Academic Journal 2015

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Association for the Study of African American Life and History

2016 Call for Papers

Hallowed Grounds: Sites of African American Memory

101st Annual Conference and Meeting

October 4 – 9, 2016

Richmond Marriott, 500 East Broad Street Richmond, VA 23219

The history of African American unfolds across the canvass of America, beginning before the arrival of the Mayflower and continuing to the present. From port cities where Africans disembarked from slave ships to the battle fields where their descendants fought for freedom, from the colleges and universities where they have pursued education, to places where they created communities during centuries of migration, the imprint of Americans of African descent is deeply embedded in the narrative of the American past, insert comma and the sites prompt us to remember. Over time, many of these sites of African American memory became hallowed grounds.

One cannot tell the story of America without preserving and reflecting on the places where African Americans have made history. The Kingsley Plantation, DuSable’s home site, the numerous stops along the Underground Railroad, Seneca Village, Mother Bethel A.M.E. Church and Frederick Douglass’ home — to name just a few — are sites that keep alive the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in our consciousness. They retain and refresh the memories of our forbearers’ struggles for freedom, justice, and God’s grace and mercy. Similarly, the hallowed grounds of Mary McLeod Bethune’s home in Washington, 125th Street in Harlem, Beale Street in Memphis, and Sweet Auburn Avenue in Atlanta tell the story of our struggle for equal citizenship during the American century.

The National Park Service (NPS) takes responsibility for preserving and teaching about the places that have been central in the making of African American memory. Virtually every aspect of our experience has become part and parcel of the NPS mission, including the home of our founder, Carter G. Woodson. ASALH joins the National Park Service in celebrating a century of preserving the hallowed grounds of African Americans and all Americans.

Deadline for submission of proposals is as follows:

Individual papers deadline is March 1, 2016; early bird panel deadline is March 15th and the panel session deadline is March 30th.

All proposals must be submitted electronically to ASALH through the All Academic online system at http:// www.asalh.org/callforpapers.html. For complete panels that are submitted by March 15, 2016, day and time preferences will be given on a first come first served basis. Please refer to the FAQ page for important information on what constitutes a complete panel on https://asalh100.files.wordpress.com/2015/01/2015-asalhfrequently-asked-questions-guide-winter-2015.pdf. Consider submitting one of the following types of proposals: full panel, conference roundtable, conference workshops, film sessions, or poster session (undergraduates).

Proposals should include title of the paper or panel, author(s) and affiliation(s), an abstract of paper or panel of 200-250 words, and all contact information. Only panel proposal submitters will receive complimentary audio/ visual equipment on a first come first served basis.

For information on how to make electronic submissions, visit http://asalh100.org/call-for-papers-2015/ , and visit the FAQ page for important information regarding submissions.

All participants must be members by April 2, 2016 and registered for the conference by July 3, 2016. There are no refunds for membership dues and none for registration fees after August 3, 2016.

Conference Schedule At-A-Glance

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Pre-Registration 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Rotunda Registration Office

On-site Registration Georgia Registration Office

Pre-Conference African American Heritage Bus Tour 8:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. International Blvd. Portico (bus departure area) Level 1

ASALH Executive Council Meeting 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Georgia 5 & 6 (Members Welcome)

Special Session: National Park Service Forum 4:30 p.m. – 6:30:00 p.m. Capitol Ballroom North Commemorating the Reconstruction Era and Civil Rights: The National Park Service’s Call to action in its Second Century

Opening Reception 5:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Atlanta History Center

Academic Program Committee Meeting 9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Georgia 6

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Pre-Registration 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Rotunda Registration Office

On-site Registration 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Georgia Registration Office

African American Heritage Bus Tour 7:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. International Blvd. Portico (bus departure area) Level 1

