A S S O C I A T I O N F O R T H E S T U D Y O F A F R I C A N A M E R I C A N L I F E A N D H I S T O R Y ® 1 0 7 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G & C O N F E R E N C E T H E 2 0 2 2 B L A C K H I S T O R Y T H E M E : B L A C K H E A L T H A N D W E L L N E S S S E P T E M B E R 2 9 , 2 0 2 2 - O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 2 2 Academic Program Journal
W W W . A S A L H . O R G / C O N F E R E N C E | 2 0 2 . 2 3 8 . 5 9 1 0 | # A S A L H # A S A L H 2 0 2 2 2 0 2 2 B L A C K H I S T O R Y T H E M E : B L A C K H E A L T H A N D W E L L N E S S ASALH ASALH.BLACKHISTORY ASALH BHM ASALHTV CONFERENCE PRO BLE IN-PERSON AT THE RENAIS HOTEL & SPA (MONTGOMERY, ) N ASALH TV. A S S O C I A T I O N F O R T H E S T U D Y O F A F R I C A N A M E R I C A N L I F E A N D H I S T O R Y ® 107TH ANNUAL MEETING & CONFERENCE S E P T E M B E R 2 9 O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 2 2 M O N T G O M E R Y , A L A B A M A Chair, Department of Psychology Loyola Marymount University CHAIR CHERYL T. GRILLS, PH.D. Professor of English/Director of Graduate Studies in Literature and Criticism Indiana University, Pennsylvania PRESENTER VERONICA T. WATSON, PH.D. erintendent, Petersbu ional Battlefield ESENTER WIS H. OGERS JR. nior Pastor, St. Paul ssionary Baptist Church rrisburg, Pennsylvania ESENTER OSEPH L. REEN, PH.D. T H E 4 0 0 Y E A R S O F A F R I C A N A M E R I C A N H I S T O R Y C O M M I S S I O N W O R K S H O P I Fear For My Life
3MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS O C I A T I O N F O R T H E S T U D Y O F A F R I C A N A M E R I C A N L I F E A N D H I S T O R Y ® S E P T E M B E R 2 0 - 2 4 , 2 0 2 3 108TH ANNUAL MEETING & CONFERENCE Save the Date Jacksonville, Florida HYATT REGENCY JACKSONVILLE RIVERFRONT 2 0 2 3 B L A C K H I S T O R Y T H E M E : B L A C K R E S I S T A N C E W W W . A S A L H . O R G O R C A L L 2 0 2 . 2 3 8 . 5 9 1 0
A s a l h F i l m f e s t i v a l F R I D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 3 0 , 2 0 2 2 F A N N I E L O U H A M E R ' S A M E R I C A | 8 : 3 0 A . M . 1 0 : 0 0 A . M . C S T T H E S I X T R I P L E E I G H T | 1 0 : 1 5 A . M . - 1 1 : 4 5 A . M . C S T A C R I M E O N T H E B A Y O U | 1 2 : 0 0 P . M . - 2 : 0 0 P . M . C S T S T O R M I N G C A E S A R S P A L A C E | 2 : 1 5 P . M . - 4 : 0 0 P . M . C S T R E C L A I M I N G P O W E R | 6 : 3 0 P . M . 8 : 0 0 P . M . C S T H E A L I N G I N C O L O U R | 8 : 1 5 P . M . 1 0 : 0 0 P . M . C S T V I S I T W W W . A S A L H . O R G / F I L M 1 0 7 T H A N N U A L M E E T I N G A N D C O N F E R E N C E S P O N S O R E D B Y B L A C K H O L L Y W O O D E D U C A T I O N A N D R E S E A R C H C E N T E R H I D D E N I N F U L L V I E W | 2 : 1 5 P . M . - 4 : 0 0 P . M . C S T B E L L Y O F T H E B E A S T | 6 : 3 0 P . M . - 8 : 0 0 P . M . C S T B L A C K F E M I N I S T | 8 : 1 5 P . M . - 1 0 : 0 0 P . M . C S T T H U R S D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 2 9 , 2 0 2 2 S A T U R D A Y , O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 2 2 S T A T E L E S S | 1 0 : 1 5 A . M . 1 1 : 4 5 A . M . C S T B A R B A R A L E E | 1 2 : 3 0 P . M . - 2 : 0 0 P . M . C S T T W O F I L M S O N A F R I C A T O W N | 2 : 1 5 P . M . - 4 : 0 0 P . M . C S T A M E R I C A ’ S W A R O N A B O R T I O N | 6 : 0 0 P . M . - 8 : 0 0 P . M . C S T F R U I T | 8 : 1 5 P . M . 1 0 : 0 0 P . M . C S T A l l I n P e r s o n F i l m s w i l l b e i n T h e R e n a i s s a n c e M o n t g o m e r y H o t e l & S p a M o n t g o m e r y R o o m 3 a n d a l l V i r t u a l F i l m s w i l l b e a v a i l a b l e t h r o u g h A S A L H T V t h e e n t i r e c o n f e r e n c e V I R T U A L A M E R I C A N R E C K O N I N G S p o n s o r e d b y : B l a c k H o l l y w o o d E d u c a t i o n a n d R e s e a r c h C e n t e r V i r t u a l O n l y F i l m S p o n s o r e d b y : P B S F r o n t l i n e
Burke, Trent, 044 Burks, Levi, 077 Burns, Shuntele, 153 Burrell, James, 155 Burt, Janeula, 152 Burton, Orville Vernon, 049, 053 Buxembaum, Nina, 089, 114 Bynum, Cornelius, 021, 065, 068
Baer, Andrew Scott, 071, 085 Bailey, Ronald W., 164 Baker, Stephanie, 127 Ballard, Dashauna, 091 Ballinger, Rashard, 045 Banks, Jeffrey A, 002 Baptist, Edward, 014 Barlow, Jameta Nicole, 037, 098 Barnett, Vedia La’Tanya, 175 Bartley, Abel A., 160 Bates, Ricardo, 189 Battle, Nishaun, 037
Allia, 144 Abioye, Akin, 068 Acker, Daniel, 074 Acker, Fay Clarissa, 010 Acosta, Melanie M, 153 Adams, Beatrice J., 087 Adams-Bass, Valerie, 027 Addy, Shadrick, 094 Aduen, Valentina, 092, 153 Afrique, Clothing, 029, 066, 131 Ahmed, Veronica, 077 Alahmed, Nadia, 144 Alexander, Je’lon, 077 Alexander, Shawn, 046 Allen, Madge, 188 Allen-Watts, Kristen, 091 Alridge, Derrick P., 003, 160 Anchrum, Hafeeza, 172 Anderson, Amber, 143 Anderson, James D., 188 Anthony, TaKeia, 007, 016, 097 Aponte, Ravenne N, 083 Archives and History, Alabama Department of, 003, 029, 066, 131 Arkansas Press, University of, 066, 131 Ashaolu, Gloria J., 009 Ashford, Evan Howard, 053 Atoyebi, Chiara, 077 Austin, Curtis, 151 Autrey, Dorothy, 005 Aziz, Maryam, 188
Bell, Aaron LeVar, 003 Bell, Ramona, 079 Bendolph, Angelia, 142 Bennett, Adreonna, 003, 091, 153 Bentley-Edwards, Keisha L, 027 Berry, Daina Ramey, 106, 174 Berry, Mary Frances, 170 Bess, Reginald A., 180 Biggs, Adam, 172 Biondi, Martha, 036 Black, Anthony Devon, 175 Black, Omilaye Ray Ali, 176 Blackmer, Peter, 138 Blackstock, Uche, 154 Blanks, Jennifer, 092, 153 Blum, Michael, 003 Bogues, Kneaira, 006 Bonastia, Christopher, 117 Booker Jr., Roger L., 071 Bordeaux, Lauren, 155 Bouie, Anne Sherrell, 011 Brackett, Kerry D., 093 Bradford, Chastity, 167 Bradley, Regina, 113 Bradley, Stefan, 111 Bradshaw, MD, MPH, Susan, 035 Brailey, Carla D., 012 Bratton, Lisa, 110 Brimmer, Brandi, 067 Bristow, Margaret Bernice Smith, 138 Brock, Alaina, 106 Brock, Lisa, 013, 031, 133, 145 Brodie, Lyman, 065 Brodnax, David, 078 Brook, Zoe, Brooks-Eaves,113Mindy, 016 Brooks-Hawkins, Jamal, 021 Browder, Michelle, 175, 185 Brown, Melvin J, 188 Brown, Nikki Lynn Marie, 026 Brown, Prince, 157 Brown, Ras Michael, 118 Brown, Scot, 119, Browne-Marshall,160Gloria J, 002, 053, Bryson,095 Ralph Joseph, 188 Burgher, Denise, 182
NUMBERS FOLLOWING NAMES INDICATE SESSION NUMBERS
5MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
PARTICPANT INDEX
101 Mobile Museum, Black History, 029, 066, Abdullah-Matta,131
Cade, Anthony J, 011, 071 Caldwell, Esly Samuel, 157 Calhoun, Cornelius, 028 Cansler-Merideth, Tonia, 135 Canton, David Alvin, 085 Caroline Marshall Draugh, Center for the Arts and Humanities, 029, 066, 131 Carter, Daryl Anthony, 003 Carter, Kirsten, 086 Carter, Mickell, 151 Caruthers, Biko, 009 Cassanello, Robert, 139 Caverl, Martine, 031 Cha-Jua, Sundiata Keita, 002, 122, 170 Chambers, Kemba, 164 Chambers II, Michael, 096 Chapman, Collette, 027 Charles, Rashida, 176 Chavis, Charles, 047, 053 Cheek, Kimberly, 003, 091, 153 Chestnut, Tonya S., 102 Chicago Press, University of, 066, 131 Childs, David Jason, 108 Cilli, Adam Lee, 035, 083 Clark, John E, 083 Clark, Zende Lamar, 002, 090 Cohen, Anthony, 109 Cole, Alyssa Patryce, 107 Cole Jr., Eddie R., 081 Coleman, Kalia, 098 Coleman, Tahara, 074 Coleman, Wendy, 053, 115 Coleman-King, Chonika, 027 Coley, Micaiah, 006 Conway, James D., 112 Cook, Thelonious, 089 Cooke, Paris, 132 Cooper, Daphne, 003
Cooper Owens, Deirdre, 185 Crowe Storm, LaShawnda, 149 Crutchfield, Joshua, 069 Cummins, Travis, 085 Cunningham, Maya, 008 Cunningham, Ronald, 142 Cupid, Sherella, 006 Curwood, Anastasia, 026, 174 Cyrus, Sylvia Y., 002, 003, 028, 156
Haile, Hamel, 034 Hailey, Chantal A, 117 Haire, Stefanie M., 009 Hall, Susan, 019 Hall, Tracie D, 149 Hambrick, Kathe, 109 Hamilton, Kenneth M, 104 Hamilton Abegunde, Maria, 149 Hammack, Maria Esther, 022 Hammonds, Evelynn, 168 Hanbury, Dallas, 014 Hancock, Yolandra E., 154 Hargrove, Jarvis, 007 Harper, Kaylee, 016 Harrell, Don, 008, 100 Harris, Adam, 081 Harris, Caitlin, 118 Harris, Carmen, 088 Harris, DeLisa Minor, 116 Harris, Kyle Q., 038 Harris, LaShawn, 088, 113 Harris, Sheena, 039 Harris, Yvette Renee, 077, 175 Harris, Jr., Robert L., 049
Davis, Markeysha Dawn, 008, 144 Davis, Milton C., 188 Davis, Romay, 100 Davis, Sara, 142 DeBerry, James, 081 Del, Evelyne, 153 De Lima, Geane, 159
6 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Dennard, David C., 003 Derfner, Armand, 049 Devlin, Erin Krutko, 120 Devoe, PhD, Y. Falami, 037 Dickinson, Michael Lawrence, 043, 053 Diggs, Constance L., 095
Daniel, Rachel Jessica, 032 Daniels, Kwesi, 183 Daniels-Ball, Lura, 171 Davenport, Joy, 070 Davis, Christina, 039 Davis, Christopher Anderson, 043, 153 Davis, Ella J, 054, 077 Davis, Jametta, 097 Davis, King, 084
Dagbovie, Pero, 050, 111, 126 Daily, Richard D’Von, 069 Dance, Eola, 017
Dilahunt, Ajamuito, 155 Dillahunt, Ajamu Amiri, 078 Dirkson, Menika, 025 Dixon, Benika ., 006 Dixon, Kellie M, 040, 072 Dixon-Gardner, Alvalyn, 034 Dodson, Jualynne E., 043, 070 Dong, Cheryl, 120 Dorman, Jacob S., 010 Dulaney, W. Marvin, 002, 003, 065, 096, 167, Duncan,188Natanya, 002, 023, 159 DuVernay, Jina, 003
Eaton-Martinez, Omar, 002 Edinboro, Dellyssa, 043 Education and Resource Center, Black Hollywood, 047, 054, 061, 070, 100, 103, 105, 123, 127, 129, 162, 165, 183, 184, 186, 189, 190 Edwards, Anne Marie, 040 Egyptian Harvest, Rejuvenation Cream, 029, 066, El-Bayoumi,131Jehan, 154 Ellis, DeWayne, 167 Ellis, Reginald, 169 Ellison, MD, PhD, Tom, 167 England, Tanya, 095 English, Bertis D, 081, 160, 188 Etienne, Leslie, 019, 134 Evans, Teairra Z., 132 Ewing, K.T., 022, 039, 107, 174
Cooper, Melissa L., 087
Fair, Alexandra, 168 Falu, Rachael E, 099 Farmer, Ashley D, 174 Farrington, Carl Elliot, 136 Favors, Jelani, 003, 081 Ferebee, Ellen, 008 Ferrante, Joan, 157 Ferrari, Carlyn E, 032 Fielder, Brigitte, 182 Fikes, Adrienne, 084 Fitzpatrick, Lisa E., 154 Fleming, Julius, 150 Fletcher, Charlene, 149 Foote, Jada, 069 Forbes, Larissa, 132 Forbes, MD, Ronald O, 084 Ford, Meg, 125 Ford, Tanisha, 174 Foreman, Deirdre, 065, 095 Forniss, Beatrice, 188 Fors, Brian, 158 Foster, Letoshia, 161 Foster, Theodore, 014 Fox-Williams, Brittany N, 117 Franklin, Janice, 005, 164 Franklin, V. P., Fraser-Howze,170Debra E., 154 Frazier, Tony A., 024 Frazier, Valerie, 143 Freeman, Ronald H, 091 Freeman, Tyrone McKinley, 015
Gaddis, Elijah, 134 Gallagher, Julie, 032 Gallagher, Victoria J., 094 Gardner, Montia Denee’, 035 Giles, Kelly N., 032 Gillis, Hazel D, 065, 091 Ginzberg, Abby, 165 Gipson, Maurice D., 112 Givens, Jarvis R., 002, 102, 150 Glymph, Thavolia, 150 Goddard, Eboni Preston, 125 Goodwin, Daleah, 039 Gray, Fred, 049, 188 Gray, James Leon, 053 Greason, Walter, 172b Green, Hilary Nicole, 014, 046, 049, 067, 139, 146, 181 Green, Joseph L., 121 Green, Laurie, 147 Green, Tara T., 015 Grills, Cheryl T., 121 Gurland-Pooler, Hazel, 123 Gutierrez, Leslie, 140
Frimpong Mansoh, Augustine Yaw, 157
Hooker, Ernest, 136 Hope, Jeanelle Kevina, 022 House, Anton D., 002, 010, 043, 188 Howard, Jasmin C., 087, 151 Howard, Phillip, 125 Hurst, Rodney, 188 Hyman, Christy Lynn, 007, 014, 181 Hyres, Alexander, 043, 071, 134
Imani, Jocelyn, 097 Initiative, Equal Justice, 029, 066, 131 Innis, Raina, 073
Herring, Read, 029, 066, 131
Hollister, Morna Lahnice, 053, 158 Holt, Valerie Ann, 002, 085, 176 Holton, Kyla, 012
Hill Butler, Deidre, 061, 152 Hobson, Maurice J., 188
Josey, Richard, 017
John, Patrick Murray, 181 Johnson, Andre E., 009, 189 Johnson, Antoine, 025 Johnson, Charles, 003, 086, 140, 155 Johnson, Jacquita, 006 Johnson, Jessica Marie, 106 Johnson, LaCrisha, 107 Johnson, Rozina L, 016 Johnson, Sherry, 044 Jones, Camille, 005 Jones, Ida E., 002, 033, 099, 137, 171 Jones, Jian, 076 Jones, Kelly Houston, 088 Jones, Mattie, 053 Jones, Patrick, 042 Jones, Rhonda, 178 Jones, Tina Naremore, 125 Jones-Branch, Cherisse, 038, 088, 111 Jordan, Ashley, 097 Jordan, Valin, Joseph-Sykes,179Yolaine, 093
Herron-Williams, Sharron, 160 Hewitt, Huey, 168
Hatcher, Kirk, 028 Hawkins, Alfonso, 093 Hawkins, Jasmine, 044 Hayes, Nichelle M., 019 Haykal, Aaisha, 002, 018, 065, 188 Henderson, Frances, 021 Henderson, Tammy, 023 Henderson, Tiera, 084 Henley, Lydia, 026 Herd-Clark, Dawn, 038, 088
7MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Harvey, Trevor, 177
