Halifu Osumare's headshot
UC Davis Professor Emerita Halifu Osumare returns to campus this month for a reading from her new book, "Dancing the Afrofuture."
Photo courtesy of Halifu Osumare
From the Stage to the Page

UC Davis Professor Emerita Halifu Osumare Returns to Campus to Celebrate New Book

Professor Emerita Halifu Osumare always had a calling: to bring attention to the impact African culture has had on U.S. popular culture and around the world. From showcasing the evolution of dance as a young Bay Area artist to studying hip-hop later in life as an academic, Osumare has helped tell the story of black culture to her students and beyond. 

Now, in her second memoir, Dancing the Afrofuture: Hula, Hip-Hop and the Dunham Legacy, she continues to tell that story alongside her own.  

“I'm very interested in black culture and my mission, as I call it, has always been to illuminate the contributions of black culture to not only American society but the world,” Osumare said. “Giving credit where credit is due.” 

Halifu Osumare stands in the center of a stage with her arms outstretched beneath the title of the book "Dancing the Afrofuture"

In Dancing the Afrofuture, published February 2024, Osumare tells the story of her life since the early 1990s when she, seeing how impactful it would be on our society, began studying hip-hop.  

“The introduction to the book is titled ‘From Dancing on the Stage to Dancing on the Page.’ That metaphor gives people a sense of what I'm covering in the book,” Osumare said. “In the process, I’m using a lens of afro-futurism to look at where people of African descent are going culturally and technologically.” 

The National Museum of African American History and Culture defines “Afrofuturism” as a term that “expresses notions of Black identity, agency and freedom through art, creative works and activism that envision liberated futures for Black life.” The Washington D.C. museum currently has an exhibit titled Afrofuturism: A History of Black Futures

Osumare argues that Afrofuturism has been present in society for decades, giving black Americans a sense of self-empowerment by embracing a mindset of “liberated imagination.” Given the history of slavery, discrimination and disenfranchisement, she said, it’s always been important for African Americans to know “we have a future and that we can define that future ourselves.” 

Her first memoir, Dancing in Blackness, won the Selma Jeanne Cohen Prize in Dance Aesthetics from the American Society of Aesthetics in 2019.  

Osumare held readings in Sacramento, Davis and San Francisco. She returned to campus on Wednesday, March 13, for a book celebration in Hart Hall 3201. The event was hosted by the Department of African American and African Studies. She planned to read from chapters covering her more than a decade at the university.  

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