Teachers’ Workshop

8:30 a.m. - 3:50 p.m. Georgia 13

Session I 8:30 a.m. - 9:50 a.m. Various

Session II 10:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. Various

Educators Luncheon 12 noon - 1:45 p.m. Capitol Ballrooms Center

Keynote Speaker: Sonia Sanchez & South

Exhibit Area Open 12 noon - 9:00 p.m Georgia 7, 8 & Pre-Function Area

Brown Bag Lunch Sessions 12 noon - 1:45 p.m. Various

Session III 2:00 p.m. - 3:50 p.m. Georgia 13

ASALH Business Meeting 4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Georgia 2

Film Festival 5:30 p.m. – 9:45 p.m. Georgia 13

Plenary Session I: The Scholarship, Activism 5:45 p.m. - 7:45 p.m. Capitol Ballroom North and Institutional Work of V.P. Franklin Chair: Derrick Alridge

Featuring: Mary Frances Berry, Sundiata Kieta Cha-Jua, Pero Dagbovie, James Stewart

Authors’ Book Signing 7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. Capitol Pre-Function Area

Evening Sessions 8:00 p.m. – 9:50 p.m. Various

Celebrating the Centennial Volume of the 9:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Capitol Ballrooms Center Journal of African American History (JAAH) & South

Conference Schedule At-A-Glance

Friday, September 25, 2015

Pre-Registration

On-site Registration

2016 Conference Planning Meeting

Exhibit Area Open

Film Festival

Session I

7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Rotunda Registration Office

7:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Georgia Registration Office

8:00 a.m. Conference Room 131

8:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m. Georgia 7, 8 & Pre-Function Area

8:00 a.m. - 10:15 p.m. Georgia 13

8:30 a.m. - 9:50 a.m. Various

Youth Day 9:00 a.m. - 12 noon North Atlanta High School

Session II 10:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. Various

Carter G. Woodson Luncheon 12 noon - 1:45 p.m. Capitol Center North/Center

Keynote Speaker: Lonnie Bunch

Brown Bag Lunch Sessions 12 noon - 1:45 p.m. Various

Session III

2:00 p.m. - 3:50 p.m. Various

ASALH Awards Program 4:00 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Atlanta 1

Plenary Session II: Who Stole the Soul? 4:45 p.m. - 6:45 p.m. Capitol Ballroom North Black Music and the Struggle for Empowerment in the Twentieth Century Chair: Fanon Che Wilkins

Featuring: Michelle R. Scott, Scot Brown, Portia Maultsby, James Mtume

Evening Sessions

7:00 p.m. – 8:50 p.m. Various

Friday Night Out (Transportation Provided) 7:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Atlanta University Center, The Past, Present, and Future of African Robert W. Woodruff Library

American Women’s History: A Conversation

Poetry Slam & Open Mic Night 10:00 p.m. - 12:30 a.m. Savannah 2 & 3

Saturday, September 26, 2015

Convention Registration 8:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Georgia Registration Office

Exhibit Area Open

ASALH Branch Meeting

Session I

8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Georgia 7, 8 & Pre-Function Area

8:30 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. Capitol Ballroom North

8:30 a.m. - 9:50 a.m. Various

Session II 10:00 a.m. - 11:45 a.m. Various

Film Festival

8:00 a.m. - 8:55 p.m. Georgia 13

John W. Blassingame Luncheon 12 noon - 1:45 p.m. Capitol Ballroom Center & South

Keynote Speaker: President Daryl Michael Scott

Special Appearance LeVar Burton

Session III

2:00 p.m. - 3:50 p.m. Various

Plenary Session III: Give Light and People Will Find 4:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Capitol Ballroom North the Way: The Future of the Field of Black Women’s Studies

Chair: Natanya Duncan

Featuring: Tiffany Gill, Farah Griffin, Faye V. Harrison, Jessica Marie Johnson, Alondra Nelson, Tiffany Ruby Patterson

ASALH Awards Gala

Guest Speaker : Susan L. Taylor, National Cares Network 7:30 p.m. - 10:30 p.m. Capitol Ballroom