Kai, Nubia, 053 kearney, kioni amelia, 075 Keith, Celeste, 086 Kendrick, Elena, 086, 155 Kentucky Press, University of, 029, 131 Khan, Deeyah, 186 Kimble, Lionel, 003, 065 Kinchen, Shirletta J., 169 King, Antonia Jade, 079 King, Dante D, 053, 058, 175 King, Kisha, 082 King, Taylor, 125 Klanderud, Jessica D, 026, 041, 097, 111, 138, Knight,180Felice, 158 Kutzler, Evan, 120
Hill, Karlos, 046
Lewis, Janaka, 152 Lewis, Terrance Joshua, 083 Lewis-Ragland, Yolanda, 179 Lindsey, Treva, 113 Littelton, La’Neice, 110 Little, Mahaliah, 087 Livingston, Samuel, 180 Lloyd, Morgan, 085 Loder-Jackson, Tondra L., 152 Logan, Georgiana, 091 London, Grace, 146 Lover, Agnes, 028 Lovett, Laura L., 032 Lundy, Rae, 040 Lutes, Jean M, 182 Mack, Gladys, 002 Mack, Thura, 091, 153 Macumber, Krista, 135 Maginn, Andrew, 035 Malli, Nicole, 156 Mango, Cheryl “Chaka”, 139 Manley, Ruby, 118 Marshall, Sylvia, 091 Maseru, Noble A-W, 176 Mason-Hogans, Akanke, 109 Massenburg, Moses, 002, 003, 090 Matthews, Kimberly A., 053 Matthews, Lopez, 002, 018, 065, 097, 178, Mays-McDonald,188 Pamela, 114 Mbow, Babacar, 092 McCall, Josephine, 125 McCleary, Ann, 120 McCullom, III, Anthony “Joey”, 031 McDaniel, Cecily, 003 McFerguson, Marquese, 076 McGillan, Jennifer, 014 McInnis, Jarvis, 150 McKinney, Jr., Charles, 042, 147 McNair, Kimberly, 022 McNair, Lisa, 053 McNamee, Heather, 112 McNeil, Adam, 024 Meadows, R. Darrell, 106 Medford, Edna Greene, 188 Medine, Carolyn, 077 Meeks, Madison McKennah, 143 Mendez, James, 067 Michigan, State University, 050, 126
Hickerson, Hope, 006 Higginbotham, Evelyn Brooks, 028, 049, 096, 168
Lacy, Nicholas, 021 Lambert, Ashlee, 021 Land, Monica, 070 Lanois, Derrick, 003, 024, 065, 100, 129, 140, LaRoche,161 Cheryl Janifer, 017 Lawrence-Riddell, Michael, 046 Lee, Steven Xavier, 057 Leonce Stevens, Alice Muriel, 091 Lewis, Gina Marie, 017, 089, 114
Jackson, Barbara-Shae, 132 Jackson, Brandon, 135 Jackson, Eric R., 002, 108 Jackson, Sheri, 109 Jackson Gavin, Andrea, 116 Jamison, Felicia, 023 Janeau, Kourtney, 006 Jay, Erika, 108
Jeffries, Hasan Kwame, 173 Jeffries Leonard, Kimberly, 185 Jelks, Randal, 002 Jenkins, Joshua, 125 Jimenez, Ismael, 182 Jimmeh, Joe R., 073
University of Georgia, 029, 066, Press,131
Miller, Uzoma, 180 Miller Smith, Arlette, 148 Mitchell, Koritha, 041, 113, 150 Mitchell, Mary Niall, 014 Mixon, Gregory Lamont, 002, 003, 065, 175, Moffitt,188Kimberly, 023
8 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
University of Massachusetts, 029, 066, 131 Press, University of Mississippi, 029, 066, 131 Press, University of North Carolina, 029, 131 Press, University of Pennsylvania, 029, 066, 131 Press, University of South Carolina, 029, 066, 131 Preston, Ashley Robertson, 074 Price, PhD, Sarah, 091
Miletsky, Zebulon V, 002, 003, 025, 041, 065, 078, Militz-Frielink,141 Sarah, 172b
Quin, Kevin C., 188 Quinones, Michiko, 085
Rahim, Raja Malikah, 140 Rainey, Hannah, 094 Rainey II, Kenneth, 177 Ramsey, Sonya, 053, 062, 152 Randall, Wendy Reed, 060 Randolph, Saungaylia, 091 Rare Breed, BX, 029, 066, 131 Reaves, Santevia, 086 Reff-Presco, Eden, 114, 138 Reid, Ellis, Reminisce,141Preservation LLC, 029, 066, Reverby,131 Susan M, 172 Rhodes, Jane, 068 Rice, Dora, Richardson,079Nyla, 079 Richardson, Renee, 169 Riddick, Zenzile Saharee, 034, 141 Ringel, Paul, 083 Ringer, Andrea, 107 Roberts, Andrea, 153 Robinson, Brian, 007 Robinson, Howard Overton, 005, 116 Robinson, Marc Arsell, 068, 148 Rogers, Lewis, 121 Rogers, Trinity, 182 Rolark Barnes, Denise, 002, 090 Romney-Schaab, Mary, 059 Rose, Chanelle N., 028 Rose-Rodriguez, Lisa A, 074, 142 Ross, Quinton, 188 Rucker, Nakia, 135 Rudder, Justin, 003, 071
Pacatte, Jerrad P., 012, 162 Palmer, Annette, 090 Palmer, Jasmine, 143 Parker, Alison Marie, 015 Parker, Robert T., 009 Pathfinder, Press, 029, 066, 131 Patterson, Valerie Lyles, 082 Pearsall-Finch, Lucy, 024 Pearson, Kim, 172b Perkins, Olivia, 139 Perry, Ashara, 088 Person, Charles, 020 Peters, Lyda, 141 Pettway, Bradly, 005 Phillips, Jayla, 075 Phillips, Kenvi, 018, 065 Pinheiro, Holly Anthony, 053, 067 Pinkston, Ada, 114 Pitre, Merline, 104 Pitts, Arif Emmitt, 075 Player, Tiffany A, 118 Pourciau, Michelle, 013, 031, 133, 145 Power-Greene, Ousmane K, 046 Press, Univerisity of Illinois, 029, 066, Press,131
University of Florida, 029, 066, Press,131
Udodiri, 168 Olsavsky, Jesse J, 052
Pruitt, Bernadette, 135 Purdum, Carlee, 006
O’Bannon, Nia, 091 Obeng, Pashington, 092
Najuma, Ayanna, 044 Napier, Alyssa, 141 Ndege, Conchita P, 136 Nelson, Elizabeth J., 094 Neville, Helen, 122 Newell, Jalen, 143 Newman, Conchita, 091 Newport, Melanie, 069 Newsome, Frederick, 053 Nichols, Casey D, 022 Nix, Keturah, 016 NKRUMA, GAIDI, 137 Northington Gamble, Vanessa, 179
University of Arkansas, 029 Press, University of Chicago, 029, 050, Press,126
Moncrease, Anita, 045 Moncrease, Brittani, 045 Montgomery, Jeremy, 036 Montgomery, Valda Harris, 020, 158 Montgomery Area, Chamber of Commerce, 029, 066, 131 Moore, Alicia Lorraine, 172b, 188 Moore, Cequyna, 092 Moore, Katrina Thompson, 012, 036 Moore, Theo M., 003, 183 Moore-Bridges, Loreal, 093 Moorer, Regina M, 173 Morgan, K. Marielle, 079 Morgan, Mikaila, 075 Morse, Michelle, 013 Mosley, Kimberly, 091 Moten, Darren E., 139 Muhammad, Baiyina W., 078 Muhammad, Lateefah, 047, 127 Muhammed, Tynetta, 013 Murphy, Frederick, 183 Musgrove, George Derek, 041 Mustakeem, Sowande, 113
O’Connor, Molly E, 011 of Tourism, Alabama Department, 029, 066, Okwandu,131
Sadrud-Din, Zaakira L, 153 Sanders, Crystal R., 081 Sanford III, Ezelle, 008, 165 Saunders, Lynsey, 138 Saunders, Ronald Brooks, 137 Scott, Aishah, 025 Scott, Michelle R., 023 Scruggs, Camesha, 002, 188 Seidler, Margaret, 053, 161 Sekai, Ayo, 159
The Scholars, Choice, 029, 066, 131 Thirus, Zanah, 061 Thomas, Brooke, 012 Thomas, Felicia, 023 Thomas, June Manning, 055 Thomas, Ph. D, Kenisha Monique, 091 Thompson, Kelli, 072 Thompson, Olivia, 132 Thompson, Valarie, 040 Thrasher, Shawndaya, 006 Tilghman, John Randolph, 073 Tinker, Maria, 098 Tinnie, Gene S, 082 Tinson, Christopher, 036 Toland, Frank, 098 Toney, Jocelyn A, 010 Troche, Rex, 177 Tucker, Kathryn, 079 Turner, Lou, 122 Turner, Rev. Terry, 053 Turnipseed, Cassie S., 139 Tynes, Rev. Don, 045 Tzeggai, Fithawee, 180
YBI, Apparel African, 029, 066, 131 Young, Alexis, 021 Young, Darius J., 003, 042, 065, 076, Young,169 Jasmin A, 011, 108
Umezinwa, Jennifer A., 099 University, North Carolina Press Exhibits of, 066
Talley, Jasmaine, 012 Tandy, Kisha R, 019 Tate, Miya, 006 Taylor, Frazine K, 018, 188 Taylor, Quintard, 188 Taylor, Ula Y., 161 Taylor, Valerie, 148 Teague, Janira, 161 Teasdell, Annette, 142 The Foundation, International, 029, 066, Theres,131James, 100
Vaise, Vince, 096 Vann, Brenda, 153 Vaughn, Gladys Gary, 002 Vincent, Godfrey, 073 Voltz, Noel Mellick, 042 Walker, Dara, 069 Walker, Dorothy, 020 Walker, Krista, 036 Walker, Lee B, 164 Walker, Pamela N, 087 Walkes, Christian, 034 Wall, Keshia, 127 Walton, Betty Ann, 173 Walton, David Mathew, 002, 090, 142, 173, Wanzer,188Lyzette, 044 Ward, Maranda C., 179 Ward, Thomas, 134 Washington, Naheim, 034 Watkins, Rachel, 017 Watson, Marcus, 075
Sellers, Destiny, 020 Shakir, Ameenah, 185 Shepherd, Anita Moore, 002, 065 Sherman, Shantella, 188 Simmons, Ron, 102 Simms Marsh, Susan, 002 Singletary, Jewell, 010 Siracusa, Anthony C, 147 Slaughter Kotzin, Diana, 027 Smallwood, Arwin, 002, 003, 065 Smethurst, James, 144 Smith, Kylie, 172 Smith, Marshanda, 104 Smith, Shanna Louise, 148 Smith, Shaquita A., 182 Smith, Tatyana Nichelle, 153 Smith, William Jerome, 035, 176 Sneed, Kymara D., 038 Soucek, Jonathan Dean, 068 Staalduinen, Caroline Van, 086 Standifer, Derrick, 076 Stanley, Kimberly Michele, 078 Stansberry, Jasmine, 151 Stanton, Robert, 164 Stearns, Raegan, 005 Stephenson, Michele, 162 Sterling, Stephanie, 086 Stevenson, Bryan, 028 Stewart, James B., 122, 152, 170, 188 Stewart, Mary Liz, 109 Stewart, Paul, 109 Stokes, Brandon, 074 Stone, Jonathon, 008, 134 Strickland, Chris, 078, 134 Summers, Martin, 147 Suriel, Yalile, 025 Swaim, Carly, 156
9MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Watson, Veronica T., 121 Waymer, Damion, 021 Weaks, Hannah, 086 Webb, Michael, 110 Wesley, Doris, 094 Wesley, Fred, 119 West, Tyanna, 086 Weston, Guy O, 171 Wheeler, Leigh Ann, 010, 123 Whisnant, Anne Mitchell, 120 White, Derrick, 003, 026, 116 White, Samantha, 107 White, Tara, 002, 033, 079, 188 White, Timetra, 051 Whitehorn, Rosahn, 003 Wibberly, Micaela Danielle, 036 Wiesner, Caitlin Reed, 069 Wiggan, Greg, 142 Williams, Amileon, 067 Williams, Jakobi, 068 Williams, Joseph T., 015 Williams, Lillian S., 033 Williams, Manuel B, 102 Williams, Robert, 188 Williams, Shari, 146 Williams, Shawn Lamar, 175 Willis, Devin Junell, 091 Willis, Kirsten, 135 Wilson, Akila E, 099 Wilson, Alexandra Nichole, 011 Wilson, Tiyarhi, 040 Winfield, Asha S, 006 Wise Whitehead, Karsonya, 172b Woodard, Paul, 153 Woodfork, Charles-Anthony, 011 Wood, III, Augustus C., 122 Woods, Sonja, 178 Woodson, Bill, 177 Woodson, R. Wayne, 072 Worthen, PhD, Dreamal, 091 Wright, Chavonte, 138 Wright, Dania, 037 Wyley, Rachel Simone, 044
002. 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm Meeting
Aaisha Haykal, College of Charleston and ASALH Vice President for Programs
Arwin Smallwood, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and ASALH Executive Council
Gladys Gary Vaughn, ASALH Executive Council
W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH ASALH (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
9:00pm 003. 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm Meeting Alabama E (AV) 2022 ACADEMIC PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING.
Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, ASALH Executive Council and University of Illinois
David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council
Participant:
Eric R. Jackson, Northern Kentucky University and ASALH Executive Council
SESSION INDEX
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Gloria J Browne-Marshall, John Jay College / ASALH Executive Council
Gladys Mack, ASALH Executive Council
Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
Aaron LeVar Bell, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
001. 7:00 am to 4:30 pm Tour Taxi Cut-out
ASALH EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING.
Jeffrey A Banks, ASALH Executive Council & Margaret & Robert Garner Branch (Cincinnati) & Martha’s Vineyard Branch
Randal Jelks, University of Kansas and ASALH Executive Council
Omar Eaton-Martinez, National Trust for Historic Preservation and ASALH Executive Council
Anita Moore Shepherd, ASALH Executive Council and ASALH James Weldon Johnson Branch
Susan Simms Marsh, ASALH Secretary and Executive Council
Moses Massenburg, Michigan State University and ASALH Executive Council
PRE-CONFERENCE AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE BUS TOUR OF SELMA. 7:00pm
Daphne Cooper, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Adreonna Bennett, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
President and
Jarvis R. Givens, Harvard University and ASALH Executive Council
Anton D. House, Delaware State University and ASALH Executive Council
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2022 SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ALL ACADEMIC SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ADDENDUMS SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ALL ACADEMIC SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ADDENDUMS
Gregory Lamont Mixon, University of North Carolina Charlotte and ASALH Executive Council Camesha Scruggs, UMass Amherst and ASALH Executive Council
Tara White, University of North Carolina Wilmington and ASALH Executive Council
Valerie Ann Holt, ASALH Treasurer
Denise Rolark Barnes, ASALH Executive Council & The Washington Informer
Leader:
Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership
Participant:
Alabama D (AV)
Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council
10 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Sylvia Y. Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director
Marvin Dulaney Branch
Zende Lamar Clark, ASALH Executive Council and ASALH Manhattan Branch
7:00am
Natanya Duncan, Queens College and ASALH Executive Council
Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University
ASU INTERPRETS THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT THROUGH HISTORIC PRESERVATION.
