Andrew Apter

Andrew Apter

Andrew Apter

Professor

Email: aapter@history.ucla.edu

Office: 5369 Bunche Hall

Phone: 310-794-9547

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Biography

My educational background in philosophy and sociocultural anthropology has shaped my critical approach to cultural and historical interpretation, with an emphasis on West Africa and the Black Atlantic.

My first major study—Black Critics and Kings: The Hermeneutics of Power in Yoruba Society (Chicago, 1992)—informs my subsequent Afro-Atlantic explorations of creolization, gender and sexuality.  A second study, The Pan-African Nation: Oil and the Spectacle of Culture in Nigeria (Chicago, 2005), highlights the contradictions of Nigeria’s oil economy through the mirror of cultural production, and has lead to my more recent reflections on the performative dimensions of black cultural citizenship.  In the more technical vein of sociolinguistics, I have developed a model of critical agency that is grounded in vernacular ritual language genres, and contributes to the decolonization of Africanist scholarship, as I argue in Beyond Words: Discourse and Critical Agency in Africa (Chicago, 2007).

When I shifted to UCLA in 2003 (history and anthropology departments) after thirteen years at the University of Chicago (anthropology), I gravitated toward the complex historicities of Afro-Atlantic ritual “archives,” initially framed in my co-edited volume (with Robin Derby), Activating the Past: History and Memory in the Black Atlantic World (Newcastle upon Tyne, 2010). As a founding member of our department’s Atlantic History Cluster, I am currently pursuing two related lines of research. The first critically reformulates Afrocentric cultural dynamics in the shaping of New World historical trajectories, as developed in my collected Yoruba-centered essays on this topic, Oduduwa’s Chain: Locations of Culture in the Yoruba-Atlantic (Chicago, 2018). The second, entitled History in the Dungeon: Atlantic Slavery and the Spirits of Capitalism (in progress), reinterprets the rise of Atlantic slavery through its variably commodified and fetishized forms, a project that focuses on slave forts and castles and restores enslaved Africans (and their hyper-alienated labor power) to the historically repressed epicenters of capitalist modernity.

Field of Study

African, World

Research

West Africa (Yoruba, Nigeria) and the African Diaspora (Haiti, Dominican Republic, Cuba), History of Anthropology, Social Theory.

Publications

Recent Articles:

 

Books:

Recent Courses:

Awards & Grants

  • 2010  John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship.
  • 2007 Amaury Talbot Prize for The Pan-African Nation, awarded by the Royal Anthropological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
  • 2007 Co-Principal Research Director, Social Science Research Council-Dissertation Proposal Development Fellowship (DPDF) for the field of “Black Atlantic Studies.”
  • 2000  National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship.
  • 1987-89, Society of Fellows in the Humanities, Columbia University.
  • Field Prize awarded to the best Yale University dissertation in poetics, literature or religion.
  • 1978-80, Mellon Fellowship, Clare College, Cambridge University.

Degrees

  • PhD Yale University (Anthropology), 1987
  • MA Yale University (Anthropology), 1982
  • BA Cambridge University (Social Anthropology), 1980
  • BA Yale University (Philosophy), 1978