Awards Recipients:

Dr. David Levering-Lewis, New York University, Carter G. Woodson Scholars Medallion Recipient

The Honorable John Lewis, Ga. 5th Congressional District, John Hope Franklin Centennial Lifetime Achievement Award

Sunday, September 27, 2015

ASALH Ecumenical Breakfast 8:00 a.m. - 9:30 a.m. Capitol Ballroom South

Keynote Speaker: Rev. C. T. Vivian

Post–Conference African American Heritage Bus Tour 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

2015 Authors Book Signing

Dell Ray Adams

A Walk in the Face of Life

Shawn Alexander

WEB DuBois An American Intellectual and Activist

Bailey-Bankston Beneath the Bars of Justice

Richard Bailey

Neither Carpetbaggers nor Scalawags: Black Officeholders

During the Reconstruction of Alabama 1867-1878

They Too Call Alabama Home: African American Profiles

Peter Bailey

Witnessing Brother Malcolm X: The Master Teacher A Memoir

Mary Frances Berry

We are Who We Say We Are

Evelyn Bethune

Bethune: Out of Darkness Into the Light of Freedom

Call & Response: The Grandchildren Reply

Carol Binta Nadeem

Civilized Blacks: Free American Negroes In The 1870’s Whose Lives Paralleled The Life of Booker T. Washington

John Bracey, James Smethurst & Sonia Sanchez

SOS-Calling All Black People

LaTonya Branham

CultureSeek: Connecting to African and African American History

Erik Brooks

Tigers in the Tempest

Joan Cartwright

A History of African American Jazz and Blues

Amazing Musicwomen

Yasmin Carty

Proverbs and Phrases with Meanings

Farrell Chiles

African American: Warrant Officers... In service to Our Country

Bettye Collier-Thomas Jesus, Jobs, and Justice

Willie Cooper

The Forgotten 14, Civil War Heroes

Constance W. Curry Silver Rights

Marta Effinger-Crichlow

Staging Migrations Toward an American West: From Ida B. Wells to Rhodessa Jones

Maurice Daniels

Saving the Soul of Georgia: Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights

Tiffany A. Flowers

The Rooftop Club Books Series: Meet the Rooftop Club

Cheryl Gooch

On Africa’s Lands: The Forgotten Stories of Two Lincoln Educated Missionaries in Liberia

George Grant

In Honor Of... Libraries Named for African Americans

Donna Gray-Banks Ilas Diamonds

Will Guzman

Civil Rights in the Texas Borderlands: Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon & Black Activism

Janette Hoston-Harris

In Memoriam: Charles Harris Wesley Tameka Hobbs

Democracy Abroad, Lynching at Home: Racial Violence in Florida

Karen January Lessons Mama Never Taught Me What Every Woman Should Know

Ricky L. Jones

Black Haze Violence, Sacrifice, and Manhood in Black Greek-letter Fraternities

Nubia Kai

Kuma Malinke Historiography: Sundiata Keita to Almamy Samori Toure

Kathryn Kemp

Anointed To Sing The Gospel: The Levitical Legacy of Thomas A. Dorsey

Make Joyful Noise: A Brief History of Gospel Music Ministry in America

Lionel Kimble, Jr.

A New Deal for Bronzeville: Housing, Employment, and Civil Rights In Black Chicago, 1925-1955

Barbara King

Transform Your Life, In TYL

Talitha LeFlouria

Chained in Silence: Black Women and Convict Labor in the New South

2015 Authors Book Signing

Josephine McCall

The Penalty for Success: My Father was Lunched in Lowndes County, Alabama

Barbara McCaskill

Love, Liberation, and Escaping

Slavery: William and Ellen Craft in Cultural Memory

Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom: The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery. Introduction by Barbara McCaskill.