Kimberly Cheek, North Carolina A&T State University
Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
Jelani Favors, North Carolina A&T University
Daryl Anthony Carter, East Tennessee State University
Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University
Sylvia Y. Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director
Leaders: Arwin Smallwood, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and ASALH Executive Council
Michael Blum, Independent Scholar
Derrick White, University of Kentucky
Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University
004. 7:00 am to 11:45 am Tour Taxi Cut-out
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Chair:
11MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Participants:Overview – The Origins of the National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African-American Culture: A Model for Preserving African American History. Janice Franklin, Alabama State University
Managing the Cultural Resources of the National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture at ASU. Bradly Pettway, Alabama State University
Raegan Stearns and the University Archives. Howard Overton Robinson, Alabama State University, National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture; Raegan Stearns, Alabama State University
7:00am
Cecily McDaniel, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
005. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Panel Session
Thursday, September 29, 2022
Jina DuVernay, Getty Images
Woodson Conference Fellow: Camille Jones, February One, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
David C. Dennard, East Carolina University
W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
Gregory Lamont Mixon, University of North Carolina Charlotte and ASALH Executive Council
Moses Massenburg, Michigan State University and ASALH Executive Council
Janice Franklin, Alabama State University
Rosahn Whitehorn, ASALH
A Historical Context for the Cultural Resources Managed by the National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture at ASU. Howard Overton Robinson, Alabama State University, National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture
Theo M. Moore, Hiztorical Vision Productions
Alabama Department of Archives and History
THURSDAY TOUR OF MONTGOMERY. 8:30am
Charles Johnson, North Carolina Central University
Commentator: Dorothy Autrey, Alabama State University
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Derrick P. Alridge, University of Virginia
Justin Rudder, Alabama Department of Archives and History
Panel Session
Commentator: Shawndaya Thrasher, Louisiana State University
Snapshots of Character: How African American Photography Influenced Social Change. Stefanie M. Haire, Middle Tennessee State University
Commentator: Andre E. Johnson, University of Memphis
Participants:TheHealing Place of the Sister Circles” Investigating Black women healthcare professionals’ workplace experiences during the Double Pandemic. Sherella Cupid, Louisiana State University; Shawndaya Thrasher, Louisiana State University; Miya Tate; Kneaira Bogues, University of Maryland—Baltimore County Mama Didn’t Make It: Looking Toward Black Health Stories In Primetime Media During the Pandemic. Asha S Winfield, Louisiana State University; Hope Hickerson, Louisiana State University; Kourtney Janeau, Louisiana State University Examining Complex Hazards: Extreme Temperatures and COVID-19 in Texas Prisons. Benika . Dixon, Texas A&M University; Jacquita Johnson, Texas A&M University; Carlee Purdum, Texas A&M University
The Healing Power of Music. Ellen Ferebee “ Who will survive in America?”: Examining American Iconographies in Contemporary African-American Music. Markeysha Dawn Davis, University of Hartford
DIGITAL HUMANITIES SESSION: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY FOR DIGITAL PROJECTS: A PRIMER.
Leaders: TaKeia Anthony, Kentucky State University Jarvis Hargrove, East Carolina University Christy Lynn Hyman, Mississippi State University
Participants:Madatthe World: A Literary History of Black Children at their Best. Biko Caruthers, University of Massachusetts Amherst “Psychological and Pedagogical”: The Black Countercurriculum Tradition and the Impactful Uses of Shackelford’s The Child’s Story of the Negro. Gloria J. Ashaolu, Michigan State University
BLACK LITERARY WORK.
BLACK MUSIC.
009. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Riverview 1 (AV)
12 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Montgomery 9
Participants:FreedomMothers: The Revolutionary Jazz, Transnational Kinship and Indigenous Africana Womanisms of Miriam Makeba, Nina Simone and Winnie Mandela. Maya Cunningham, University of Massachusetts Amherst Joy and Pain: The Law of the Land and Black Music’s Global Praxis. Don Harrell, University of Central Florida and Dorothy Turner-Johnson, Central Florida Branch
007. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Chair: Robert T. Parker, Chickasaw Heritage Center-Chickasaw Inkana Foundation
Woodson Conference Fellow: Micaiah Coley, University Honors Program, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Workshop Montgomery 5 (AV)
Paper Session
Commentator: Ezelle Sanford III, Carnegie Mellon University
Chair: Brian Robinson, North Carolina Central University
006. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Paper Session
BLACK HEALTH, OUR FAMILIES & THE STORYTELLING AROUND COVID-19.
008. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Jonathon Stone, Howard University
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Chair: Sherella Cupid, Louisiana State University
012. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Paper Session
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Alexandra Nichole Wilson, Howard University
Chair: Anton D. House, Delaware State University and ASALH Executive Council
Participants:“Mr.Black Man, Where Is Your Religion?” The Great Migration’s Black Spiritual Churches and Wellness Practices. Jacob S. Dorman, University of Nevada, Reno Spiritual and Community Wellness in the Life of Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer. Fay Clarissa Acker
The JaeLux Yellness Project: Healing Out Loud Over Suffering in Silence. Jocelyn A Toney, Clark Atlanta University Transmuting Trauma to Generational Healing. Jewell Singletary Commentator: Leigh Ann Wheeler, Binghamton University
Participants:CivilRights, the Cooperative and Black Health. Jasmaine Talley, Tulane University “To Demonstrate a Practical Way of Doing the Job” The Alpha Kappa Alpha Mississippi Health Project and the New Deal, 1935-1942. Brooke Thomas, Rutgers University Howard/Mellon: Black Feminist Approach to Saving Black Moms: A Historical Exploratory Analysis of Identifying Structural Racism Factors in Healthcare. Carla D. Brailey, Texas Southern University
13MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
010. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Riverview 4
Participants:Cookbook as Textbook: Sue Bailey Thurman Preserving and Teaching Diasporic Identity Through Food. Molly E O’Connor, Rutgers University Dr. Louis Charles Roudanez: How Black Medicine Can Help as much as it Heals. Anthony J Cade, The U.S. Army Center of Military History Healing & Hexing”: Mojo & Medicine as Tools of Resistance to Enslavement. Anne Sherrell Bouie, Independent Historian & Artist Commentator: Jasmin A Young, University of California, Riverside Woodson Conference Fellow: Charles-Anthony Woodfork, Dowdy, College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences Scholar, American Heart Association HBCU
Chair: Katrina Thompson Moore, Saint Louis University
BLACK WELLNESS.
Paper Session
BLACK HEALING AND RESISTANCE.
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
BLACK HEALTH COOPERATIVES AND PROJECTS.
Commentator: Jerrad P. Pacatte, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey Woodson Conference Fellow: Kyla Holton, Dowdy SECU People Helping People Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
011. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Paper Session
Alabama D (AV)
Presenters: Michelle Morse, Chief Medical Officer and Deputy Commissioner, NYC Tynetta Muhammed, Black Youth Project Field Organizer
TRACES OF BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS IN ARCHIVES OF ENSLAVEMENT.
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
Participants:IfItHadNot Been for Black Women on Our Side: First Ladies on the Front Lines. Rozina L Johnson, Kentucky State University Self-Care: An Act of Sociopolitical Liberation for Black Women in Academia. Mindy Brooks-Eaves, Kentucky State University We Got the Bag: The Philanthropic Activism of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. TaKeia Anthony, Kentucky State University Looking Back to Find A Way Forward: A Reflection of Black Women Writers’ Generational Influence. Keturah Nix, Kentucky State University
Presenters:
014. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Chair: TaKeia Anthony, Kentucky State University
Leaders: Lisa Brock, Howard-Mellon Grant Consultant Michelle Pourciau, Howard-Mellon Program Coordinator
Commentator: Mindy Brooks-Eaves, Kentucky State University
BIOGRAPHIES OF BLACK WOMEN: A WINDOW INTO HEALTH AND WELLNESS.
Edward Baptist, Cornell University Mary Niall Mitchell, University of New Orleans Dallas Hanbury, Montgomery County (Ala.) Archives Christy Lynn Hyman, Mississippi State University
016. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Panel Session
Roundtable
013. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College
Commentator: Theodore Foster, University of Louisiana Lafayette
10:00am
HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM WORKSHOP 1: HOW DO WE GET HEALTHY? AN INTERGENERATIONAL CONVERSATION ON DISPARITIES, EQUITY AND WELLNESS IN BLACK COMMUNITIES TODAY.
Alabama E (AV)
015. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Panel Session
Woodson Conference Fellow: Kaylee Harper, February One Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University 2022
BEYOND THE ACADEMY WALLS: REIMAGINING BLACK WOMEN AND THEIR ACTIVISM.
Participant: Jennifer McGillan, Mississippi State University
Chair: Alison Marie Parker, University of Delaware
Participants:ThePrivate Ailments and Public Activism of Mary Church Terrell. Alison Marie Parker, University of Delaware Madam C.J. Walker’s Gospel of Giving: Black Women’s Self Care, Community Care and Philanthropy during Jim Crow. Tyrone McKinley Freeman, Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy “Loving My Bare Body”: The (Un) Healthy Activist Life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson. Tara T. Green, University of Houston Commentator: Joseph T. Williams, Rutgers University
14 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Chair:
15MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Commentator:
Participant:
Panel Session
Participants:Scarred:The Impacts to Physical and Mental Health of Civil Rights Movement Activists. Dorothy Walker, Freedom Rides Museum Scarred: An Activist Details How Attacks on Him During the Civil Rights Movement Impacted the Quality of His Life Physically and Emotionally. Charles Person, Freedom Rider Scarred: The Perspective of a Youth Activist During the Civil Rights Movement Who Later Became a Therapist Who Confronted Her Own Trauma. Valda Harris Montgomery, President, Friends of the Freedom Rides Museum
017. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Montgomery 6 (AV)
Woodson Conference Fellow: Destiny Sellers, February One, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Presenters: Kisha R Tandy, Indiana State Museum
Chair: Kisha R Tandy, Indiana State Museum
Montgomery 5 (AV)
Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council Kenvi Phillips, Brown University
Panel Session
Cheryl Janifer LaRoche, University of Maryland College Park
Roundtable
019. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
SCARRED: THE IMPACTS TO PHYSICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH OF CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT ACTIVISTS.
INFORMATION PROFESSIONALS OF ASALH BUSINESS MEETING.
Frazine K Taylor, Genealogist and Alabama State University
Gina Marie Lewis, Bowie State University
018. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Meeting
Montgomery 4
A Journey in Healing: Navigating the African Diaspora and Trauma-Informed Engagement through the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (Descendant Engagement). Rachel Watkins, American University
A Journey in Healing: Navigating the African Diaspora and Trauma-Informed Engagement through the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences. Richard Josey, Collective Journeys
020. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Aaisha Haykal, College of Charleston and ASALH Vice President for Programs
“CARED FOR AND PROTECTED:” EARLY BLACK HEALTH AND WELL-BEING.
A JOURNEY IN HEALING: NAVIGATING THE AFRICAN DIASPORA AND TRAUMA-INFORMED ENGAGEMENT THROUGH THE ARTS, HUMANITIES, AND SOCIAL SCIENCES.
Susan Hall, Indiana Historical Society
Participants:AJourney in Healing: Navigating the African Diaspora and Trauma-Informed Engagement through the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (Public History). Eola Dance, National Park Service
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
Commentators: Charles Person, Freedom Rider Valda Harris Montgomery, President, Friends of the Freedom Rides Museum
Chair: Dorothy Walker, Freedom Rides Museum
Leslie Etienne, Indiana University - Purdue University, Indianapolis/Joseph Taylor Branch Nichelle M. Hayes, ASALH Joseph Taylor Branch (Indianapolis)
Ashlee Lambert, Arizona State University Frances Henderson, University of Maryland
024. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
Jamal Brooks-Hawkins, Arizona State University Alexis Young, Arizona State University Nicholas Lacy, Purdue University
Presenters: Felicia Jamison, Drake University Natanya Duncan, Queens College and ASALH Executive Council
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Chair:
“WE NOT NEW TO THIS, WE TRUE TO THIS”: CONTEXTUALIZING & CENTERING BLACK HEALTH, WELLNESS, AND FUTURITY THROUGH STRATEGIC, SYSTEMIC, AND SUSTAINABLE PRAXIS.
Commentator: Kimberly Moffitt, University of Maryland - Baltimore County
022. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Roundtable
Tony A. Frazier, North Carolina Central University
Presenters:
Casey D Nichols, Texas State University
FINDING BLACK VOICES IN ARCHIVES AND SHAPING THE INTELLECTUAL LEGACY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES.
WOMEN WHO SIT AND WRITE: BLACK WOMEN’S MENTAL HEALTH SANCTUARIES IN THE ACADEMY.
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Montgomery 8
Chair: Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University
Tammy Henderson, University of Maryland - Baltimore County Felicia Thomas, Morgan State University
Commentator: K.T. Ewing, Tennessee State University
Leaders: Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University Adam McNeil, Rutgers University
Woodson Conference Fellow: Lucy Pearsall-Finch, Dowdy, NBCU Academic Fellow, Wanda Starke Achievement Scholar
Riverview 3 (AV)
Presenters: Casey D Nichols, Texas State University Jeanelle Kevina Hope, University of California, Davis Maria Esther Hammack, University of Pennsylvania Kimberly McNair, University of Southern California
16 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Riverview 4
023. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Roundtable
Commentator: Damion Waymer, University of Alabama
DIGITAL HUMANITIES SESSION: PODCASTING AND DIGITAL STORYTELLING: A HOW-TO.
021. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Roundtable
Chair: Michelle R. Scott, University of Maryland—Baltimore County
Commentator: Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
Riverview 8
026. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Chair: Valerie Adams-Bass, University of Virginia
Alabama B (AV/Livestream)
WADE IN THE WATER: SAVING OURSELVES FROM BUSINESS AS USUAL, PROTECTING OUR HEALTH AND WELLBEING.
17MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Chair: Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
025. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
028. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm
WHEN PUBLIC HEALTH AND POLICING COLLIDE: HOW 2020 SHAPED OUR CLASSROOMS.
Luncheon
Commentator: Diana Slaughter Kotzin
Panel Session
KENTUCKY IN THE NEWS – PUBLIC FACING SCHOLARSHIP ON RACE, SPORTS, AND EDUCATION IN KENTUCKY.
SOCIAL JUSTICE AT ASALH WITH BRYAN STEVENSON, EQUAL JUSTICE TODAY AND BEYOND, HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM LUNCHEON.
Participants:MyHistory, My Body: Investigating Black History Knowledge, Body Image, Racial/Ethnic Socialization and the Racial Identity of Black Youth. Collette Chapman, University of Georgia
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
12:00pm
Woodson Conference Fellow: Lydia Henley, University Honors Program, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Riverview 6
Panel Session
Introduction of the Speaker: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
Presenters: Aishah Scott, Providence College Antoine Johnson, John Hopkins University Yalile Suriel, University of Minnesota Menika Dirkson, Morgan State University
Invocation: Agnes Lover, St. Paul AME Church Keynote Speaker: Bryan Stevenson, Equal Justice Initiative Greetings: Cornelius Calhoun, Montgomery City Council Vice President Kirk Hatcher, Alabama Senator District 26 Chanelle N. Rose, Associate Professor Rowan University Welcome: Sylvia Y . Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director
Participants:BlackEquestrians of the World War II Era. Anastasia Curwood, Commonwealth Institute of Black Studies; History Department Sporting Congregations: Rethinking the Integration of College Sports. Derrick White, University of Kentucky Legal Discrimination in Kentucky Law. Nikki Lynn Marie Brown, University of Kentucky
Eat, Pray, Live: African American Christian Women’s Cardiovascular Health. Keisha L Bentley-Edwards, Duke University Black (Other)mothering Magic: A Roadmap for Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies. Chonika Coleman-King, University of Florida
Roundtable
027. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
University of Pennsylvania Press University of Mississippi Press
Pre-function area
SEPTEMBER
University of Georgia Press
029. 12:00 pm to 9:00 pm
University of Massachusetts Press University of South Carolina Press
Egyptian Harvest Rejuvenation Cream University Press of Kentucky University of Arkansas Press University of Chicago Press University Press of Florida Univerisity of Illinois Press
030. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm
Chamber of Commerce
Rare Breed BX
Alabama Department of Archives and History Aziz
Caroline Marshall Draugh Center for the Arts and Humanities Read MontgomeryAfriqueHerringClothingArea
SomethingCathy’sFashionGlobalFor Everybody
ASALH Film Festival Virtual Room B AMERICAN2:05pmRECKONING.
University of North Carolina Press
031. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Zee WayneCraftsState University Press (Virtual) Louisiana State University Press (Virtual)
THURSDAY, 29, 2022
The Foundation International Pathfinder Press
EXHIBIT AREA OPEN.
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Equal Justice Initiative
EXHIBITOR:
Exhibitor
FOR A FULL LIST OF EXHIBITORS, SCAN HERE A SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ALL ACADEMIC S
Black History 101 Mobile Museum
18 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Presenters: Martine Caverl, RN, Founder of Ujimaa Medics
The Scholars Choice
Leaders: Lisa Brock, Howard-Mellon Grant Consultant Michelle Pourciau, Howard-Mellon Program Coordinator
HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM WORKSHOP 2: FIRST AID TO FREE US: TOOLS FOR COMMUNITY CARE RESPONSE & SELF-DETERMINATION WITH BLACK STREET MEDICS.
