Nah Dove | |
---|---|
Born | 1940s |
Education | Polytechnic of North London (University of North London); Institute of Education |
Alma mater | State University of New York at Buffalo |
Occupation(s) | Author, lecturer and scholar |
Employer | Temple University |
Notable work | Afrikan Mothers: Bearers of Culture, Makers of Social Change (1998); The Afrocentric School: A Blueprint (2021); Being Human Being: Transforming the Race Discourse (2021) |
Relatives | Evelyn Dove Mabel Dove Danquah (aunts) |
Nah Dove (born 1940s)[1] is an author, lecturer and scholar in African-American studies. She has lived in Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Canada, the UK, and in the US, where she is an assistant professor instruction in the department of Africology and African American studies at the college of liberal arts, Temple University, Philadelphia.[2]
Her book Afrikan Mothers: Bearers of Culture, Makers of Social Change was published in 1998; some of her other publications include The Afrocentric School [a blueprint] (2021), Being Human Being: Transforming the Race Discourse (Universal Write Publications, 2021) co-authored with Dr Molefi Kete Asante, and a contribution to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby.[3]