Kevin McGruder

Race and Real Estate; Conflict and Cooperation in Harlem, 1890 - 1920

Genna Rae McNeil

Witness Two Hundred Years of African-American Faith and Practice at the Abyssinian Baptist Church of Harlem, New York

Edna Green Medford

Lincoln and Emancipation

Trimiko Melancon

Unbought and Unbossed: Transgressive Black Women, Sexuality, and Representation

Black Female Sexualities

Erin Gosser Mitchell

Born Colored Life Before Bloody Sunday

William Monnie

Selma And Its Aftermath:

A Photographic Journey by Civil Rights Worker Bill Monnie

Aldon Morris

The Scholar Denied: D. W. B. Du Bois and the Birth of Modern Sociology

Tiyi Morris

Womanpower Unlimited and the Black Freedom Struggle in Mississippi

Tommie Morton-Young

Many Roads Traveled or Twenty years in Bondage

Premilla Nadasen

Household Workers Unite: The Untold Story of African American Women who Built a Movement

Echol Nix

In the Beginning: The Martin Luther King, Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College

M. J. O’Brien

We Shall Not Be Moved

Alison Parker

Interconnections: Gender and Race in American History

Walter Rucker

Gold Coast Diasporas: Identity, Culture, and Power (Blacks in the Diaspora Series)

Donata Russell Ross

How I Broke Through Segregation to Launch a Business Empire by Herman Russell

Sonia Sanchez

SOS—Calling All Black People

John Sharer

The Cockney Lad and Jim Crow

Janet Sims-Wood

Dorothy Porter Wesley at Howard University

Karen Sloan-Brown

A Reflection: What a Difference a Day Makes, What About 100 Years?

Daniel Smith

African Americans and Charleston: Histories Intertwined

Mattie Solomon

What Did Your Parents Do To You?

Peter Wallenstein

Race, Sex, and the Freedom to Marry: Loving v. Virginia

Glovinia Williams

Do You Believe God? If So It’s Time To Step out On Faith

Phyllis Jean Williams

The Secret Legend of Three Kings

Sonja Williams

Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio and Freedom

Angela Williamson Bakers Dozen

Barbara Winslow

Shirley Chisholm Catalyst for Change

2015 ASALH Centennial Conference Tours

Wednesday, September 23

“From Civil Rights to Human Rights” - ASALH Pre-Conference Tour of the MLK District and the Center for Civil and Human Rights

8:00 - 8:30 a.m. Bus loads at Sheraton Atlanta Hotel (International Blvd. entrance- near UPS Store on Level 1)

8:30 a.m. Depart for The King Center & the MLK National Historic Site

9:00 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. Tour of The King Center and the MLK National Historic Site

9:00 – 9:45 a.m. Participants will take the self-guided tour of The King Center.

9:45 a.m. National Park Service Ranger will meet the participants outside at the Eternal flame.

9:45 a.m. – 12:45 p.m. Ranger will lead tours of the following sites:

• King Birth Home • Historic Fire Station • Historic Ebenezer Baptist Church

• National Park Service National Historic Site Visitor Center

12:45 p.m. Participants will depart from the National Park Service Visitor Center

1:00 p.m. - 2:00 p.m. Lunch

2:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Tour of the National Center for Civil & Human Rights

4:30 p.m. Arrive back at the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel

Thursday, September 24

Atlanta Black History Tour

7:00 a.m. Bus loads at Sheraton Atlanta Hotel (International Blvd. entrance- near UPS Store on Level 1)

7:30 a.m. Bus departs for tour

11:45 a.m. Bus returns to hotel Westside (Driving tour)

• HJ Russell Construction Co. • Clark Atlanta University • W.E.B Dubois Statute

• Morehouse College/ Forbes Arena/ Ray Charles Amphitheatre • Spelman College • Morehouse School of Medicine

• The New GA Dome/ GA World Congress Center • The Last Home of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. • Morris Brown College

• The Interdenominational Theological Center • Bronner Bros. Hair Products - Mr. Nathaniel Bronner, founder

• Charles Lincoln Harper Statue • Herndon Stadium • Alonzo Herndon Mansion-1910

Downtown (Driving tour)

• The MLK Center District • National Center for Civil and Human Rights

Sweet Auburn Avenue District

• APEX Museum - (Stop)

• Sweet Auburn Avenue (Stop – participants will get off the bus to see the following sites.

