News & Events
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The Black Room @ UC Berkeley
November 2, 2015
The Black Room: Revisiting "Blackness" In The Global 21st Century Program Series: Interdisciplinary Faculty Programs The Black Room: Revisiting “Blackness” in the Global 21stCentury organized by Nadia Ellis (English), Leigh Raiford (African American Studies), Darieck Scott (African American Studies), and Bryan Wagner (English), deals with “The Black Room,” an inclusive space that exists to foster critical reflection and exchange about foundational terms and concepts in African American and African Diaspora Studies. This project will answer questions such as: What is blackness? Is it a culture, a politics, a standpoint, or a way of being? What does it mean to…
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Liberating Dreams
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Faculty, Ph.D. candidates win fellowships for humanities, social science research
August 6, 2015
http://news.berkeley.edu/2015/07/24/faculty-and-doctoral-candidates-win-fellowships-for-humanities-social-science-research/
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Interview: On Cold War China in the Black Radical Imagination
April 30, 2015
Check out this latest post on the African American Intellectual History Society's blog--an interview with Robeson Taj Frazier on his latest book, THE EAST IS BLACK: COLD WAR CHINA IN THE BLACK RADICAL IMAGINATION. Dr. Frazier is a graduate alumni of the African Diaspora Studies program, and presently an Assistant Professor at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. His research explores black political culture and popular culture, globalization and cross-cultural traffic, and African diasporic intellectual history, with a specific focus on the intersections between African American culture and other cultures, especially 20th and 21st…
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St. Clair Drake Research Symposiym – May 4, 2015
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The Black Room presents… Kobena Mercer
April 18, 2015
The Black Room: Revisiting “Blackness” in the Global 21stCentury presents... “Afromodern versus Post-Black? A Diasporic Historiography for African American Art” Kobena Mercer, Professor in History of Art and African American Studies at Yale University Monday, April 27th 308A Doe Library 4-6pm Lecture Abstract: Scholarship in African American art history has flourished between 2000 and 2015, yet this was also when “post-black” gained currency to suggest race no longer matters in culture and society. Arguing that “Afromodernism,” a term Robert Farris Thompson coined in 1991, offers a more flexible analytical tool for diaspora-based research, this paper argues that conceptual resources for such an…
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Rickey Vincent discusses “Party Music” on April 27th
April 16, 2015
Please join the American Cultures Center as we host Dr. Rickey Vincent as he discusses his latest book, 'Party Music: The Inside Story of the Black Panthers' Band and How Black Power Transformed Soul Music .' Monday, April 27th 5pm - 7pm 554 Barrows Hall, Barbara Christian Reading Room Introduction by Dr. Waldo E. Martin, Jr. Appetizers will be provided Chicago Review Press http://tinyurl.com/acpartymusic Party Music is both social movement analysis and radical music history. Party Music tells the story of The Lumpen, the short lived R&B band comprised of rank-and-file members of the Black Panther Party in 1970. The interaction of soul music aesthetics and black power…
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MoAD Lecture | Darieck B. Scott
April 12, 2015
LECTURE | Tell Me More: Scholarly Voices Across the African Diaspora with Dr. Darieck B. Scott April 18, 2015 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm Free with MoAD Admission "Black (Super)Power Fantasies: Blade the Vampire Hunter and the Black Male Superhero Figure" In this lecture, Dr. Darieck Scott will discuss the monstrous and the sexual dimensions of black male imagery in superhero comics, focusing on the character “Blade”—also the main character of a trio of Hollywood action movies starring Wesley Snipes. He will discuss how comic book male superheroes’ extreme hyper-masculinity becomes uncomfortably exaggerated when the superhero is a black male,…
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Black Graduation 2015!
March 30, 2015
Black Graduation 2015 will take place on Saturday, May 23, 2015 at 2pm in Zellerbach Hall. As always, Black Graduation is planned and hosted by the staff and faculty in the Department of African American Studies as the primary graduation ceremony for students earning undergraduate and graduate degrees in African American and African Diaspora Studies. While our first responsibility is to serve our majors, we are happy to open up the ceremony to students graduating from other programs as a service to the broader Cal community. Online registration for Black Graduation this year begins on March 15, register at http://berkeleyblackgrad.wufoo.com/forms/black-graduation-registration/ Online…
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Change You CAN’T Believe In: How a Police Texting Scandal Echoes San Francisco’s Racist Past
March 30, 2015
San Francisco and its environs enjoy a longstanding reputation as a progressive haven within the US, a place associated with gay pride, school desegregation, freedom of speech, hippies, and, now, hipsters attempting to advance human potential and quality of life through technology. But as recent events in the city attest, there’s another San Francisco, one where only 6% of city residents (but 56% of the city’s jail population) are black; a San Francisco built on a legacy of decades of imported racism.