“…Since the publication of “Exploring Afrocentricity: An Analysis of the Rhetoric of Jesse Jackson” (Walker & Greene, 2006) and “Exploring Afrocentricity: An Analysis of the Rhetoric of Barack Obama” (Stewart, 2011) scholars have researched Afrocentricity (Jenkins & Moore, 2013; Pratt-Clarke, 2014; Tolliver, 2015), investigated Afrocentric communication (Exkano, 2013; Meyerson, 2015; Sesanti, 2016) and conducted studies using an Afrocentric approach (Bonsu, 2016; Engel-Di Mauro et al, 2014; Howard, 2011; Kumah-Abiwu, 2016; Tillotson, 2017). Whether investigating African religion (Bonsu, 2016), teaching at an HBCU (Meyerson, 2015), or investigating the effects of White privilege on black voices in the media (Redding, 2017), researchers continue to view Afrocentricity as relevant for understanding certain contexts and as a viable tool for analysis.…”