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Voices of the Diaspora: The Artisans Behind the Canvas

Art transcends boundaries, echoing emotions, stories, and histories. Our artists are the pulse of the Miami Museum of Contemporary Art of the African Diaspora. Through their unique lenses, they capture the essence of the African Diaspora, weaving a narrative that binds continents, cultures, and communities. Discover the brilliance behind each masterpiece, the visionary artisans who breathe life into art.

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Discover Artists of the African Diaspora:

This is the first phase of Miami MoCAAD’s Digital Artist Library. This will be your go-to place to find artists.

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Adler Guerrier
Adler Guerrier

Adler Guerrier

BIOGRAPHY

Adler Guerrier (born 1975, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti) is a Haitian-born artist whose multidisciplinary practice explores place, identity, urban space, politics, and the poetics of everyday geography. Working across photography, drawing, collage, printmaking, sculpture, and installation, Guerrier examines the social and psychological dimensions of landscape through assemblage, walking, recurring forms, and the recomposition of text and image.  Guerrier received a BFA from the University of Florida/New World School of the Arts in 2000. His work often engages diaspora, migration, Black life, architecture, and the built environment, using photographs, prints, sculptural interventions, and collaged works on paper to consider how race, class, and culture are embedded in cities and in the ways people move through them. Miami is a central site in his practice, functioning both as a lived geography and as a broader framework for thinking about belonging, urban change, and memory.  His work has been exhibited at Pérez Art Museum Miami, the California African American Museum, the Whitney Biennial, Crisp-Ellert Art Museum, and David Castillo Gallery, among other venues. His work is held in collections including Pérez Art Museum Miami, ICA Miami, the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Walker Art Center. Adler Guerrier lives and works in Miami, Florida.

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Aimé Mpane
Aimé Mpane

Aimé Mpane

BIOGRAPHY

Aimé Mpane (born 1968, in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo) is a Congolese artist whose multidisciplinary practice explores colonialism, identity, place, memory, and the enduring relationship between the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Belgium. Working across sculpture, installation, painting, mosaic-like wall hangings, and carved wood portraiture, Mpane examines postcolonial history and contemporary Congolese life through rough-hewn surfaces, layered construction, and the repeated use of wood as a materially and symbolically charged medium.  Mpane studied at the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Kinshasa, where he trained in sculpture. His work often engages colonial history, race, public memory, and Congolese self-representation, using wood carving, painted surfaces, portraiture, and a traditional adze to consider how identity is formed across personal experience and larger historical structures. Many of his sculptures and installations address the aftermath of Belgian colonialism, while his portraits of people encountered in Kinshasa foreground the social and emotional texture of contemporary urban life.  His work has been exhibited at the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, the Liverpool Biennial, the University of Wyoming Art Museum, Haines Gallery, and the National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. He received the Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Prize from The Phillips Collection, and his work is held in collections including The Phillips Collection and the Studio Museum in Harlem. Aimé Mpane lives and works between Brussels and Kinshasa.

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Alexandra Antoine
Alexandra Antoine

Alexandra Antoine

BIOGRAPHY

Alexandra Antoine is a Haitian-American interdisciplinary visual artist and cultural apprentice whose multidisciplinary practice explores Haitian heritage, portraiture, food, farming, physical labor, and traditional artistic practices across the African diaspora. Working across collage, portraiture, mural-making, social practice, food-based work, and education, Antoine examines memory, lineage, healing, and community through storytelling, visual design, and forms of making rooted in both domestic and collective life.  Antoine earned an Associate’s degree in Fine Arts from Valencia Community College in 2010 and a BFA with an emphasis in Art Education from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2014. Her work often engages family archive, Haitian culture, apprenticeship, portraiture, and the labor of cultivation, using collage, murals, photography, food, and community-based practice to consider identity, cultural transmission, and the everyday processes through which knowledge is shared across generations. Sources also note her time spent in Léogâne, Haiti, the birthplace of her parents, as an important foundation for her visual language.  Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, with solo exhibitions at boundary, Chicago Art Department, and Rootwork Gallery in Chicago, and she has participated in projects with The Heirloom Collards Project, Envisioning Justice, and artist residency and teaching initiatives in the Chicago area. In 2022, she was named Artist in Residence at Lake Forest College. Alexandra Antoine lives and works in Chicago, Illinois. 

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Alvaro Barrington
Alvaro Barrington

Alvaro Barrington

BIOGRAPHY

Alvaro Barrington (born Feb 1, 1983, Caracas, Venezuela) is a multidisciplinary artist whose work spans painting, textile, installation, and performance, engaging histories of migration, diaspora, and cultural exchange. Raised between the Caribbean and New York and now based in London, Barrington’s practice reflects a transnational perspective shaped by movement, hybridity, and community. His work is characterized by a material-driven approach that incorporates burlap, textiles, acrylic, yarn, and found objects, often referencing domestic labor, craft traditions, and everyday life. Drawing inspiration from Caribbean culture, hip-hop, jazz, and global artistic lineages—from modernist painting to textile practices—Barrington creates works that merge abstraction and figuration while foregrounding process and collaboration. Barrington frequently explores the relationship between art and social space, treating exhibitions as sites of gathering, exchange, and performance. His works often reference historical figures, cultural icons, and personal networks, positioning art as a living, relational practice rather than a fixed object. Through bold color, layered materials, and tactile surfaces, his paintings and installations emphasize presence, memory, and the interconnectedness of global Black cultures. His work has been widely exhibited internationally, including major exhibitions and biennials, and he represented Grenada at the 60th Venice Biennale (2024). Barrington lives and works in London.

