Envisioning Black Futures through Ancestral Memory: Afrofuturist Frameworks for Story and Technology
Divine ChideraThis paper argues that ancestral memory functions both as a mode of knowledge and as a framework for designing Black futures. Drawing from Afrofuturist theory and select literary works, the study explores how collective memory, oral traditions, and mythic imagination inform not only storytelling but also technological ethics and community-centered innovation. Through readings of Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower and Nnedi Okorafor’s Binti, the paper shows how ancestral motifs can generate sustainable models of resilience and techno-cultural practice. It concludes with an applied framework for integrating ancestral memory into speculative design, narrative systems, and decentralized technology.

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[Uploaded on Oct 15, 2025, 1:41:33 PM][Afrofuturism, ancestral memory, Black futures, speculative design, storytelling, digital humanities, decolonial technology]

Notes

This study contributes to Africa’s ongoing dialogue about how technology can emerge from indigenous epistemologies and cultural continuity. By reframing ancestral knowledge as a design principle, it offers a localized approach to innovation that aligns with communal ethics and sustainability. The framework proposed here can inform African-led projects in decentralized technology, digital heritage preservation, and community-based design ensuring that technological progress remains rooted in local values and collective memory.