Reminisce Preservation LLC
YBI African Apparel
Alabama Department of Tourism
Anthony “Joey” McCullom, III, Training Coordinator at Ujimaa Medics
034. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Roundtable
Participants:Inequality in Health During the 1832 Cholera Pandemic. Andrew Maginn, University of the South: Sewanee “Prospering Through the Pandemic: Socio-Emotional Wellness and the Cultivation of Black Academic Talent During a Global Pandemic. Montia Denee’ Gardner The Importance of Menthol and Flavored Tobacco Restrictions in Reducing Health Disparities. Susan Bradshaw, MD, MPH, County of Los Angeles Department of Public Health
Commentator: William Jerome Smith, Douglass School
Alabama D (AV)
Presenters: Laura L. Lovett, University of Pittsburgh Carlyn E Ferrari, Seattle University Rachel Jessica Daniel, Massasoit Community College Julie Gallagher, Penn State, Brandywine
032. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
19MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
FORGING A BLACK WOMEN’S AGENDA.
033. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Alabama E (AV)
Leaders: Alvalyn Dixon-Gardner, Tufts University Naheim Washington, Tufts University Hamel Haile, Tufts University
Commentator: Christian Walkes, Harvard University
035. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Montgomery 4 HEALING AND HUMANIZING THROUGH BLACK HISTORY AND CULTURE: LESSONS FROM THE BLACK ALIVENESS YOUTH PROJECT IN MASSACHUSETTS.
Paper Session
Panel Session
Chair: Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership
Chair: Zenzile Saharee Riddick, Harvard Graduate School of Education
SEEING IS MORE THAN BELIEVING: THE HEALING PROPERTIES OF THE BLACK CLUBWOMEN’S PRESERVATION MOVEMENT.
Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership
Participants:MaryB.Talbert: Mother of Black Clubwomen’s Preservation. Lillian S. Williams, University at Buffalo History as Uplift: African American Clubwomen and Applied History. Tara White, University of North Carolina Wilmington and ASALH Executive Council Still Were All Bound Up Together Commemorating the Suffrage Centennial. Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership
Sponsor:
Chair: Kelly N. Giles, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Commentator: Kelly N. Giles, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Montgomery 5 (AV) HEALTH DISPARITIES.
Chair: Adam Lee Cilli, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg
20 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Chair: Cherisse Jones-Branch, Arkansas State University
Montgomery 8
Paper Session
038. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Participants:TheRural Southern African American Experience: “TO MAKE THE BEST BETTER”. Kyle Q. Harris, Florida A&M University Extension and Home Demonstration Financial Programming in Peach County During the Great Depression. Dawn Herd-Clark, Hillsborough Community College Functional and Literate: How Home Demonstration Improved the Black Home and Family. Kymara D. Sneed, Mississippi State University
Commentator: K.T. Ewing, Tennessee State University
Participants:“Bruisedand broken in mind and in body”: The Health Challenges of Sara G. Stanley, Teacher in the Reconstruction-Era South. Christina Davis, Savannah State University Cornelia Bowen and the Reformatory for Boys in Mt. Meigs. Sheena Harris, West Virginia University “Physical Power”: Hallie Quinn Brown and Black Women’s Education. Daleah Goodwin, Xavier University
Trailblazers in Black Educational Advancement: John Wesley Davison and Henry Alexander Hunt and the Fort Valley High and Industrial School. Kyle Q. Harris, Florida A&M University
The Most Remarkable Diseases of the Negroes: Treatment and Medical Care, 1800-1860. Jeremy Montgomery, Mississippi State University
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Commentator: Katrina Thompson Moore, Saint Louis University
SPILLING THE TEA ABOUT BLACK WOMEN’S SELF-CARE.
036. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Chair: Martha Biondi, Northwestern University
STRESS, STRENGTH, AND SURVIVAL: BLACK WOMEN AT THE INTERSECTION OF EDUCATION AND WELLNESS.
HISTORY OF BLACK HOSPITALS AND MEDICINE.
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
039. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Panel Session
Participants:“AConcern Touching Health and Life Itself”: The Hospital Desegregation Movement in Virginia, 1951-1966. Micaela Danielle Wibberly Black Hospitals Fight to Continue Black Medical Training. Krista Walker, University of Colorado School of Medicine
Leader: Y. Falami Devoe, PhD, Antioch University
037. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Panel Session
Sponsor: Kyle Q. Harris, Florida A&M University Dawn Herd-Clark, Hillsborough Community College Kymara D. Sneed, Mississippi State University
Chair: Daleah Goodwin, Xavier University
THE RURAL SOUTHERN AFRICAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE: “TO MAKE THE BEST BETTER”.
The Politics of Social Medicine: W.E.B. Du Bois, W. Montague Cobb, and Histories of Black Health Advocacy. Christopher Tinson, Saint Louis University
Montgomery 6 (AV)
Montgomery 9
Presenters: Dania Wright, Fluffy Jo Jameta Nicole Barlow, The George Washington University Nishaun Battle, Virginia State University
Black Powers: The Contested Terrain of Racial Empowerment in Cleveland During the Movement Era. Patrick Jones, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
Panel Session
Rae Lundy, Wiley College
Commentator: Christopher Anderson Davis, Adelphi University
Participants:ThePersonal is Political: The Intimate and Religious Lives and Political Powers of Antebellum Louisiana’s Free Women of Color. Noel Mellick Voltz, University of Utah
Paper Session
Tiyarhi Wilson, Sam Houston State University Anne Marie Edwards, Northern Illinois University Valarie Thompson, University of Oklahoma
George Derek Musgrove, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council Koritha Mitchell, Ohio State University
Chair: Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University
21MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Presenters: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
042. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES: HOW TO GET TO TENURE WITHOUT LOSING YOUR MIND.
Kellie M Dixon, North Carolina A&T State University
Chair:
Presenters: Kellie M Dixon, North Carolina A&T State University
The Political Worlds of George Washington Lee: Race, Power, Politics, and the End of Segregation. Charles McKinney, Jr., Rhodes College
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
040. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Riverview 4 GLOBAL BLACKNESS.
Roundtable
Chair: Anton D. House, Delaware State University and ASALH Executive Council
Participants:AfricanDiaspora Reality, Conceptual, and Analytical Instrument. Jualynne E. Dodson, Michigan State University “Americans from Africa”: Dr. Edgar Toppin and Public Intellectualism in the Black Freedom Struggle, 1955-1976. Alexander Hyres, University of Utah Black Women, Mental Wellness, and Global Education in the 20th century. Dellyssa Edinboro, Bellevue College
043. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
RETHINKING BLACK POLITICS.
Riverview 1 (AV)
041. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Riverview 2
HUMANIZING WELLNESS AND WELLBEING FOR BLACK WOMYN IN HIGHER EDUCATION.
Roundtable
“Can I Endure Such Agony?: Forced Separation and the Antebellum Domestic Slave Trade in Urban America.” Michael Lawrence Dickinson, Virginia Commonwealth University
Riverview 3 (AV)
22 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Commentator: Brittani Moncrease
TRAUMA, TRESSES, & TRUTH: UNTANGLING OUR HAIR THROUGH PERSONAL NARRATIVES.
Panel Session
HIDDEN IN FULL VIEW.
Riverview 6
Panel Session
2:15pm
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
046. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Commentator: Lateefah Muhammad, Black Heritage Council, Alabama Historical Commission
Participants:TheHistory of the Black Owned and Operated Medical Schools and Hospital in America. Anita Moncrease, Moncrease & Associates, LLC
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
Riverview 8
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Commentator: Rachel Simone Wyley, Founder & CEO, Culture Kinesis
Chair: Michael Lawrence-Riddell, Self-Evident Education
Roundtable
THE LEGACY OF BLACK MEDICAL SCHOOLS AND DEPARTMENTS IN THE U.S.
ASALH Film Festival
044. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Participants:Trauma,Tresses, & Truth: Untangling Our Hair Through Personal Narratives. Lyzette Wanzer, The Authors’ Guild Self-care and Sanctuary in Black Women’s Salons. Sherry Johnson, Grand Valley State University Power Struggle. Jasmine Hawkins, Founder & President of Urgent 365, Inc. The Colonization of Hair. Ayanna Najuma, Lincoln-McLeod LLC
Presenters: Ousmane K Power-Greene, Clark University Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College Karlos Hill, University of Oklahoma Shawn Alexander, University of Kansas
047. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
Chair: Rashard Ballinger, Moncrease & Associates, LLC
The Impact of the Flexner Report on Medical Education and Black Medical Schools. Rashard Ballinger, Moncrease & Associates, LLC; Rev. Don Tynes
Participant: Charles Chavis, George Mason University
The day in the life of a Black Medical School Student in the late 1800’s/end of the 19th Century. Anita Moncrease, Moncrease & Associates, LLC
TRUTH AND (OR) FICTION? GRAPHIC HISTORY, HISTORIC FICTION, AND THE SPECULATIVE TURN IN THE HISTORY OF RACIAL VIOLENCE.
Woodson Conference Fellow: Trent Burke, Dowdy Scholar
045. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Chair: Lyzette Wanzer, The Authors’ Guild
23MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Presenters: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College Robert L. Harris, Jr., Africana Studies and Research Center Cornell University Fred Gray, Author and CRA Attorney
ASALH Film Festival Virtual Room B
HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM WORKSHOP 3: A ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION OF JUSTICE DEFERRED: RACE AND THE SUPREME COURT.
Sponsor: University of Chicago Press, University of Chicago Press State University Michigan, Michigan State University 6:00pm
052. 6:15 pm to 6:30 pm
051. 6:00 pm to 6:15 pm
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors
Author: Jesse J Olsavsky, The Most Absolute Abolition: Runaways, Vigilance Committees, and the Rise of Revolutionary Abolitionism, 18351861
Chair: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University
Author: Timetra White, Finding Liv 6:15pm
048. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
HIDDEN IN FULL VIEW (VIRTUAL). 4:00pm
5:30pm
050. 5:30 pm to 7:00 pm Reception Exhibit Area
JAAH EDITOR MEET-AND-GREET AND WINE RECEPTION.
Commentators: Orville Vernon Burton, Author and Clemson University Armand Derfner, Civil Rights attorney
049. 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Plenary Session
Participant: Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors FINDING LIV BY TIMETRA WHITE.
THE MOST ABSOLUTE ABOLITION: RUNAWAYS, VIGILANCE COMMITTEES, AND THE RISE OF REVOLUTIONARY ABOLITIONISM, 1835-1861 BY JESSE OLSAVSKY.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2022
054. 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Virtual Room B
055. 6:30 pm to 6:45 pm
BELLY OF THE BEAST (VIRTUAL). 6:45pm
THE STORY OF MR. THOMAS CARNEY - A MARYLAND PATRIOT OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTIONARY WAR BY STEVEN XAVIER LEE.
SCAN HERE TO ACCESS
6:30pm
Alabama CDE Concourse
Nubia Kai, I Spread My Wings and I Fly Dante D King, The 400-Year Holocaust
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only)
Commentator:
AUTHORS’ BOOK SIGNING.
ASALH Film Festival
SCAN
24 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Authors Book Signing
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,
Ella J Davis, Wayne County Community College District
Author: June Manning Thomas, University of Michigan professor emerita
STRUGGLING TO LEARN: AN INTIMATE HISTORY OF SCHOOL DESEGREGATION IN SOUTH CAROLINA BY JUNE MANNING THOMAS.
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only)
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Fred D. Gray, Alabama v. King: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Criminal Trial That Launched the Civil Rights Movement
ASALH Film Festival
Virtual Authors
Lisa McNair, Dear Denise: Letters to the sister I never knew Holly Anthony Pinheiro, The Families’ Civil War: Black Soldiers and the Fight for Racial Justice Sonya Ramsey, Bertha Maxwell-Roddey: A Modern-Day Race Woman and the Power of Black Leadership Margaret Seidler, UKWELI Searching for Healing Truth
056. 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
BELLY OF THE BEAST.
053. 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
ALL ACADEMIC.
Rev. Terry Turner, God’s Amazing Grace: Reconciling Four Centuries of African American Marriages and Families
HERE TO ACCESS ADDENDUMS.
Author: Steven Xavier Lee, Heritage Museum/Maryland Commission on African American History & Culture 2022
FOR A FULL LIST OF EXHIBITORS SCAN HERE. FOR A FULL LIST OF AUTHORS SCAN HERE.
Authors:
Evan Howard Ashford, Mississippi Zion: The Struggle for Liberation in Attala County, 1865–1915 Gloria J Browne-Marshall, She Took Justice: The Black Woman, Law, and Power – 1619 to 1969 Orville Vernon Burton, Justice Deferred: Race and the Supreme Court Charles Chavis, The Silent Shore: The Lynching of Matthew Williams and the Politics of Racism in the Free State Wendy Coleman, Man of God: What is YOUR Report? and Woman of God: What is YOUR Report? Michael Lawrence Dickinson, Almost Dead: Slavery and Social Rebirth in the Black Urban Atlantic, 1680-1807 Morna Lahnice Hollister, Resisting Jim Crow: The Autobiography of Dr. John A. McFall Mattie Jones, Nurture
Frederick Newsome, An African American Philosophy Medicine
057. 6:45 pm to 7:00 pm
Virtual Authors
7:00pm
063. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
062. 8:15 pm to 8:30 pm
058. 7:00 pm to 7:15 pm
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival) BLACK FEMINIST.
Author: Wendy Reed Randall, Once There Was a Girl: A Memoir 8:15pm
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
060. 7:30 pm to 7:45 pm
BERTHA MAXWELL-RODDEY: A MODERN DAY RACE WOMAN AND THE POWER OF BLACK LEADERSHIP.
Author: Mary Romney-Schaab, An Afro-Caribbean in the Nazi Era: From Papiamentu to German 7:30pm
NOT DEFINED BY CIRCUMSTANCES OR ENVIRONMENT PRESENTED BY MRS. WENDY REED-RANDALL, AUTHOR OF ONCE THERE WAS A GIRL: A MEMOIR.
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors
THE 400-YEAR HOLOCAUST: WHITE AMERICA’S LEGAL, PSYCHOPATHIC, AND SOCIOPATHIC BLACK GENOCIDEAND THE REVOLT AGAINST CRITICAL RACE THEORY BY DANTE KING.
Virtual Authors
061. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
Commentator: Deidre Hill Butler, Union College
Participant: Zanah Thirus, Filmmaker
GROWING UP IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: A NURSE ENCOUNTERS STARVATION IN THE UNINSURED BY JOAN W. OXENDINE.
ASALH Film Festival
Author: Dante D King, Author - The 400-Year Holocaust 7:15pm
059. 7:15 pm to 7:30 pm
064. 8:30 pm to 8:45 pm
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only)
Virtual Room B BLACK FEMINIST (VIRTUAL). 8:30pm
ASALH Film Festival
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors
25MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors AN AFRO-CARIBBEAN IN THE NAZI ERA: FROM PAPIAMENTU TO GERMAN BY MARY ROMNEY-SCHAAB.
Author: Sonya Ramsey, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Author Book Talk (Virtual Only) Virtual Authors
Deirdre Foreman, Ramapo College of New Jersey Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
ALL
Gregory Lamont Mixon, University of North Carolina Charlotte and ASALH Executive Council
Leaders:
Reminisce Preservation LLC
2023 CONFERENCE PLANNING COMMITTEE MEETING.
Alabama Department of Archives and History Aziz
Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University
The Foundation International Pathfinder Press
SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ACADEMIC.
Caroline Marshall Draugh Center for the Arts and Humanities
Zee WayneCraftsState University Press (Virtual)
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Aaisha Haykal, College of Charleston and ASALH Vice President for Programs
EXHIBIT AREA OPEN II.
Kenvi Phillips, Brown University
YBI African Apparel
066. 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Exhibitor
8:00am
EXHIBITOR:
Black History 101 Mobile Museum Egyptian Harvest Rejuvenation Cream University Press of Kentucky University of Arkansas Press University of Chicago Press
Anita Moore Shepherd, ASALH Executive Council and ASALH James Weldon Johnson Branch
Participant:
University of Georgia Press
Arwin Smallwood, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and ASALH Executive Council
Read MontgomeryAfriqueHerringClothingArea
Hospitality Suite (Room 1027)
065. 8:00 am to 9:50 am Meeting
Chamber of Commerce
W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
SomethingCathy’sFashionGlobalFor Everybody
University of Massachusetts Press University of South Carolina Press University of Pennsylvania Press University of Mississippi Press
Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council
The Scholars Choice
S
Pre-function area
Louisiana State University Press (Virtual)
Alabama Department of Tourism
Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University
FOR A FULL LIST OF EXHIBITORS SCAN HERE A
University Press of Florida Univerisity of Illinois Press
Hazel D Gillis, James Weldon Johnson Branch Lyman Brodie, University of Central Florida Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University
Friday, September 30, 2022
University of North Carolina Press
Rare Breed BX
26 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Equal Justice Initiative
Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University
Commentators: Jakobi Williams, Indiana University Jane Rhodes, University of Illinois Chicago 069. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Panel Session
THE FAMILIES’ CIVIL WAR.