Note that participants will not actually go inside these sites.) SCLC Headquarters, WERD AM Radio- First Black Radio Station, Madame CJ Walker Salon, Odd Fellows Professional Building.- 1910 Museum Sweet Auburn Avenue (Driving tour)

Auburn Ave. Research Library, Former Atlanta Life Insurance Building, Former Atlanta Daily World Building, Royal Peacock o Silver Moon Barber Shop- 1904 Big Bethel AME Church, John Wesley Dobbs Statue, Wheat Street Baptist Church, Cox Bros. Funeral Home/ Haughbrooks Funeral Home, Ebenezer Baptist Church, Birth Home Dr. MLK

2015 ASALH Centennial Conference Tours

Sunday, September 27

Five stops are planned to give the patrons a deeper appreciation for the rich history and cultural resources found on the six institutions that are historically linked to the Atlanta University Center (AUC).

9:30 a.m. Bus loads at the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel (International Blvd entrance near the UPS Store)

10:00 a.m. Leave the Sheraton Atlanta Hotel and drive to the Morehouse College campus. Tour the King International Chapel, the Frederick Douglass Commons where the college has a permanent exhibit of its history on display. If time permits, a stop by the Benjamin E. Mays Monument on the historic green of the campus.

Drive to Spelman College. Briefly tour the Cosby Center, the home of the college’s archives and Women’s Research Center, the historic campus Oval, and Sisters Chapel.

Drive to the Clark Atlanta University campus to tour the main academic quadrangle stopping by the bust of W. E. B. Du Bois, and the CAU Art Galleries on the second floor of Trevor Arnett Hall. If time permits, view the historic markers commemorating the Atlanta Student Movement during the Civil Rights era of the 1960s.

Drive to the AUC Robert Woodruff Library; conduct a brief tour of the library and at the former Morris Brown College campus where the original Atlanta University campus was founded in 1867. Pass by the sites where Du Bois worked and lived during his early years on the Atlanta University faculty and where he wrote the book, The Souls of Black Folk.

Return to the Atlanta Sheraton Hotel, arriving before 3:00 PM.

FILM FESTIVAL

Sheraton Hotel

Georgia 13 Room

Film Festival is FREE and open to the public

Thursday, September 24, 2015

5:30 – 7:30pm

Mountains That Take Wing: Angela Davis & Yuri Kochiyama - A Conversation on Life, Struggles & Liberation (C.A. Griffith and H.L. T. Quan, 2009, 97 minutes)

Intercut with compelling period footage, these women - internationally renowned scholar, professor and writer Angela Davis and 89-year-old grassroots organizer and Nobel Peace Prize nominee Yuri Kochiyama - dialogue. From conversations in 1996 and 2008 they cover topics ranging from Jim Crow laws and Japanese American internment camps, to Civil Rights, anti-war, women’s and gay liberation movements, to today’s campaigns for political prisoners and prison reform.

Discussion facilitator: Michelle Duster

7:45 – 9:45pm

ALICE WALKER: Beauty in Truth (Pratibha Parmar, 2013, 84 minutes)

The film mixes powerful archival footage with moving testimonials from friends and colleagues such as Howard Zinn, Angela Y. Davis, Gloria Steinem, Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Quincy Jones, Steven Spielberg and Danny Glover to show audiences a penetrating look at the life and art of an artist, intellectual, self-confessed renegade and human rights activist.

