wright, Diedrich and Heinrichs2011).

9 For very different reasons, Black Americans to some extent confirmed notions of Europe as a ‘colorblind utopia’ (For example: Fairclough Reference Fairclough and Leuchtenburg2007; Visser-Maessen Reference Visser-Maessen2019; Whitmire Reference Whitmire, Einhorn, Harbison and Huss2022).

10 Black female stereotypes begotten from American popular culture also factor into such rejections. See also: Beaman and Fredette (Reference Beaman and Fredette2022), Cruel Ironies Collective (Reference Emejulu and Sobande2019), Diallo (Reference Diallo, Emejulu and Sobande2019), Othieno et al. (Reference Othieno, Emejulu and Sobande2019).

12 For example, for Sweden, Italy, and Germany, see, respectively: Teitelbaum (Reference Teitelbaum, Einhorn, Harbison and Huss2022); Hawthorne (Reference Hawthorne2017, Reference Hawthorne2022); Gerund (Reference Gerund2013). For the ‘Anglosphere’: Geary et al. (Reference Geary, Schofield and Sutton2020). However, the connections between Black America and European conceptions of Whiteness and national identity are not limited to White nationalism or (far) rightwing politics, but deeply ingrained in mainstream culture, at least in Germany (Gerund Reference Gerund2013).

13 Black Americans often were treated better in Europe, as, among others, their ‘Americanness’ offered them a ‘safety valve’ compared to African migrants (Coates Reference Coates2015; Fairclough Reference Fairclough and Leuchtenburg2007; Gerund Reference Gerund2013; Lamar Reference Lamar, Tricia Danielle Keaton and Stovall2012).

15 This claim has European-wide validity, albeit with national variations. For Germany, see for example: Grewe (Reference Grewe2022), Layne and Thurman (Reference Layne and Thurman2022). For Belgium: Mielants (Reference Mielants2006). For the Netherlands: Essed and Nimako (Reference Essed and Nimako2006).

16 Despite the long history and large number of Europeans who identify as Black and Muslim, there is a noticeable tendency to separate the two (Alexander Reference Alexander2018; Nimako Reference Nimako2012; Small Reference Small and Ratuva2019).

17 An early exception is Ward (Reference Ward1995).

18 Terms can also have different connotations within various local contexts, with disastrous side-effects. In the 1960s-1980s, for example, British politicians used scholarly works that inappropriately applied American terminology such as ‘ghettoes’ and ‘race riots’ to local race relations to enact policies that harmed minority communities (Small and Solomos, Reference Small and Solomos2006). Direct translations, like the German and Dutch ones for the American term ‘people of color,’ actually contain racist connotations (Faymonville Reference Faymonville2003; Hondius Reference Hondius, Essed and Hoving2014).

19 For example see: BDG Network (Reference Network2018); Black Central Europe network (2024), www.blackcentraleurope.com; Black European Academic Network (2024), www.beaneu.com; Black European Women’s Congress; BEST-Black European Studies (2005), https://www.hsozkult.de/event/id/event-54580.

20 Key elements within these initiatives are their explicit commitment to antiracism education and challenging established university practices. Interracial frictions within such initiatives furthered such practices and self-awareness and the creation of homegrown epistemologies, sometimes aided by Black American materials (Cruel Ironies Collective Reference Emejulu and Sobande2019; Diallo Reference Diallo, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Howse Reference Howse, Emejulu and Sobande2019; Qureshi Reference Qureshi, Emejulu and Sobande2019; University of Colour Reference Weiner and Báez2018). Some outside voices are finding a (limited) ear in academia in the United Kingdom, Germany, Belgium, France, Portugal, Spain, and the Netherlands (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017).

21 The high number of works by American-based scholars on Black Germany testifies to these unequal power dynamics (El-Tayeb Reference El-Tayeb2022; Layne and Thurman, Reference Layne and Thurman2022).

22 Nonetheless, this centrality of ‘Africa’ is anything but stable across time and space, with some contemporary Black Germans for example dropping the prefix ‘Afro’ in favor of ‘Black’ (Florvil Reference Florvil2020).

23 According to Jean Muteba Rahier, diachronic studies center “monocultural trajectories and histories of black community formation in exclusive national contexts” while synchronic ones combine “multiple histories and temporalities” and are “transnational in orientation [and] transcultural and interethnic at the core” (Gieskes Reference Gieskes2017, p. 10).