Chair: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College
BLACK CHALLENGES TO CONTAINMENT AND THE CARCERAL STATE IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.
Chair: Melanie Newport, University of Connecticut
Commentator: Caitlin Reed Wiesner, Mercy College Woodson Conference Fellow: Jada Foote, Cheatham-White Scholar, University of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University 070. 8:30 am to 10:00 am
ASALH Film Festival
Alabama E (AV)
Participant: Monica Land, Producer Joy Davenport, Producer
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Presenters: Holly Anthony Pinheiro, Furman University James Mendez, Loyola University Chicago Brandi Brimmer, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University
27MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
067. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Roundtable
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
BEYOND NON-VIOLENCE AND SELF-DEFENSE: CIVIL RIGHTS, BLACK POWER, AND THE FIGHT FOR ECONOMIC JUSTICE.
Participants:
FANNIE LOU HAMER’S AMERICA.
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
8:30am
Participants:“Everybody’s Got a Right to Live”: Black Power Activists and the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign. Jonathan Dean Soucek, Purdue University From Vanguards to School Teachers: How the Black Panther Party Launched a Model for Elementary Education,. Akin Abioye Jim Crow North, the Black Student Union, and 1960s Activism in Washington State. Marc Arsell Robinson, California State University San Bernardino
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
“We are not a civil rights group…We are a revolutionary organization”: Safiya Bukhari, the Black Liberation Army, and the Politics of Abolition. Joshua Crutchfield, University of Texas at Austin Reframing Resistance: Joseph Beam and the Prison Question in the 1980s. Richard D’Von Daily, Penn State University School Safety as a Labor Issue? Studying Community and Teacher Debates Over the Role of Police in Detroit Public Schools, 19681973. Dara Walker, Penn State University “Jail won’t do anything”: Black Women Respond to Rape in the Bay Area, 1977-1979. Caitlin Reed Wiesner, Mercy College
Commentator: Jualynne E. Dodson, Michigan State University
Woodson Conference Fellow: Amileon Williams, February One Scholar, NC Golden Leaf Scholar, HRSA Nursing Scholar, Blue Cross Blue Shield Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University 068. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Panel Session
FRIDAY,
071. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Chair: Anthony J Cade, The U.S. Army Center of Military History
Woodson Conference Fellow: Raina Innis, University Honors Program North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
The Power of Naming: Toponymy and Black Communities in Southern Alabama. Justin Rudder, Alabama Department of Archives and History
Leaders: R. Wayne Woodson, Woodson and Associates, LLC
Paper Session
The Historical Trauma of Roger L Booker, Structural Racism & Its Impact on The Black Community. Roger L. Booker Jr., The University of Kansas
NEOLIBERALISM AND THE STRUGGLE FOR BLACK LIVES IN THE AFRICAN WORLD.
Chair: John Randolph Tilghman, Tuskegee University
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
Participants:
Montgomery 8
BLACK SPACES AND PLACES.
074. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Montgomery 4
072. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Workshop
THE POWER OF ORAL HISTORY.
Presenters:
Kellie M Dixon, North Carolina A&T State University R. Wayne Woodson, Woodson and Associates, LLC
Montgomery 5 (AV)
CREATING SPACE FOR EQUITY: REALITIES OF ENVIRONMENTAL, MENTAL AND OCCUPATIONAL WELLNESS FOR BIPOC HIGHER EDUCATION LEADERS.
Chair: Ashley Robertson Preston, Howard University
The Historical Intersection and Impact of Environmental Racism, the Informal Economy, Social Security Benefits and Black Woman’s Mortality. Tahara Coleman, Texas Woman’s University The Importance of African American Architects to Overall Health and Wellness of The African American Community. Daniel Acker, Independent Scholar Therapy at the Shop: Black Barbershops and Black Men’s Mental Health. Brandon Stokes, Indiana University
Commentator:
Kellie M Dixon, North Carolina A&T State University Kelli Thompson, North Carolina A&T State University
Commentator: Godfrey Vincent, Tuskegee University
Andrew Scott Baer, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Associate Professor of History
Participants:Educating in a Burning House: How Black Teachers Desegregated Schools, Colleges, and Universities in Virginia, 1960-2001. Alexander Hyres, University of Utah
Panel Session
Participants:Firestone and Black People In Liberia. Joe R. Jimmeh, Tuskegee University Jamaica For Sale: How Michael Manley’s Democratic Socialism Led to Neoliberalism. John Randolph Tilghman, Tuskegee University
“Everything for Sale”: A History of Privatization in Trinidad and Tobago. Godfrey Vincent, Tuskegee University
Paper Session
Commentator: Lisa A Rose-Rodriguez, ASALH Cleveland
SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
073. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
28 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Paper Session
Just in Case You Forgot: Exploring the Legacy of Southern Female Emcees. Marquese McFerguson, Florida Atlantic University Ain’t I a Woman: The Evolution of the Woman Emcee and Her Impact on Occupational Justice. Jian Jones, Florida A&M University
076. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Riverview 1 (AV)
29MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Participants:AfricanaStudent Organization and Africana Studies: Context of their emergence. kioni amelia kearney, Buffalo State College Why We Became Majors in Africana Studies at Buffalo State College. Arif Emmitt Pitts, Buffalo State College Developing Africana at Buffalo State: The Work, the Lessons, and Our Feelings. Jayla Phillips, Buffalo State College Context and Rationale for Student Involvement in Developing Africana Studies at Buffalo State. Mikaila Morgan, Buffalo State College
Montgomery
Paper Session
Chair: Baiyina W. Muhammad, North Carolina Central University
Panel Session 9
Participants:BlackLiberation, Sociopolitical Change, and Political Wellness: A Theoretical Perspective. Chris Strickland, University of Georgia Fighting for Core Issues: Greater Boston CORE. Zebulon V Miletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council Heartland Blackness: Diasporic Consciousness in Iowa’s African American Press, 1894-1914. David Brodnax, Trinity Christian College Organize the South: How a Southern Black Workers Organization Connected Workers Rights and Environmental Justice in the 1980s. Ajamu Amiri Dillahunt, Michigan State University
Chair: Yvette Renee Harris, Miami University
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Commentator: Marcus Watson, Buffalo State College
Participants:DeepWells: A Correlation of Ida B. Wells and Queen Latifah on Community Contextualization. Derrick Standifer; Jian Jones, Florida A&M University
DEVELOPING AFRICANA STUDIES AT BUFFALO STATE COLLEGE: STUDENTS’ PERSPECTIVES.
THE ROLE OF THE WOMAN EMCEE WITHIN THE BLACK COMMUNITY.
Woodson Conference Fellow: Levi Burks, February One Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Riverview 6
Participants:AFreshDisturbing Wind of Change: June Dobbs Butts & the Superb Life of a Black Sex Therapist. Je’lon Alexander, National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture at Alabama State University Crafting Black Femininity: Why Black Women Should Embrace All Things Girlie For Wellness. Chiara Atoyebi, Author Loud Black Bodies: An Intersectional Lens on Obstetric Violence. Veronica Ahmed, Purdue University Love Ethics and African American Health. Carolyn Medine, University of Georgia
077. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Chair: Marcus Watson, Buffalo State College
Commentator: Ella J Davis, Wayne County Community College District
Chair: Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University
078. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
BLACK ORGANIZING AND LIBERATION.
Commentator: Kimberly Michele Stanley, Indiana State University
BLACK SEXUAL POLITICS.
Panel Session
075. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Alabama D (AV)
Woodson Conference Fellow: James DeBerry, Cheatham-White Scholar, University of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
BLACK WOMEN’S BODIES.
A SPECIAL PLACE IN TIME AND SPACE - A VIEW OF BLACK HEALTH AND HISTORY FROM THE AFRICAN AMERICAN FAR SOUTH.
Woodson Conference Fellow: Dora Rice, University Honors Program North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
ASALH Film Festival
079. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Paper Session
Chair: Gene S Tinnie, Dos Amigos/Fair Rosamond Slave Ship Project
Participants:BlackWomen
FANNIE LOU HAMER’S AMERICA (VIRTUAL). 10:00am
30 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Commentator: Kathryn Tucker, Troy University
Moderator: Bertis D English, Alabama State University
Participants:IReminisce Over You - Valerie Patterson. Valerie Lyles Patterson, Florida International University Black Health and Wellness in the era of Jim Crow. Kisha King, ASALH South Florida Chapter South Florida: Epicenter of Middle Passage Awareness and Remembrance. Gene S Tinnie, Dos Amigos/Fair Rosamond Slave Ship Project
America’s Forgotten Migration: Black Southerners’ Efforts to Secure Graduate Education During the Era of Legal Segregation. Crystal R. Sanders, Emory University
Commentators: Valerie Lyles Patterson, Florida International University Kisha King, ASALH South Florida Chapter
080. 8:30 am to 10:00 am
081. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Key Session
The State Must Provide: Why America’s Colleges Have Always Been Unequal – And How to Set Them Right. Adam Harris Shelter in a Time of Storm: How Black Colleges Fostered Generations of Leadership and Activism. Jelani Favors, North Carolina A&T University
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
A CONVERSATION ON THE ROLE, LEGACY, AND FUTURE OF HBCUS IN HIGHER EDUCATION.
Virtual Room B
Don’t Feel Pain, Unpacking the Medical Myth. Nyla Richardson, North Carolina A & T University Black Women’s Body Positivity in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. Antonia Jade King, University of London Seizing Black Women’s Wellbeing: The Racist Assault on Black Midwifery. K. Marielle Morgan, Purdue University Sporting DIVAS: Athletes, Black Womanhood, & Wellness. Ramona Bell, Cal Poly Humboldt
082. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Panel Session
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Participants:TheCampus Color Line: College Presidents and the Struggle for Black Freedom. Eddie R. Cole Jr., University of California, Los Angeles
Chair: Tara White, University of North Carolina Wilmington and ASALH Executive Council
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Participants:CentralLunatic Asylum for Colored Insane: Mental Health is Health. Adrienne Fikes, Soul Power Coach; King Davis, University of Texas at Austin; Ronald O Forbes, MD, Central State Hospital Family Implications of archived data. Adrienne Fikes, Soul Power Coach
Paper Session
BLACK WOMEN IN HEALTH CARE.
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: King Davis, University of Texas at Austin
Participants:AHistory of International Paper in Mobile and the Struggle for Racial Justice. Travis Cummins, University of South Alabama Building Black Philadelphia 1915-1929. David Alvin Canton, University of Florida The Philadelphia Black Metropolis of 1838. Michiko Quinones, Black Docents Collective; Morgan Lloyd, The African American Museum in Philadelphia
Chair: Charles Johnson, North Carolina Central University
31MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Montgomery 5 (AV)
NEXT-GEN BLACK HISTORY FACULTY: STUDENT RESEARCH, MULTI-INSTITUTION COLLABORATION, AND THE DIGITAL LIBRARY ON AMERICAN SLAVERY (ROUNDTABLE).
CENTRAL LUNATIC ASYLUM FOR COLORED INSANE: MENTAL HEALTH IS HEALTH.
A FOCUS ON BLACK CITIES.
Commentator: Terrance Joshua Lewis, Auburn University 084. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Panel Session
Montgomery 4
Commentator: Andrew Scott Baer, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Associate Professor of History 086. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Roundtable
Alabama E (AV)
The Central State Archives Project Data. King Davis, University of Texas at Austin; Ronald O Forbes, MD, Central State Hospital Woodson Conference Fellow: Tiera Henderson, White House HBCU Initiative Scholar University North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University 085. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Paper Session
Commentators:
Chair: Paul Ringel, High Point University
Participants:AnExploratory Analysis of African American Women in Pharmacy: 1894-1950. John E Clark, University of South Florida Finding the Professional Voice: History, Role, and Experience of Black Nurse Practitioners in the U.S. 1965-2022. Ravenne N Aponte, University of Pennsylvania Jeannette Washington, Pittsburgh’s First Black Nurse. Adam Lee Cilli, University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg
Tyanna West, North Carolina Central University Stephanie Sterling, East Carolina University
Chair: Valerie Ann Holt, ASALH Treasurer
083. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Presenters: Elena Kendrick, North Carolina Central University Celeste Keith, North Carolina Central University Hannah Weaks, East Carolina University Caroline Van Staalduinen, East Carolina University Kirsten Carter, University of North Carolina at Pembroke Santevia Reaves, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
Woodson Conference Fellow: Ashara Perry, University Honors Program North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Participant:
Montgomery 6 (AV)
JOIN ASALH LEADERSHIP.
Chair: David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council
089. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Roundtable
Radical Resistance on the Ground: Gardening and Farming as Social and Political Self-Efficacy Thelonious Cook, Mighty Thundercloud Edible Forest
087. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Radical Resistance on the Ground: Gardening and Farming as Social and Political Self-Efficacy Gina Marie Lewis, Bowie State University
Presenters: Carmen Harris, Upstate University of South Carolina Dawn Herd-Clark, Hillsborough Community College Kelly Houston Jones, Arkansas Tech University Cherisse Jones-Branch, Arkansas State University
Moses Massenburg, Michigan State University and ASALH Executive Council Zende Lamar Clark, ASALH Executive Council and ASALH Manhattan Branch Denise Rolark Barnes, ASALH Executive Council & The Washington Informer Annette Palmer, Morgan State University (Ret.)
Roundtable
Radical Resistance on the Ground: Gardening and Farming as Social and Political Self-Efficacy Nina Buxembaum, Artist and York College CUNY
Chair: LaShawn Harris, Michigan State University
Chair: Gina Marie Lewis, Bowie State University
Chair: Melissa L. Cooper, Associate Professor of History, Rutgers-Newark
Panel Session
NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF THE BLACK SOUTH.
Montgomery 9
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Participants:
RADICAL RESISTANCE ON THE GROUND: GARDENING AND FARMING AS SOCIAL AND POLITICAL SELFEFFICACY.
088. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
32 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Presenters: Beatrice J. Adams, Assistant Professor of History, College of Wooster Mahaliah Little, Assistant Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of California, Irvine Pamela N Walker, Texas A&M University - San Antonio Jasmin C. Howard, Michigan State University
Roundtable
DARLENE CLARK HINE & GERALD HORNE BOOK PANEL: CHERISSE JONES BRANCH (IN-PERSON PANEL).
Montgomery 8
090. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
APPROACH TO IDENTIFYING TRAUMA IN AFRICAN AMERICANS THROUGH JAZZ (1920’s- 1960’s). Yolaine Joseph-Sykes, Miles College
Chairs:
093. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
091. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Participants:AFEMINIST
Trauma in African American Literature. Alfonso Hawkins, Miles College Trauma through Octavia Butler. Loreal Moore-Bridges, Miles College It’s not Easy: Trauma through Walter Mosely. Kerry D. Brackett, Miles College
Thura Mack, University of Tennessee Knoxville Adreonna Bennett, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Kimberly Cheek, North Carolina A&T State University
092. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
33MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Roundtable
Participants:ACommunity Based Approach to Deter Childhood Obesity in Title 1 Schools. Saungaylia Randolph, Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University; Sarah Price, PhD; Conchita Newman, Florida A&M University; Dreamal Worthen, PhD, Florida A&M University; Kenisha Monique Thomas, Ph. D, Florida Agriculture & Mechanical University Culturally Competent Interventions to “Unmask” Stress in Caregivers of Black Children with Autism. Kimberly Mosley, The University of North Texas Examining Black Women’s Internalization of the Strong Black Woman/Superwoman, Gendered Racial Identity and Collective Coping. Devin Junell Willis, Western Michigan University How Online Social Support Platforms Co-manage Mental Health for Black Men. Ronald H Freeman, Retired Hypertension among African Americans in the Southern United States: A Lifespan Perspective on Black Health. Georgiana Logan, Marshall University; Dashauna Ballard, The University of Alabama; Kristen Allen-Watts, The University of Alabama-Birmingham Indian Woods: A GIS Case Study in Cultural Resilience. Nia O’Bannon, North Carolina A&T State University James Weldon Johnson Branch of ASALH Branch Programs and Activities. Hazel D Gillis, James Weldon Johnson Branch Nourishing the Movement: Georgia Gilmore and the Club from Nowhere during the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-1956. Sylvia Marshall, Romare Bearden Branch (Charlotte, NC) 2020 Pandemic Review Of Disadvantaged Families’ Factors Of Resiliency And Family-Based Prevention Programs. Alice Muriel Leonce Stevens, Holistic Elevation
Riverview 1 (AV)
Chair: Cequyna Moore, US/ICOMOS
Presenters:
Panel Session
Poster Session
Pashington Obeng, Pan African World Heritage Museum (Accra, Ghana) Babacar Mbow, Pan African World Heritage World Museum (Accra, Ghana) Jennifer Blanks, Texas A&M University Valentina Aduen, Texas A&M University
DEEP SCARS: ADDRESSING TRAUMA THROUGH BLACK CREATIONS.