Discussion facilitator: McKinley Melton

Friday, September 25, 2015

8:00am – 9:30am

Black Journal (May 1969) (William Greaves, 60 minutes)

This is the episode aired in May 1969 and focuses on Black student revolts for the establishment of Black Studies departments at Cornell and Duke universities. The latter culminates in the establishment of Malcolm X Liberation University in Durham NC. There is also an interview with Clifford Alexander on his efforts on the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Discussion Facilitator: Reginald Ellis

9:45am – 11:30am

Living Thinkers: An Autobiography of Black Women in the Ivory Tower (Roxana Walker-Canton, 2013, 75 minutes)

Examines the intersection of race, class and gender for Black women professors and administrators working in U.S. colleges and universities today.

Discussion Facilitator: Natanya Duncan

Friday, September 25, 2015

11:45am – 1:15pm

Furious Flower III: Seeding the Future of African American Poetry

Cultivating Form: Creating the Black Aesthetics in Poetry (Part 1 in Four Part Series) (Joanne Gabbin and Judith McCray, 2015, 58 minutes)

This episode features readings by Rita Dove, Elizabeth Alexander, Patricia Smith, Herman Beavers, Aracelis Girmay, A. Van Jordan, Marilyn Nelson, and Toi Derricotte. It begins with a conversation between Elizabeth Alexander and Rita Dove about the significance of this 20th anniversary of the Furious Flower conference poetry, the state of the field and their role as educators. It ends with Rita Dove’s keynote address.

Discussion Facilitator: Althea Tait

1:30pm – 3:00pm

Vell Phillips: Dream Big Dreams (Robert Trondson, 2015, 57 minutes)

Discover how Vel Phillips achieved an impressive list of “firsts” as part of her legacy, including the first African American judge in Wisconsin and the first woman, and African American, in the nation elected to executive office in state government.

Discussion Facilitator: Patrick Jones

3:15pm – 4:30pm

The Beech Experiment: A Success Story of Urban Rehabilitation (Kenneth Scott, 2015, 44 minutes)

North Central Philadelphia was once the crown jewel of the Black community. After the riots of the 1960s it descended into a desolate, bleak area most known for its crime including drugs, rape and murder. A group of concerned citizens and leaders decided to try an experiment and form an organization called the Beech Corporation to revitalize the neighborhood. They didn’t know if their ideas and strategies would work. This is their story of how their vision and commitment led to huge transformation.

Discussion Facilitator: Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor

4:45pm – 6:15pm Old South

(Danielle Beverly, 2015, 54 minutes)

In Athens, Georgia, a college fraternity traditionally known to fly the confederate flag moves to a historically black neighborhood and establishes their presence by staging an antebellum style parade. What starts with a neighborhood struggle over cultural legacies in the South, the opening of a community garden becomes a grounds for understanding, as well as a physical and emotional space for healing, offering a sense of possibility and hope for the future.

Discussion Facilitator: Cherisse Jones-Branch

Friday, September 25, 2015

6:30pm – 7:30pm

This Little Light Of Mine: The Legacy of Fannie Lou Hamer (Robin N. Hamilton, 2015, 26 minutes)

Documents her life and struggle, starting with her years on a plantation in Mississippi, and leading up to her heroic speech during the Democratic National Convention in 1964.

Discussion Facilitator: Shenette Garrett-Scott Film Director – Robin N. Hamilton will be there to answer questions

7:45pm – 10:15pm

The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (Available To Conventioneers Only) (Stanley Nelson, 2015, 116 minutes)

Explores the Black Panther Party, its significance to the broader American culture, its cultural and political awakening for black people, and the painful lessons wrought when a movement derails.

Discussion Facilitator: Robyn Spencer

Saturday, September 26, 2015

8:00am – 9:40am

The Untold Story Of Emmett Till (Keith A. Beauchamp, 2005, 70 minutes)

Investigates 14-year-old Till’s 1955 murder in the Mississippi Delta and the miscarriage of justice that let his murderers go free. Nine-years in the making, the film features eye-witness accounts and uncovers new facts surrounding Till’s murder. The film prompted the United States Justice Department to reopen its investigation of the case.

