Taharka Ade is an assistant professor in the Department of Africana Studies at San Diego State University. Dr. Ade is an Africologist who primarily investigates the African antecedents of various cultural phenomena among African Americans ranging from language, religion, the arts, corporeal aesthetics, and motif.
"“Taharka Adé’s W. E. B. Du Bois’ Africa: Scrambling for a New Africa is a penetrating and origi-nal work of African historical analysis. Professor Adé successfully carries forth an analysis of Du Bois’ conception of Africa that is robust and rich in layering the texture of agency, perspective and culture in an innovative fabric on Pan Africanism. Adé is the leader of a new generation of Afrocentric intellectuals who posit culture, historical and contemporary, as the center of social and political realities. What he has discovered in his study of Du Bois’ Pan Africanism is the inadequacy and limit of ""race"" as a meaningful concept.” — Molefi Kete Asante, author, The History of Africa, and Professor, Africology, Temple University “Taharka Adé demonstrates the infinite vitality of Du Bois’s archive and its capacity to challenge new generations of scholars to use contemporary paradigms to interpret and map Du Bois’s vision for Africa.” — Christel Temple, Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Pittsburgh ""W.E.B Du Bois is considered by many to be one of the greatest intellectuals of the 20th century. Dr. Adé wonderfully captured the essence of Du Bois’ brilliance in “Du Bois’ Africa: Scrambling for a New Africa” while simultaneously positioning himself as a 21st century scholar with extraordinary potential."" — Anthony Browder, Founder and Director of IKG Cultural Resources."