Poster Sessions
COMING INTO FOCUS: HOW THE DISCOURSE OF MONUMENT REMOVAL RECLAIMS COMMUNITY HEALTH IN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA.
POSTER SESSION 1.
Chair: Kerry D. Brackett, Miles College
Riverview 2
CARTER G. WOODSON GRAND RE-OPENING PREVIEW 2023.
097. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
34 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Riverview 6 DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS: CAREER PATHWAYS OUTSIDE OF ACADEMIA.
Presenters: Vince Vaise, National Park Service W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth) Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University
096. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
Hannah Rainey, North Carolina State University
Commentator: TaKeia Anthony, Kentucky State University
Commentator:
The Medicalization of Race: Public Health Policy for African Americans in Richmond, Virginia 1890 to 1920. Deirdre Foreman, Ramapo College of New Jersey Trauma-Informed Care. Tanya England, Manhattan Branch
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
095. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Victoria J. Gallagher, North Carolina State University
Doris Wesley, North Carolina State University Shadrick Addy, Ohio State University
Riverview 3 (AV)
STERILIZATION, RACE, AND TRAUMA: TRACING THE HISTORY OF DETRIMENTAL HEALTH IMPLICATIONS FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Elizabeth J. Nelson, North Carolina State University
Chair: Michael Chambers II, National Park Service
Roundtable
THE VIRTUAL MARTIN LUTHER KING (VMLK) PROJECT: EMBODIMENT, AFFECT, RECOVERY AND EQUITY.
Constance L. Diggs, Nyack College/Alliance Theological Seminary
Participants:ForcedBreeding/Forced Sterilization: The Black Woman’s Fertility Under Siege By White Legal Inhumanity. Gloria J BrowneMarshall, John Jay College / ASALH Executive Council
Panel Session
Chair: Deirdre Foreman, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Presenters: Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council
Riverview 4
Leaders:
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
094. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Ashley Jordan, Evansville African American Museum Jametta Davis, National Archives and Records Administration Jocelyn Imani, National Park Service
Virtual Room B
FRIDAY,
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
099. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
101. 10:15 am to 11:45 am
ASALH Film Festival
Participant: Romay Davis, Member of the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion and Congressional Gold Medal Recipient James Theres, Director
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
Chair:
098. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership 10:15am
NPS-TUSKEGEE MILITARY HISTORY-TUSKEGEE AIRMEN NHS.
Participants:NPS-Tuskegee Military History-Tuskegee Airmen NHS. Frank Toland, Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site, NPS Tuskegee Military History-NPS- Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site. Jameta Nicole Barlow, The George Washington University Tuskegee Airmen NHS- Tuskegee Military History-NPS. Maria Tinker, Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site, NPS Woodson Conference Fellow: Kalia Coleman, February One Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical state University
Commentator:
THE SIX TRIPLE EIGHT: NO MAIL, LOW MORALE (VIRTUAL).
Commentator: Don Harrell, University of Central Florida and Dorothy Turner-Johnson, Central Florida Branch
ASALH Film Festival
Riverview 8
Panel Session
100. 10:15 am to 11:45 am
SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
THE SIX TRIPLE EIGHT: NO MAIL, LOW MORALE. Moderator: Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University
Key Session
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Chair: Maria Tinker, Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site, NPS
THROUGH FATHER’S EYE: RICHARD WRIGHT ‘S CHRONIC AMERICAN CONDITION.
35MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
Participants:Engaging the Mind, Body, and Voice in Public Health and Wellness: A Reading of Richard Wright’s Native Son. Jennifer A. Umezinwa, Morgan State University Man Up: Toxic Masculinity in The Man Who Was Almost a Man. Rachael E Falu, Morgan State University Richard Wright’s life and Safety, Love, and Positive Self-Esteem. Akila E Wilson, Morgan State University
Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership
Participants:TheTexas Domestic Slave Trade Digital Edition. Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas at Austin Kinship and Longing: Keywords for Black Louisiana. Jessica Marie Johnson, Johns Hopkins University NHPRC-Mellon Planning Grants for Collaborative Digital Editions in African American, Asian American, Hispanic American, and Native American History and Ethnic Studies Program. R. Darrell Meadows, National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Archives and Records Administration Woodson Conference Fellow: Alaina Brock, Cheatham-White Scholar, University of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
LEARNING LUNCH- DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS SESSION: “AND WHO ARE YOU? WHAT DO YOU DO?”.
A CRIME ON THE BAYOU - FILM SCREENING (VIRTUAL).
KEYWORDS AND TXDST: SEEKING AND CENTERING AFRICAN AMERICAN VOICES IN COLLABORATIVE DIGITAL EDITIONS.
12:00pm
104. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Workshop
Leaders: Marshanda Smith, Michigan State University Kenneth M Hamilton, Southern Methodist University Merline Pitre, Texas Southern University
103. 12:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Chair: R. Darrell Meadows, National Historical Publications and Records Commission, National Archives and Records Administration
ASALH Film Festival
ASALH Film Festival
FRIDAY, 30, 2022
Emcee: Bertis D English, Alabama State University
Virtual Room B
Montgomery 5 (AV)
105. 12:00 pm to 2:00 pm
SEPTEMBER
36 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
102. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Luncheon
Invocation: Manuel B Williams, Resurrection Catholic Church
Greetings: Tonya S. Chestnut, Alabama State Board of Education Ron Simmons
106. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Panel Session
A CRIME ON THE BAYOU - FILM SCREENING.
CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON.
2:05pm
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Keynote Speaker: Jarvis R. Givens, Harvard University and ASALH Executive Council
Alabama B (AV/Livestream)
Participants:Resistance and Rebellion at John C. Calhoun’s Fort Hill Plantation. La’Neice Littelton, Clemson University Resistance through Land Ownership at Historic Brattonsville. Lisa Bratton, Tuskegee University Resistance at Mt. Jolly Plantation. Michael Webb
Presenters: Anthony Cohen, President, The Menare Foundation, Inc. Kathe Hambrick, River Road African American Museum Mary Liz Stewart, Co-Founder, Underground Railroad Education Center Paul Stewart, Co-Founder, Underground Railroad Education Center
Panel Session
BLACK STUDIES, BLACK THEOLOGY, EDUCATION, AND MENTAL HEALTH.
109. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Montgomery 4
Roundtable
Woodson Conference Fellow: Akanke Mason-Hogans, Cheatham-White, Chevron Corporate Scholarship, Leadership Alliance FYRE Scholar North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Presenters: K.T. Ewing, Tennessee State University Alyssa Patryce Cole, University of Florida LaCrisha Johnson, Tennessee State University Samantha White, Manhattanville College
110. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Montgomery 5 (AV)
Roundtable
Alabama E (AV)
107. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
108. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Roundtable
111. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Chair: She ri Jackson, Atlanta, GA
Chair: Andrea Ringer, Tennessee State University
Chair: Lisa Bratton, Tuskegee University
Alabama D (AV)
Presenters: Eric R. Jackson, Northern Kentucky University and ASALH Executive Council David Jason Childs, Northern Kentucky University Erika Jay, Northern Kentucky University
FELIX ARMFIELD SESSION: DISSERTATION PITCH LIGHTNING ROUND.
37MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
BLACK HEALTH AND COMMUNITY CARE: A WORKING GROUP.
“RESISTING ENSLAVEMENT AND ITS AFTERMATH AT HISTORIC PLANTATIONS IN SOUTH CAROLINA”.
Leaders: Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University Cherisse Jones-Branch, Arkansas State University Stefan Bradley, Loyola Marymount University
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
Chair: Jasmin A Young, University of California, Riverside
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream) ROOTS AND RESISTANCE.
Chair: LaShawn Harris, Michigan State University
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: James D. Conway, Arkansas State University
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Montgomery 8
HOWARD/MELLON: ART AND SOCIAL JUSTICE: ARTMAKING AS COMMUNITY WELLNESS.
Participants:Manofthe
Sponsor: Heather McNamee, Arkansas State University
114. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Sowande Mustakeem, Washington University in St. Louis Koritha Mitchell, Ohio State University Regina Bradley, Kennesaw State University
Riverview 2
Roundtable
Key Session
BLACK POWER IN THE MID-SOUTH: BLACK PRIDE AND EMOTIONAL WELLNESS IN MEMPHIS AND ARKANSAS.
38 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Media Session
113. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
THE VACCINE: OUR HISTORY, OUR HEALTH, OUR HOPE.
Montgomery 6 (AV)
Presenters: Eden Reff-Presco, Global ArtSpeak Alliance Pamela Mays-McDonald, ASALH Philadelphia Chapter, Arts advocate/Arts activist/Art Historian, Mother Bethel AME Church Historical Society Nina Buxembaum, Artist and York College CUNY Ada Pinkston, Towson University
Panel Session
Presenters: Derrick White, University of Kentucky Howard Overton Robinson, Alabama State University, National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture DeLisa Minor Harris, Fisk University
Commentator: Treva Lindsey, The Ohio State University
Riverview 1 (AV)
116. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
112. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
DARLENE CLARK HINE & GERALD HORNE BOOK PANEL: TREVA LINDSEY (IN-PERSON PANEL).
Roundtable
Participant: Wendy Coleman, MAN OF GOD: WHAT IS YOUR REPORT? and WOMAN OF GOD: WHAT IS YOUR REPORT?
Presenters:
People: Reverend Ezekiel Bell and the Black Power Era in Memphis. James D. Conway, Arkansas State University Looking Good and Feeling Good: How Beauty Pageants, Healthcare and the Arts Became Radicalized Symbols of Black Power in Arkansas. Maurice D. Gipson, University of Missouri
Woodson Conference Fellow: Zoe Brook, February One Scholar, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical state University
115. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Chair: Andrea Jackson Gavin
SEARCHING AND PRESERVING HBCU ARCHIVES.
Chair: Gina Marie Lewis, Bowie State University
Something Must Be Done: Black Education Activism as A Fight for Student Mental Health and Wellbeing in Jonesboro, Arkansas. Heather McNamee, Arkansas State University
Joseph L. Green, Senior Pastor, St. Paul Missionary Baptist Church Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Participant: Fred Wesley, Musician Scot Brown, UCLA
Roundtable
120. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
400 YEARS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY WORKSHOP: I FEAR FOR MY LIFE.
THE LONG HISTORY OF BLACK WOMEN’S HEALTH PRACTICE AND ADVOCACY.
The Demand for 21st Century School Integration in New York City. Christopher Bonastia, Lehman College and CUNY Graduate Center
Key Session
Panel Session
Leader: Scot Brown, UCLA
Riverview 4
121. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Riverview 3 (AV)
Chair: Cheryl Dong, University of Northern Iowa
117. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
REMEMBERING THE ROOTS OF FUNK.
PUBLIC PLACES, HIDDEN EXPERIENCES: AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE AND THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE.
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
Participants:Bridgingthe Trust Gap: Lessons from Black Students in NYC High Schools. Brittany N Fox-Williams, Lehman College, CUNY A DuBoisian Framework for Understanding Black Families’ School Choices. Chantal A Hailey, University of Texas at Austin
Chair: Cheryl T. Grills, Loyola Marymount University, 400 Years of African American History Commission
Veronica T. Watson, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
119. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
118. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Christopher Bonastia, Lehman College and CUNY Graduate Center
Presenters: Anne Mitchell Whisnant, Duke University Erin Krutko Devlin, University of Mary Washington Ann McCleary, University of West Georgia Evan Kutzler, Georgia Southwestern State University
39MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Participants:Womenand Wellness in Africana Healing Cultures: Tracing the Gendered Spiritual Roots of African/American Approaches to Health and Well-Being. Ras Michael Brown, Georgia State University Black Women, Disability, Ex-Slave Pensions. Tiffany A Player, Georgia State University What Happened to Granny Midwives When Prayers and Clean Hands Were Not Enough: Midwifery Laws and Policies in 1920s Georgia and Alabama. Ruby Manley, Georgia State University Rebelling Against the System: The Dysfunctional Healthcare Within New York and North Carolina Women’s Prisons 1974-1975. Caitlin Harris, Georgia State University
Presenters: Lewis Rogers, Petersburg National Battlefield
Riverview 6
THE ROLES OF TRUST AND COMMUNITY IN SCHOOL CHOICES OF BLACK NEW YORKERS.
Panel Session
Chair: Ras Michael Brown, Georgia State University
126. 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm Reception
124. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
Participants:Augustus Wood, “‘Soul Power! Worker Power! Black Power!’: Black Radical Labor Social Movements: Atlanta as a Case Study, 1970-1973”. Augustus C. Wood, III, University of Illinois LA ’92 – Whither Black Radicalism? Lou Turner, University of Illinois Radial Healing: A Pathway to Black Liberation. Helen Neville, University of Illinois
Participant: Hazel Gurland-Pooler, Filmmaker
Moderator: Eboni Preston Goddard, National Parks Conservation Association
EPISODES OF RADICAL BLACKNESS ACROSS TIME, SPACE, AND STRUGGLES.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2022
Woodson Conference Fellow: Taylor King, Cheatham-White Scholar, University of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University 6:30pm
Commentator: Leigh Ann Wheeler, Binghamton University
Plenary Session
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Commentator: James B. Stewart, Pennsylvania State University
JAAH RECEPTION AND NIGHT OUT.
STORMING CAESARS PALACE (VIRTUAL). 4:00pm
STORMING CAESARS PALACE.
Sponsor: University of Chicago Press, University of Chicago Press State University Michigan, Michigan State University
Chair: Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, ASALH Executive Council and University of Illinois
2:15pm
THE ALABAMA BLACK BELT NATIONAL HERITAGE AREA: HEALING THROUGH HISTORY & CULTURE.
Presenters: Tina Naremore Jones, University of West Alabama Josephine McCall, The Penalty For Success: My Father Was Lynched In Lowndes County, Alabama Phillip Howard, The Conservation Fund Joshua Jenkins, National Parks Conservation Association Meg Ford, Ruffner Mountain
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Alabama State Archive
ASALH Film Festival
122. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Virtual Room B
123. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
Participant: Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University
Panel Session
Riverview 8
40 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
The 1960s ‘Black Perspective Historians’: Chronicling the Story of the Second Storey* of Radical Black Historians. Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, ASALH Executive Council and University of Illinois
125. 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
ASALH Film Festival
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
RECLAIMING POWER:THE BLACK MATERNAL HEALTH CRISIS (VIRTUAL). 8:15pm
EXHIBIT AREA OPEN III.
A FULL LIST OF EXHIBITORS SCAN HERE. A SCAN HERE TO ACCESS ALL ACADEMIC. S
ASALH Film Festival
University of Massachusetts Press University of South Carolina Press University of Pennsylvania Press University of Mississippi Press University of Georgia Press
Commentator: Lateefah Muhammad, Black Heritage Council, Alabama Historical Commission
ON NEXT PAGE
Pre-function area
Caroline Marshall Draugh Center for the Arts and Humanities Read MontgomeryAfriqueHerringClothingArea Chamber of Commerce
FOR
131. 8:00 am to 5:00 pm Exhibitor
RECLAIMING POWER: THE BLACK MATERNAL HEALTH CRISIS.
Commentator: Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University
Alabama Department of Tourism Alabama Department of Archives and History
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
ASALH Film Festival
EXHIBITOR:
HEALING IN COLOUR.
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
University of North Carolina Press
Reminisce Preservation LLC
Virtual Room B
University Press of Florida Univerisity of Illinois Press
130. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
Virtual Room B HEALING IN COLOUR (VIRTUAL).
