
Outside Podcast African Surfing and the Ocean as a Source of Joy, with Professor Kevin Dawson
Aug 27, 2025
In this engaging dialogue, Professor Kevin Dawson, a UC Merced historian specializing in the Atlantic world and African diaspora, discusses the often-overlooked contributions of Black surfers to the sport. He emphasizes how surfing connects him to a rich African aquatic heritage and shares personal stories that reveal the joy and complexity of riding the waves. Dawson also reflects on a humorous encounter with Jason Momoa and delves into the historical layers of surfing tied to the Atlantic slave trade, showcasing the interplay of joy and sorrow within these waters.
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Experience Deepens Historical Reading
- Kevin blends archival research with embodied fieldwork by surfing and diving at the same locations he studies.
- Physical experience informs his reading of historical accounts and reveals meanings text alone misses.
Surfing Canoes And Plywood At Cape Coast
- In 1997 Kevin watched fishermen and kids at Cape Coast surf in canoes and on plywood boards, echoing traditional practices.
- Those scenes challenged his U.S. assumptions about Black absence from aquatic culture.
Earliest Written Surfing Accounts In Africa
- Dawson found 17th– and 18th-century European accounts that clearly describe African surfing long before Cook's Hawaiian account.
- These sources show surfing was practiced and observed along Africa's west coast centuries earlier than commonly told.

