| Author | Henry Louis Gates Kwame Anthony Appiah As of 2005[update], >400 scholarly contributors |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | General knowledge,Africana studies |
| Published | Since 1999 |
| Publisher | Basic Civitas Books Oxford University Press |
Publication date | 1999-2005 (printed version) |
| Publication place |
|
| Media type | Multivolume print |
| 031 |
Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience, orEncyclopædia Africana (Latin for 'African Encyclopaedia'), is a compendium ofAfricana studies includingAfrican studies and the "Pan-African diaspora." It was originally inspired byW. E. B. Du Bois' 1909 projectEncyclopedia Africana. Du Bois envisioned an encyclopedia that was to be "unashamedlyAfro-Centric but not indifferent to the impact of the outside world."[1] "Africana studies" is ahypernym with subdisciplines including African studies, African American studies, etc.
Du Bois died before ever making the project a reality. Thus, the project was continued byHenry Louis Gates andKwame Anthony Appiah. The two edited and published the first volume in 1999. The first edition appeared in a single volume, of which about a third each was dedicated to North AmericanAfrican-American studies, toAfro-Latin American topics of Latin America and the Caribbean and toAfrica proper.
The second edition was published in 2005 byOxford University Press in five volumes, including more than 3500 entries on 3960 pages.[2][3]

Daniel Alexander Payne Murray was one of the first African-Americans to work as alibrarian at theLibrary of Congress in 1871. In 1899, Murray organized an exhibit at the1900 Paris Exposition onNegro authors. Under his direction, his award-winning exhibit became the core of the Library of Congress's Colored Author Collection. Murray planned to expand his collection and create anencyclopedia ofAfrican-American achievement.[4]
In 1901, Du Bois widened the scope of the project to encompass the entireAfrican diaspora. He suggested that the encyclopedia be called the "Encyclopedia Africana" in a similar fashion to theEncyclopædia Britannica. Du Bois envisioned a scientific and comprehensive work on Africa and peoples of African descent that would refute theEnlightenment notion of Black people as devoid of civilization and the hallmarks of humanity. Due to lack of support from the established philanthropies, the project died.[5]
Du Bois never completed the project. However, the idea of an encyclopedia that explored the Black experience was revived and expanded. In the late 1970s, while Gates and Appiah were attending theUniversity of Cambridge inEngland, they first discussed the project. They proposed the project to theBritannica encyclopedia company but were told it lacked financial viability.[6]
In February 1998, Appiah and Gates, and their team of African-American studies scholars, partnered withMicrosoft to releaseMicrosoft Encarta Africana, a CD-ROM variation of theEncyclopedia Africana accompanying the later released print version.[6] Microsoft had the separate product for a brief period. Starting with the 2001 version, it was integrated into the main Encarta Reference Suite.[7]
The 1st edition was praised for seemingly fulfilling Du Bois's vision of creating a compendium that, likeEncyclopédie, "would serve as a springboard for future scholarship and a bulwark against racist misconceptions." In 1999,Publishers Weekly reviewed the 1st edition and admired how "accessible" it is.[8]
Filmmaker,Kahlil Joseph, was inspired by the encyclopedia. He deployed symbolic and literal elements of the project into his art exhibit and 2025 filmBLKNWS: Terms & Conditions, a "filmic collage" of African and diasporic culture.[9]