Birthday

1983

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Alvin Baltrop
Alvin Baltrop

Alvin Baltrop

BIOGRAPHY

Alvin Baltrop (born December 11, 1948, in the Bronx, New York City – died February 1, 2004) was an American photographer whose documentary practice explored queer social worlds, erotic freedom, urban abandonment, class, and the fragile forms of community that emerged along New York’s West Side piers in the 1970s and 1980s. Working primarily in black-and-white photography, Baltrop examined intimacy, vulnerability, sexuality, and survival through immersive observation, serial documentation, and a sustained proximity to the people and spaces he photographed.  Baltrop studied photography at the School of Visual Arts in New York from 1973 to 1975. Before and during that period, he served in the Navy as a medic during the Vietnam War and continued photographing those around him. His work often engages queer history, social documentary, the archive, and urban landscape, using direct yet empathetic image-making to consider desire, marginality, bodily freedom, and the disappearance of spaces that once held underground gay life and artistic experimentation.  His work has been exhibited at the Bronx Museum of the Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, Galerie Buchholz, and Modern Art, London, and it has gained major posthumous recognition for its record of pre-AIDS queer life on Manhattan’s waterfront. Baltrop encountered rejection from the art establishment during his lifetime, but his photographs are now understood as vital to the histories of photography, queer New York, and Black visual culture. Alvin Baltrop lived and worked in New York City. 

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1948

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Anthony Akinbola
Anthony Akinbola

Anthony Akinbola

BIOGRAPHY

Anthony Akinbola (born 1991, in Columbia, Missouri) is a Nigerian-American artist whose multidisciplinary practice explores Black identity, commodity culture, abstraction, and the social meanings embedded in everyday materials associated with Black life. Working across painting, sculpture, installation, and found-object assemblage, Akinbola examines self-fashioning, commercial circulation, and cultural value through durags, pomade cans, barbershop imagery, and other objects that carry both intimate and political resonance.  Akinbola received a B.A. in communications and media from SUNY Purchase College. Raised between the United States and Nigeria, he often engages Black hair culture, consumer goods, and material signifiers of diasporic experience, using repetition, stitching, accumulation, and acts of transformation to consider how identity is shaped through commerce, ritual, display, and everyday use. His work frequently moves between sculpture and painting, reimagining familiar objects as formal and conceptual devices that speak to Black individuation, joy, fetishization, and the politics of visibility.  His work has been exhibited at the SCAD Museum of Art, Sean Kelly, Night Gallery, Galerie Krinzinger, Carbon 12, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, and the Queens Museum, and has appeared in group exhibitions at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Baltimore Museum of Art. His work is held in the Guggenheim Museum’s permanent collection and the Zabludowicz Collection. Anthony Akinbola lives and works in New York.

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South Africa
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West Africa
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North America
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Mexico
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Mid-atlantic
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Europe
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Southeast (USA)
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Africa
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West (USA)
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South America
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Asia
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The Caribbean
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Southwest (USA)
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Australia
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Mid-West (USA)
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Canada
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Northeast (USA)
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Middle East
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South (USA)
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Intuitive
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Textile-based
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Materiality
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Journalistic
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Geometric
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Industrial
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Mythic
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Symbolic
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Ritualistic
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Representational
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Neo-expressionism
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Sculptural
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Narrative
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Minimalist
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Conceptual
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Abstract
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Portraiture
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Surrealist
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Cubism
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Interactive
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Figurative
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Installation
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Formalist
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Realism
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Architectural
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Documentary
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Expressionist
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Landscape
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Experimental
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Assemblage
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Decorative Arts
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Collage
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Medium
Pottery
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Interdisciplinary
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Film
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Installation
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Photography
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Multidisciplinary
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Mixed Media
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Work on paper (Prints and/or Drawings)
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Illustration
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Glass
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Text
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Architecture
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Sculpture
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Design
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Public Art
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Fashion
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Beadwork
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Digital
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Ceramics
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Video
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Painting
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Sonic / Audio
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Fiber and Textile
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Collage
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Performance Art
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Assemblage
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Materiality
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Place
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Indigenous
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Transformation
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Texture
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Heritage
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Language
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Domestic Life
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Education
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Archives
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Family
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Translation
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Diaspora
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Motherhood
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Athleticism
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Social Justice
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Ancestry
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Ritual
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Mental Health
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Journalistic / Documentary
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Music
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Technology
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Leisure
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Environment
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Urban Environment
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Culture
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Masculinity
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Mythology
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Post-colonialism
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Consumerism
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Domestic Labor
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Femininity
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Daily Life
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Spirituality
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History
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Memory
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Power
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Afrofuturism
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Dance
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Feminism
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Human Experience
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Migration
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Rebellion
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Space
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Identity
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Pan-Africanism
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Luxury
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Enslavement
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Beauty
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Labor
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Media
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Psychology
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Body
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Science
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Race
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Symbolism
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Economics
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Time
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Protest
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Community
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Journalism
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Humor
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Critique
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Gender/Sexuality
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Prison Industrial Complex
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Philosophy
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Cross-Cultural
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Bias
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Popular Culture
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Religion
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Class
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Fashion
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Black Nationalism
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Nature/Ecologies
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Individualism
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Politics
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