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Egyptian Harvest Rejuvenation Cream
41MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Participant: Keshia Wall, Elon University Stephanie Baker, Elon University
ASALH Film Festival
ASALH Film Festival
The Foundation International Pathfinder Press
Rare Breed BX
University Press of Kentucky University of Arkansas Press University of Chicago Press
The Scholars Choice
CONTINUED
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Equal Justice Initiative
129. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
128. 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
8:00am
Black History 101 Mobile Museum
127. 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Saturday, October 1, 2022
Participants:BarbaraJohns and Beyond: Black Male Youth, the American High School, and Civil Rights Activism in Virginia, 1951-1970. Alexander Hyres, University of Utah Civil Rights and the Struggles for Access to Physical and Mental Health: A Tale of Two Cities. Jonathon Stone, Howard University Black Lives Matter and the 1960’s Civil Rights Movement for Wellness: A Comparative Analysis. Chris Strickland, University of Georgia Health Activism during the Freedom Movement. Thomas Ward, Farmingdale State College-SUNY
Leaders: Lisa Brock, Howard-Mellon Grant Consultant Michelle Pourciau, Howard-Mellon Program Coordinator
HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM WORKSHOP 4: SOCIAL JUSTICE 103: UNDERSTANDING THE BLACK DIASPORA.
SomethingCathy’sFashionGlobalFor Everybody
Woodson Conference Fellow: Larissa Forbes, University Honors Program North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Chair: Teairra Z. Evans, The University of Alabama
YBI African Apparel Zee WayneCraftsState University Press (Virtual) Louisiana State University Press (Virtual)
Presenters: Barbara-Shae Jackson, The University of Alabama Paris Cooke, The University at Birmingham Olivia Thompson, The University of Alabama Teairra Z. Evans, The University of Alabama
Alabama E (AV)
Woodson Conference Fellow: Nakia Rucker, University Honors Program, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
Participants:FreedomColonies in Grimes County, Texas, 1870-1940. Brandon Jackson Emancipation Renewed: The Second Great Migration to Beloit, Wisconsin. Tonia Cansler-Merideth Enslaved Marriage Strategies: A Cumberland County, Virginia Study. Krista Macumber, Sam Houston State University A Brief History of Walker County’s Freed People, 1865-1870. Kirsten Willis
Chair: Bernadette Pruitt, Sam Houston State University
134. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Paper Session
Alabama D (AV)
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
8:30am
Chair: Leslie Etienne, Indiana University - Purdue University, Indianapolis/Joseph Taylor Branch
Commentator: Elijah Gaddis, Auburn University
BLACK HEALTH AND CIVIL RIGHTS.
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Panel Session
135. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
42 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Aziz
133. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Workshop
SWITCH UP THE FLOW: COST AND BENEFIT OF CODESWITCHING WITHIN THE ACADEMY.
132. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Roundtable
A CENTURY OF EMANCIPATION, A CENTURY OF HOPE: AFRICAN AMERICANS SEEK WELL-BEING AND SUCCESS, 1860-1970.
Montgomery 4
Panel Session
136. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Presenter: GAIDI NKRUMA, Dr. Edna B. McKenzie Branch
138. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Leaders: Charles Johnson, North Carolina Central University Leslie Gutierrez, Johnson C. Smith University Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University Raja Malikah Rahim, Appalachian State University
139. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Riverview 1 (AV)
Roundtable
DIGITAL HUMANITIES SESSION: GETTING STARTED WITH ORAL HISTORY.
Chair: Conchita P Ndege, North Carolina A&T State University
Chair: Darren E. Moten, Alabama State University
Participants:BlacksDefending America and Health Problems as a Result of Service. Ernest Hooker, North Carolina A&T State University The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: How More than the Patient is Affected by Illness and the Role of Grandparents, Racism and Sexism. Conchita P Ndege, North Carolina A&T State University
Leaders: Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership Ronald Brooks Saunders, Dr. Edna B. McKenzie Branch
Presenters: Robert Cassanello, University of Central Florida Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College Cheryl “Chaka” Mango, Virginia State University Cassie S. Turnipseed, Jackson State University Woodson Conference Fellow: Olivia Perkins, University Honors Program North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
137. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Workshop
Montgomery 5 (AV)
The Tuskegee Experiment and Tuskegee University and HBCUs that Have Provided Positive Health Care Since Jim Crow. Carl Elliot Farrington
Participants:ACreative Afterlife. Chavonte Wright, Indiana University Beauty from Ashes: Image of Teen Mental Health in Select Black Teen Novels. Margaret Bernice Smith Bristow, Hampton University Black Joy: The Conjuring of the Artistic Spirit. Eden Reff-Presco, Global ArtSpeak Alliance Race-Related Health and Wellness Frames via Public Broadcasting Content from 1980 to 2016. Lynsey Saunders, University of Florida
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
BLACK ARTS AND MEDIA.
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
Paper Session
Commentator: Peter Blackmer, Eastern Michigan University
43MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
140. 8:30 am to 9:40 am Workshop
QIGONG: AN EASTERN MODALITY FOR BLACK FOLKS.
Montgomery 6 (AV)
SOUTHERN STATE LEGISLATION 2022: THE PANIC OVER CRITICAL RACE THEORY AND THE FUTURE OF ACADEMIC FREEDOM.
BLACK HEALTH MATTERS: FROM THE BLACK FAMILY TO HBCUS AND BLACKS IN THE US MILITARY.
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Panel Session
Paper Session
From Miseducation to Liberation: The Black Intellectual Tradition and K-12 Social Studies Education. Annette Teasdell, Clark Atlanta University; Greg Wiggan, University of North Carolina Charlotte
TEACHING BLACK HISTORY.
143. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Panel Session
“A Black International Was Possible”: Black Arts in the US and the UK and a Black Arts International. James Smethurst, University of Massachusetts—Amherst
Commentator: Lisa A Rose-Rodriguez, ASALH Cleveland
Chair: Amber Anderson, College of Charleston
Participants:CRTForNon-Educators, Congressmen, Former Presidents, Governors, School Boards, Parent Groups, and Other Novices. Ronald Cunningham
Madison McKennah Meeks, College of Charleston Jasmine Palmer, College of Charleston Jalen Newell, College of Charleston
144. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Commentators: Lyda ZebulonPetersVMiletsky, SUNY-Stony Brook University and ASALH Executive Council
Chair: Alyssa Napier, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Designing An Online Curriculum for Teaching Hard History: The Clotilda Story. Angelia Bendolph, Mobile, AL Branch, ASALH Discovering Hidden Voices: Enriching the National Narrative Through Primary Sources. Sara Davis, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
THE 1967 LEGACY PROGRAM AT THE COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON.
141. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Presenters: Amber Anderson, College of Charleston
Commentator:
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Chair: Markeysha Dawn Davis, University of Hartford
Riverview 3 (AV)
10:00am
142. 8:30 am to 9:40 am
44 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
BLACK INTERNATIONALISM: ROUTES AND ROUTES OF THE GLOBAL RADICAL BLACK THOUGHT AND ACTIVISM.
Participants:TheBoston Freedom Schools: Integrated Education as Freedom Dreams. Alyssa Napier, Harvard Graduate School of Education Psychological, Embodied, and Relational Healing in Education: A Historical Case Study of Black Community Controlled Schooling. Zenzile Saharee Riddick, Harvard Graduate School of Education Community Control in Boston, 1963-1974. Ellis Reid, Harvard Graduate School of Education
Roundtable
Chair: David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council
EXPERIMENTING WITH HEALING EDUCATION IN BOSTON, 1960S TO 1980S.
Valerie Frazier, College of Charleston
Participants:“sailingthe sky:” Black Diasporic Poetics & Woman-speak. Allia Abdullah-Matta, CUNY LaGuardia Community College
Black Radical Internationalism and Its Discontents: James Baldwin, W.E.B. Du Bois and the Foundations of Anti-Zionist Discourse. Nadia Alahmed, Dickinson College
Participants:“TheLaughing Stock of Public Housing in Tennessee”: Race and Housing in Post Civil Rights Memphis. Anthony C Siracusa, CU Boulder
BLACK FEMALE ACTIVISM AND NEW DEFINITIONS OF BLACK WOMANHOOD, 1920S-1980S.
George W. Lee and the Politics of Black Representation. Charles McKinney, Jr., Rhodes College Black Mothers, St. Jude, and the Struggle Against Hunger in Memphis: From Self-Determination to the Federal WIC Program, 19671974. Laurie Green
149. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
146. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Panel Session
MORE THAN A BLACK BODY: A WHOLE COMMUNITY APPROACH TO WELLNESS AND HEALING.
Panel Session
148. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
THE STRUGGLE FOR BLACK LIFE AND HEALTH IN MEMPHIS.
147. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Participants:HealingOne Stitch at a Time: The Lynch Quilts Project. LaShawnda Crowe Storm, The Lynch Quilts Project “The Alphabet is an Abolitionist”: Connecting Black Literacy and Black Wellness as Fugitive Practices”. Tracie D Hall, American Library Association
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
LAYING ON OF HANDS: TRANSFORMATIVE POWER IN FACULTY MENTORSHIP.
Chair: Shanna Louise Smith, Jackson State University
Chair: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College
Alabama D (AV)
Chair: Martin Summers, Boston College
Chair: Maria Hamilton Abegunde, Indiana University Bloomington
Commentator: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College
Leaders: Lisa Brock, Howard-Mellon Grant Consultant Michelle Pourciau, Howard-Mellon Program Coordinator
Commentator: Charlene Fletcher, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Participants:DistanceMentoring & Virtual Collaboration Between Black Women Faculty: Navigating Academic Waters. Shanna Louise Smith, Jackson State University; Arlette Miller Smith, St. John Fisher College
Participants:“ComeNow, and Let Us Reason Together”: African-American Home Demonstration Empowerment Pedagogy Develops Rural Women Leaders, 1928-1955. Shari Williams, Columbus, GA “Against Their Will”: Black Feminist Intellectuals, the Anti-Rape Debate, and the Origins of Intersectionality, 1970-1985. Grace London, Auburn University
Sister Song: The Womb Is the World to be Healed. Maria Hamilton Abegunde, Indiana University Bloomington
Montgomery 5 (AV)
HOWARD/MELLON SOCIAL JUSTICE CONSORTIUM WORKSHOP 5: WANT JUSTICE? LEARN HOW TO LEAD SOCIAL JUSTICE WORKSHOPS IN YOUR COMMUNITY.
The Power in Building a Sister Network While On the Contingent Faculty to Tenure Track: An AutoEthnographic Study on Informal Faculty Mentors. Valerie Taylor, University of Las Vegas, Nevada
Alabama E (AV)
Montgomery 6 (AV)
Panel Session
145. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
Panel Session
45MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
No Just Sitting Around Admiring Each Other Naturals:” 1960s Black Student Activism and Faculty Mentorship in Washington State. Marc Arsell Robinson, California State University San Bernardino
Panel Session
Chairs:
Poster Session
Presenters: Koritha Mitchell, Ohio State University Thavolia Glymph, Duke University Julius Fleming, University of Maryland Jarvis McInnis, Duke University
The Rose that Grew from Concrete: Black Men, Childhood Sexual Abuse, Romantic Attachment, and Masculinity. Tatyana Nichelle Smith, Western Michigan University
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
POSTER SESSION 2.
Participants:Sustainability and the Media in Communities of Color. Evelyne Del
Commentator: Curtis Austin, University of Oregon
152. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
The Intersecting Influences of Race, Gender, and Class on Black Women’s Health. Shuntele Burns, Alabama State University
150. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
151. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
BOOK SESSION: BERTHA MAXWELL-RODDEY: A MODERN-DAY RACE-WOMAN AND THE POWER OF BLACK LEADERSHIP.
DARLENE CLARK HINE & GERALD HORNE BOOK PANEL: JULIUS FLEMING (IN-PERSON PANEL).
Chair: Jarvis R. Givens, Harvard University and ASALH Executive Council
Presenters: Tondra L. Loder-Jackson, University of Alabama-Birmingham James B. Stewart, Pennsylvania State University Janaka Lewis, University of North Carolina Charlotte Janeula Burt, Associate Professor of Education, Department of Educational Studies & Leadership Bowie State University Commentator: Sonya Ramsey, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Montgomery 8
153. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
The pedagogical praxis of community-mindedness: Nurturing the educational well-being of African American children. Melanie M Acosta, FAU; Paul Woodard
Thura Mack, University of Tennessee Knoxville Adreonna Bennett, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Kimberly Cheek, North Carolina A&T State University
Roundtable
Tearing Down to Rise Up: bell hooks and Her Methods for Healing. Zaakira L Sadrud-Din, Albany State University
Chair: Curtis Austin, University of Oregon
Chair: Deidre Hill Butler, Union College
THE BLACK POWER ERA RE-EXAMINED.
Montgomery 9
Participants:Stylin’Black Power: Fashioning Activism and Masculinity. Mickell Carter, Auburn University NDUGA: The Movement for Black Youth and Black Power in Greenville, Mississippi. Jasmine Stansberry, University of Alabama North Cackalacky Black Power and NC HBCUs. Jasmin C. Howard, Michigan State University
Poster Sessions
Leveraging Technology for Impact: Narratives of Resistance to White Supremacy, Community Resilience and Survival. Valentina Aduen, Texas A&M University; Jennifer Blanks, Texas A&M University; Andrea Roberts, University of Virginia
The Black Hospital Movement in Greater Kansas City. Brenda Vann, Greater Kansas City Black History Study Group-Branch
The Issues of Charles Davenport’s Jamaican Race Project. Christopher Anderson Davis, Adelphi University
46 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Roundtable
Riverview 2
Riverview 1 (AV)
Chair: Yolandra E. Hancock, Milken Institute School of Public Health at The George Washington University
Panel Session
155. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Chair: Felice Knight, The Citadel
154. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
157. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Presenters: Lisa E. Fitzpatrick, Grapevine Health Jehan El-Bayoumi, George Washington University Debra E. Fraser-Howze, D. Fraser Associates, LLC. Uche Blackstock, Advancing Health Equity
Commentator: Ajamuito Dilahunt, East Carolina University
SCIENCE AND THEOLOGY: HEALTH AND WELLNESS IN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA.
Commentator: Valda Harris Montgomery, President, Friends of the Freedom Rides Museum
Presenters: Prince Brown, Northern Kentucky University Joan Ferrante, Northern Kentucky University Esly Samuel Caldwell, Independent Augustine Yaw Frimpong Mansoh, Northern Kentucky University
Chair: Prince Brown, Northern Kentucky University
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, PHARMACISTS, AND PHYSICIANS: RACIAL INEQUITIES IN HEALTHCARE IN SOUTH CAROLINA, 1790-1950.
Riverview 3 (AV)
Panel Session
Roundtable
Leaders: Nicole Malli, America250 Foundation Sylvia Y. Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director Carly Swaim, America250 Foundation
Participants:TheInstitution Cannot Be Supported Without Servants. Felice Knight, The Citadel Exceptional but not an Exception. Morna Lahnice Hollister, Charleston Area Branch of ASALH (South Carolina) Archives, History, and the Lost Records of Black Hospitals in South Carolina. Brian Fors, Waring Historical Library, Medical University of South Carolina
Roundtable
STUDENT PERSPECTIVES ON NORTH CAROLINA HISTORY.
Participants:HealingWilmington: The Importance of Telling the Truth about the Massacre of 1898. Elena Kendrick, North Carolina Central University Healing Halifax: Health 4 Life. James Burrell, North Carolina Central University White Supremacy’s Educational Terror: The Impact of the Lost Cause Disinformation Campaign on North Carolina’s Public Education System. Lauren Bordeaux, North Carolina Central University
156. 10:00 am to 11:40 am Workshop
BLACK COALITION AGAINST COVID: A COMMUNITY-BASED RESPONSE TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC.
COMMUNITY CONVERSATION: AFRICAN AMERICAN REPRESENTATION AND ENGAGEMENT IN THE SEMIQUINCENTENNIAL (250TH) COMMEMORATION.
Chair: Charles Johnson, North Carolina Central University
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
158. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Riverview 4
47MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Chair: Bertis D English, Alabama State University
160. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
159. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
Workshop
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
164. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Luncheon
Alabama B (AV/Livestream)
Keynote Speaker: Robert Stanton, National Park Service (Ret)
Commentator: Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University 10:15am
163. 10:15 am to 11:45 am
Invocation: Lee B Walker, New Home Baptist Church
BLASSINGAME LUNCHEON.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Participant: Michele Stephenson, Filmmaker
Beyond the Culture Wars: Racial Recovery, Conservatism, and Hip Hop. Derrick P. Alridge, University of Virginia James Mtume: Towards an Africana Paradigm of Music Studies. Scot Brown, UCLA
A look into the History of Practitioners of Medicine in the Black Community. Letoshia Foster, Longwood University
Riverview 8
48 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Participants:Health,Wellness and America’s Great Migration in Global Context. Janira Teague, Norfolk State University Not to be Served; But to Serve: Prince Hall Freemasonry and its Fight for Black Health in the Black South. Derrick Lanois, Norfolk State University
A look into the History of Practitioners of Medicine in the Black Community. Ula Y. Taylor, University of California Berkeley
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival) STATELESS.