24 For similar calls outside Germany: Tuck and Boehmer (Reference Tuck and Boehmer2016); Ndiaye (Reference Ndiaye2008). Recent anthologies that feature Americanists and Black Europe scholars include: BDG Network (Reference Network2018), Bolaki and Broeck (Reference Bolaki and Broeck2015), Hine et al. (Reference Hine, Hine, Keaton and Small2009), Raphael-Hernandez (Reference Raphael-Hernandez2004a).

25 Others remain more interested in contributing to U.S. Black history, for example Wendt (Reference Wendt2009).

26 For example: Archer-Straw (Reference Archer-Straw2000), Jules-Rosette (Reference Jules-Rosette1998), Leininger-Miller (Reference Leininger-Miller2001), Moore (Reference Moore2021), Schmeisser (Reference Schmeisser2006), Waldschmidt-Nelson et al. (Reference Waldschmidt-Nelson, Chatelain and Monteith2015). Slightly earlier examples include Fabre (Reference Fabre1993) and Stovall (Reference Stovall1996).

27 Aside from Malcolm X, Martin Luther King and Angela Davis appear to receive most attention. See also: Hodder (Reference Hodder2016).

28 For ‘the Long Movement’ see: Hall (Reference Hall2005), Cha-Jua and Lang (Reference Cha-Jua and Lang2007). For Black Power Studies see the work of Joseph (e.g. Reference Joseph2009). For Black Internationalism: Bedasse et al. (Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020). Examples of Black Internationalism include: Blain and Gill (Reference Blain and Gill2019), Frazier (Reference Frazier2014), Makalani (Reference Makalani2011), McDuffie (Reference McDuffie2011), Umoren (Reference Umoren2018).

29 While running parallel to the development of Black Power Studies in the United States, this literature must also be understood in relation to British historiography that addresses imperialism and postcolonial migration, and the desire to move away from how White politicians defined a ‘color problem’ in favor of “how immigrants’ everyday lives defined Black political life” (Perry Reference Perry2014, p. 652). Other recent works include: Angelo (Reference Angelo2018), Bunce and Field (Reference Bunce, Field and Egbuna2011), Kelley and Tuck (Reference Kelley and Tuck2015), Perry (Reference Perry2015), Narayan (Reference Narayan2019), Waters (Reference Waters2019).

30 For a comparison to the Netherlands, see De Vlugt (Reference De Vlugt2023).

31 The objective of Blackening Europe for instance was taking “African America”—rather than Black European communities themselves—“as the starting point for a discussion about the blackening of Europe in general” (Raphael-Hernandez Reference Raphael-Hernandez and Raphael-Hernandez2004b, p. 2).

32 Emily Frazier-Rath, for instance, laments how the experiences of German children fathered by Black American G.I.s “have been relegated to other fields” and “excluded from ‘the story’ of the Black German community” (Reference Frazier-Rath2022, p. 471).

33 Black Internationalism can be criticized for de-centering Africa and Africana intellectual traditions (Bedasse et al., Reference Bedasse, Butler, Fernandes, Laumann, Nagaraja, Talton and Thurman2020).

34 For the United Kingdom, see works by Paul Gilroy, A. Sivanandan, and Stuart Hall. For France: Babana-Hampton (Reference Babana-Hampton2009), Keaton (Reference Keaton2010), Keaton et al. (Reference Keaton, Sharpley-Whiting and Stovall2012a). For Germany: Campt (Reference Campt2003), Faymonville (Reference Faymonville2003), Wright (Reference Wright2003).

35 In the United Kingdom, the growth of race studies is already spurring “its fragmentation and dilution” (Alexander Reference Alexander2018, p. 1044).

36 Such linguistic grievances go back to the 1980s (Ohene-Nyako Reference Ohene-Nyako2019a).

37 The use of English can also function as a source of empowerment and a barrier of protection (Faymonville Reference Faymonville2003). For example, today’s activist movements against Blackface in the Netherlands publish literature and blogs in English to connect with international audiences for support, networking, and sharing and enhancing organizing tactics and knowledge production (Pitts Reference Pitts2020). Likewise, Dutch scholar Gloria Wekker deliberately published her White Innocence (Reference Wekker2016) in English because she wanted to be “part of a larger decolonial circle of discourse” that could additionally protect against having the merit of her work be defined solely by Dutch critics invested in the myth of European colorblindness (Wekker Reference Wekker, Weiner and Báez2018, p. 138). The Dutch version (Witte Onschuld, 2017) includes a chapter on the English version’s reception.

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