Online Journals
African Studies Quarterly: The Online Journal for African Studies (U. of Florida)
Anthurium:
A Caribbean Studies Journal
A bi-annual, peer-reviewed journal that publishes original
works by Caribbean writers and scholars worldwide exclusively
in electronic form. The journal promotes a lively exchange
among writers and scholars in the arts, humanities, and
social sciences who hold diverse perspectives on Caribbean
literature and culture and offers a mixture of fiction,
poetry, plays, critical essays, cultural studies, interviews,
and visual art. Book reviews and bibliographies, special
thematic issues, and original art and photography are some of
the features of this international journal of Caribbean arts
and letters. Anthurium is a non-profit publication and
project of Caribbean Literary Studies in the Department of
English at the University of Miami. It is published in
association with the University's Richter Library Digital
Media Lab, supported solely by the University of
Miami.
Belk Library E-Journals: Africa/African-American Studies (Elon University students, faculty, and staff only—contact Belk Library for assistance)
Harlem:
Mecca of the New Negro
A hypermedia edition of the March 1925 Survey Graphic Harlem
Number
(facsimile reproduction and critical apparatus for an
illustrated issue of Survey magazine, the journal of social
work in America in the 1920s) (Matthew G. Kirschenbaum and
Catherine Tousignant, U. Virginia)
Safundi: The Journal of South
African and American Comparative
Safundi is…an online community of scholars,
professionals, and students interested in viewing and
analyzing the United States and South Africa from an
international, transnational, and/or comparative
perspective.
Womanist Theory and
Research
“Published by the Womanist Studies Consortium at The
University of Georgia, Womanist Theory and Research is a
biannual, peer-edited, interdisciplinary, intercultural,
international journal on women of color. Reflecting womanist
inclusivity, WTR provides a forum for exchanging feminist
research, theory, and ideas among women-of-color scholars and
students in the humanities, social sciences, education,
theology, law, medicine, politics, librarianship, journalism,
art, information technologies, and
telecommunications.”