161. 10:00 am to 11:40 am
ASALH Film Festival Virtual Room B STATELESS12:00pm(VIRTUAL).
Emcee: Majella Chube Hamilton
Chair: Margaret Seidler, UKWELI Searching for Healing Truth
Participants:Singingthe
Commentator: Jerrad P. Pacatte, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
BLUES AND BLESSINGS: MUSIC AND MUSINGS DURING THE AFRICAN AMERICAN FREEDOM STRUGGLE.
Ayo Sekai, Universal Write Publications, LLC Geane De Lima, The Social Justice Foundation
DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS--PUBLISHING WORKSHOP.
Commentator: Sharron Herron-Williams, Southern University at Shreveport
Leaders: Natanya Duncan, Queens College and ASALH Executive Council
162. 10:15 am to 11:45 am
Blues: Black Music during Times of Pain. Abel A. Bartley, Clemson University
Riverview 6
Panel Session
BLACK HEALTH IS WEALTH: MIGRATION, EDUCATION, AND PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH.
ASALH Film Festival
Panel Session
Greetings: Janice Franklin, Alabama State University Kemba Chambers, Trenholm State College President Ronald W. Bailey, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
165. 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm
Virtual Room B BARBARA LEE: SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER (VIRTUAL). 2:00pm
167. 2:00 pm to 3:40 pm
PRESIDENTIAL SESSION: EXPLORING VARIOUS ASPECTS OF BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS.
169. 2:00 pm to 3:40 pm Panel Session
Riverview 1 (AV)
Participants:MadorBad?: Race and the Medico-Legal Construction of Maternal Mental Health in the Early Twentieth Century. Udodiri Okwandu, Harvard University
MESSAGES FROM THE GRASSROOTS: REVOLUTIONARY GRASSROOTS LEADERSHIP AND CULTURAL POLITICS.
BARBARA LEE: SPEAKING TRUTH TO POWER.
SILENT BUT DEADLY: THE CONSEQUENCES OF EPISTEMIC SILENCE ON BLACK HEALTH IN AMERICA IN THE 20TH CENTURY.
Alabama D (AV)
Chair: Reginald Ellis, Florida A&M University
Commentator: Ezelle Sanford III, Carnegie Mellon University
Commentator: Evelynn Hammonds, Harvard University
Montgomery 7 (AV/Livestream)
166. 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm
Presenters: Chastity Bradford, Tuskegee University DeWayne Ellis, The Wealth Syndicate, LLC Tom Ellison, MD, PhD, PROJECT H.E.L.P. USA/MRC and Bruno-Smithfield Community Health Centers
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
49MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022 12:30pm
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
ASALH Film Festival
The Commission Cannot be in the Open: Medical Civil Rights in 1964 Mississippi. Alexandra Fair, Harvard University Black Trans History and the Problem of Medicalization. Huey Hewitt, Harvard University
Presidential Session
ASALH Film Festival
Moderator: W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
Chair: Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University
168. 2:00 pm to 3:40 pm Panel Session
Participant: Abby Ginzberg, Filmmaker
Participants:FreedomNow!: Detroit and the Revolutionary of 1963. Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University Memphis, Black Power, Stax Soul and Black Youth Activism. Shirletta J. Kinchen, University of Louisville Wanted - One Southern Soul Singer: An Examination of Johnnie Taylor’s Career. Renee Richardson, University of Louisville
RACIAL HEALING IN THE 21ST CENTURY: REPARATIONS AND REPARATORY JUSTICE.
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
THE LEGACY OF LOWNDES COUNTY AND ITS’ DIASPORA.
171. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Participants:BlackPolitical Leaders and Reparations Campaigns. Mary Frances Berry, University of Pennsylvania African Americans, Physical Health, and Reparations Demands. James B. Stewart, Pennsylvania State University Reparations and African Americans’ Struggle for Autonomy in the 21st Century. Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua, ASALH Executive Council and University of Illinois
Chair: David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council
172. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Chair: Susan M Reverby, Wellesley College
Montgomery 5 (AV)
Ida E. Jones, Morgan State University and ASALH Vice President for Membership Lura Daniels-Ball, Our Authors Study Club, Inc of Los Angeles
172b. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
PLANNING STRATEGICALLY FOR ASALH’S FUTURE.
170. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Panel Session
Panel Session
Chair: V. P. Franklin, Univ. Of CA, Riverside
Montgomery 1 (AV/Livestream)
Panel Session
Chair: Karsonya Wise Whitehead, Loyola University Maryland
Presenters: David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council Regina M Moorer, Alabama State University Hasan Kwame Jeffries, The Ohio State University Betty Ann Walton, Lowndes County
Montgomery 4
THE BLACK HISTORY BULLETIN 85 YEARS OF SPEAKING AND TEACHING OUR HISTORY.
2:05pm
PARADOX OF PRESCRIPTION: BLACK PROFESSIONALS AND ANTI-BLACK RACISM IN THE HISTORY OF HEALTH AND MEDICINE.
Leaders: Guy O Weston, Timbuctoo Historical Society and Rutgers University
50 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Alabama E (AV)
173. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Roundtable
“A Most Amazing Phenomena”: The Paradox of Mental Hygiene at the Tuskegee Institute 1947-1963. Kylie Smith, Emory University
Participants:Pathologizing Racial Trauma & Black Resistance: The Case of Nursing Student Gwendolyn Jones 1953-1956. Hafeeza Anchrum, University of Pennsylvania Aspiring to Whiteness?: Black Doctors and the Paradox of Professional Legitimacy. Adam Biggs, University of South Carolina Lancaster
Workshop
Participants: Alicia Lorraine Moore, Southwestern University Walter Greason, McCalester College Kim Pearson, The College of New Jersey Sarah Militz-Frielink, Northern Illinois University
Chair: Valerie Ann Holt, ASALH Treasurer
Riverview 2
The Underdevelopment of Health in the African American Community: Social Justice and Racial Equity …. What Say You? Noble A-W Maseru, University of Pittsburgh
Moderator: Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas at Austin
Montgomery 8 WOODSON WORKS POP-UP TALKS.
Drum Majors for Reproductive Justice: Black Doulas and Their Impact on Black Families. Vedia La’Tanya Barnett, George Washington University
Montgomery 9 HEALTH AS A SOCIAL JUSTICE ISSUE.
Montgomery 6 (AV)
Paper Session
Running While Black: The Factors that Influence the Physical Activity Behaviors of Black Men. Rashida Charles, University of Pennsylvania
177. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Roundtable
Reframing community health to create safe spaces for Black Women Healers in traditional medicine. Omilaye Ray Ali Black, Clark Atlanta University
Presenters:
Gregory Lamont Mixon, University of North Carolina Charlotte and ASALH Executive Council
Key Session
Fighting on Two Fronts: The Impact of Terminal Illness on the Fall of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. Shawn Lamar Williams, Georgia State University
THE CRAFT OF WRITING BLACK WOMEN’S BIOGRAPHY.
Commentator: William Jerome Smith, Douglass School
Participants:
174. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Reframing Antiblackness and White Supremacy as Legal Psychopathic and Sociopathic Constructs Rather Than Social Constructs. Dante D King, Author - The 400-Year Holocaust
Chair:
Presenters: Bill Woodson, New College of Florida Trevor Harvey, President, NAACP Rex Troche, Chief, Sarasota Police Dept. Kenneth Rainey II, Captain, Sarasota Police Department
Anastasia Curwood, Commonwealth Institute of Black Studies; History Department K.T. Ewing, Tennessee State University Ashley D Farmer, University of Texas at Austin Tanisha Ford, CUNY Graduate Center
51MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
The Impact of Sickle Cell Disease on Family Functioning: Listening to the Voices of Parents. Yvette Renee Harris, Miami University
175. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
INNOVATION THROUGH COLLABORATION: SARASOTA PURSUES A NOVEL APPROACH TO EXCELLENCE IN COMMUNITY POLICING.
Pop-up Talk
Chair: Bill Woodson, New College of Florida
176. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Participants:AnarchaLucy Betsey: The Mothers of Modern Gynecology Using Art, History and Courageous Conversations address Black Maternal Health Disparities and Environmental Injustice. Michelle Browder, The Mothers of Gynecology Carceral Lifestyle Influencers and Social Media. Anthony Devon Black, UW Madison
DIGITAL HUMANITIES SESSION: THE FUTURE OF ARCHIVES AND DIGITAL COLLECTIONS.
Presenters:
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
Paper Session
Yolanda Lewis-Ragland, Pediatrician, Children’s National Hospital Owner and CEO, Family Fitness and Wellness for Community VanessaHealthNorthington Gamble, University Professor of the Medical Humanities, Professor of Health Policy and American Studies, The George Washington University Valin Jordan, National Director of Learning, Sponsors of Educational Opportunity Founder, Yoga4SocialJustice
Participants:Howard/Mellon: Groundings with Our Congolese Sisters and Brothers (Wadugu): Developing a Congo-focused, Alternative Study Abroad Curriculum at Morehouse College. Samuel Livingston, Morehouse College Recovering the Black Radical Critique of Urban School Segregation. Fithawee Tzeggai, University of Kansas
Riverview 8
RECOVERING BLACK WOMEN WRITERS FOR BLACK CHILDREN’S HEALTH AND WELL-BEING: A PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL DISTRICT COLLABORATION.
Commentator: Uzoma Miller, Ohio University
178. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Chair: Maranda C. Ward, The George Washington University
Riverview 3 (AV)
OMEKA S. SHOWCASE AND SPOTLIGHT ON HALLOWED GROUNDS: RACE, SLAVERY AND MEMORY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA.
182. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Roundtable
Leaders:
180. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Rhonda Jones, University of North Carolina at Greensboro Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council Sonja Woods, Moorland Spingarn Research Center
Leaders: Hilary Nicole Green, Davidson College Christy Lynn Hyman, Mississippi State University Patrick Murray John, Northeastern University
181. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm Workshop
Key Session
179. 2:05 pm to 3:40 pm
Riverview 6 EDUCATING THE BLACK PUBLIC.
Chair: Jean M Lutes, Villanova University
The Importance of Learning Foreign Languages for Students of Color in Today’s World. Reginald A. Bess, College Language Association
Riverview 7 (AV/Livestream)
HOW BLACK PRACTITIONERS REWRITE, RE-NARRATE AND REIMAGINE HEALTH EQUITY.
Riverview 5 (AV/Livestream)
Chair: Jessica D Klanderud, Berea College
Presenters: Denise Burgher, University of Delaware Brigitte Fielder, University of Wisconsin-Madison Ismael Jimenez, School District of Philadelphia Trinity Rogers, Villanova University Shaquita A. Smith, School District of Philadelphia
52 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Ralph Joseph Bryson, Alabama State University
CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE
53MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2022
6:00pm
Alabama B (AV/Livestream)
AMERICA’S WAR ON ABORTION (VIRTUAL).
Alabama A (AV/Livestream)
Commentator: Kwesi Daniels, Tuskegee University
183. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
186. 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm
187. 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm
ASALH Film Festival
Alicia Lorraine Moore, Southwestern University Madge Allen, ASALH Manhattan Branch
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
4:00pm
185. 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Virtual Room B
ASALH ANNUAL AWARDS BANQUET.
ASALH Film Festival
Participant: Deirdre Cooper Owens, University of Nebraska Kimberly Jeffries Leonard, The Links, Inc. and The Black Women’s Agenda Michelle Browder, The Mothers of Gynecology
James B. Stewart, Pennsylvania State University
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
ASALH Film Festival
THE HISTORY OF BLACK WOMEN AND HEALTH.
James D. Anderson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
7:30pm
AFRICATOWN.
AMERICA’S WAR ON ABORTION.
188. 7:30 pm to 10:30 pm Awards
Fred Gray, Author and CRA Attorney
Awardee:
Virtual Room B AFRICATOWN (VIRTUAL).
Author: Deeyah Khan, Filmmaker
184. 2:15 pm to 4:00 pm
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Rodney Hurst, James Weldon Johnson Branch, ASALH Florida Quintard Taylor, University of Washington Edna Greene Medford, Howard University Shantella Sherman, The Acumen Group
2:15pm
Plenary Session
Moderator: Ameenah Shakir, Florida A&M University
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Participant: Theo M. Moore, Hiztorical Vision Productions Frederick Murphy, Filmmaker
ASALH Film Festival
Sponsor: Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Robert Williams, Bantu
Benediction:
Melvin J Brown, Superintendent Montgomery Public Schools
Beatrice Forniss, Local Arrangements Committee
Sponsor:
Kevin C. Quin, Cornell University
FRUIT: IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO SAVE LIVES (VIRTUAL).
Gregory Lamont Mixon, University of North Carolina Charlotte and ASALH Executive Council
Tara White, University of North Carolina Wilmington and ASALH Executive Council Camesha Scruggs, UMass Amherst and ASALH Executive Council
Bertis D English, Alabama State University
189. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
Quinton Ross, Alabama State University President
POST-CONFERENCE AFRICAN AMERICAN HERITAGE BUS TOUR OF TUSKEGEE.
Maryam Aziz, University of Washington
Milton C. Davis, Milton C. Davis Law Office
Anton D. House, Delaware State University and ASALH Executive Council
Award Presenter:
Montgomery 3 (AV/Film Festival)
Participant: Ricardo Bates, Director
Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
Welcome:
David Mathew Walton, Western Carolina University and ASALH Executive Council
Tara White, University of North Carolina Wilmington and ASALH Executive Council
FRUIT: IT TAKES A VILLAGE TO SAVE LIVES.
Andre E. Johnson, University of Memphis
Virtual Room B
Maurice J. Hobson, Georgia State University
Greetings:
54 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
Black Hollywood Education and Resource Center
191. 7:00 am to 4:30 pm Tour Taxi Cut-out
Participant:
Aaisha Haykal, College of Charleston and ASALH Vice President for Programs
8:15pm
Sunday, October 2, 2022
7:00am
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2022
Commentator:
Frazine K Taylor, Genealogist and Alabama State University
190. 8:15 pm to 10:00 pm
W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
ASALH Film Festival
Sponsor:
ASALH Film Festival
W. Marvin Dulaney, ASALH President and ASALH Marvin Dulaney Branch (Dallas/Ft. Worth)
Lopez Matthews, District of Columbia, Office of Public Records and ASALH Executive Council
55MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
NOTES
NOTES
56 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
NOTES
57MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA | THE 2022 BLACK HISTORY THEME: BLACK HEALTH AND WELLNESS
58 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST
NOTES
W W W . A S A L H . O R G / C O N F E R E N C E | 2 0 2 . 2 3 8 . 5 9 1 0 | # A S A L H # A S A L H 2 0 2 2 2 0 2 2 B L A C K H I S T O R Y T H E M E : B L A C K H E A L T H A N D W E L L N E S S ASALH ASALH.BLACKHISTORY ASALH BHM ASALHTV CONFERENCE PROGRAMS AILABLE IN-PERSON AT THE RENAISSANCE MONTGOMERY HOTEL & SPA (MONTGOMERY, AL) AND VIRTUALLY ON ASALH TV. A S S O C I A T I O N F O R T H E S T U D Y O F A F R I C A N A M E R I C A N L I F E A N D H I S T O R Y ® 107TH ANNUAL MEETING & CONFERENCE S E P T E M B E R 2 9 O C T O B E R 1 , 2 0 2 2 M O N T G O M E R Y , A L A B A M A P L E N A R Y S E S S I O N F R I D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 3 0 , 2 0 2 2 | 4 : 0 0 P . M . - 6 : 0 0 P . M . C S T The Alabama Black Belt National Heritage Area: Healing Through History & Culture ALL CONFERENCE PROGRAMS WILL BE HELD CENTRAL STANDARD TIME (CST) National Parks Conservation Association MODERATOR EBONI PRESTON GODDARD University of West Alabama PANELIST TINA NAREMORE JONES The Elmore Bolling Initiative, Inc. PANELIST JOSEPHINE BOLLING MCCALL Conservation Fund PANELIST PHILLIP HOWARD National Parks Conservation Association PANELIST JOSHUA JENKINS Ruffner Mountain PANELIST MEG FORD
P L A T I N U M S P O N S O R S
SPECIAL THANKS GO TO OUR SPONSORS
D I A M O N D S P O N S O R S
G O L D S P O N S O R S
60 107TH ANNUAL MEETING AND VIRTUAL CONFERENCE | SEPTEMBER 29 - OCTOBER 1, 2022 | ALL TIMES CST