Discussion Facilitator: Telisa Bailey

10:00am – 11:30am

Ordinary People, Extraordinary Deeds (Presented by March on Washington Film Festival) - 60 minutes

Film excerpts and moving personal testimonies highlighting unsung heroes of the Civil Rights Movement in the words of their survivors.

Film excerpt: 4 Little Girls (1997). Five little girls were in the basement lounge of Birmingham’s 16th St. Baptist Church when it was bombed one Sunday morning in 1963. Four died. Sarah is the one who survived. But what really happened to those who lived?

Film excerpt: Booker’s Place (2012) Booker Wright was a longtime waiter at Lusko’s, Restaurant and owner of his own eatery. When he spoke too freely on a 1965 network documentary about his life in Mississippi, he paid a terrible price. Booker’s Place is the film made by his granddaughter, Yvette to learn the whole story.

Film excerpt: Home of the Brave (2004). In 1965 Viola Liuzzo, a white wife and mother in Detroit, drove to volunteer with the Selma March. She was shot and killed while transporting marchers in her car. The film chronicles her daughter Mary’s search to find the pieces of her mother’s story she never knew.

Panelists: Mary Liuzzo Lilleboe. Yvette Johnson, (Booker Wright’s granddaughter and filmmaker) and Sarah Collins Rudolph (one girl who survived the bombing)

Discussion Facilitator: Crystal R. Sanders

Saturday, September 26, 2015

11:45am – 1:45pm

Neshoba: The Price of Freedom (Micki Dickoff and Tony Pagano, 2010, 86 minutes)

Tells the story of a Mississippi town still divided about the meaning of justice, 40 years after the murders of civil rights workers James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner.

Discussion Facilitator: Nan Woodruff

2:00pm – 4:00pm

BaddDDD Sonia Sanchez

(Barbara Attie, Janet Goldwater and Sabrina Schmidt Gordon, 2015, 90 minutes)

Offers unprecedented access to the life, work and mesmerizing performances of renowned poet and activist Sonia Sanchez who had been a continuous presence for nearly 60 years. She was a central figure in the Black Arts Movement and is an inspiration to contemporary spoken word artists

Discussion Facilitator: Sonia Sanchez

4:15pm – 6:45pm

Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary (Stephen Vittoria, 2012, 120 minutes)

Before he was convicted of murdering a policeman in 1981 and sentenced to die, Mumia Abu-Jamal was a gifted journalist and brilliant writer. Now after more than 30 years in prison, Mumia is not only still alive but continuing to report, provoke and inspire.

Discussion Facilitator: Kenja McCray

7:00pm – 8:55pm

Jesse Owens

(Stanley Nelson, 2012, 85 minutes)

The story of the 22-year-old son of a sharecropper who triumphed over adversity to become a hero and world champion, JESSE OWENS is also about the elusive, fleeting quality of fame and the way Americans idolize athletes when they suit our purpose, and forget them once they don’t.

Discussion Facilitator: Pellom McDaniels III

Sponsored by: March on Washington Film Festival California Newsreel

We would also like to thank Women Make Movies, First Run Features, and Firelight Media for their support of this film festival.

2015 CONVENTION EXHIBITORS & MARKETPLACE

Georgia 7, 8 & Pre-Function

FEATURING QUALITY SMALL BUSINESS VENDORS, ACADEMIC PRESSES AND MORE

Exhibitors

Art Publishing and Distribution by Charles Bibbs

Association Book Exhibit

Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture & History

Everyone’s Place

Farmers Insurance

Foundation International

Heritage International Fashions

Journal of African American History

Library Company of Philadelphia

McFarland Publishing

Middle Tennnessee State University

National Museum of American History

National Park Service-Southeast Regional Office

Penguin Random House retiredslaves.com

Robin Lofton

Scholars Choice

University of Arkansas Press

University of Georgia Press

University of Illinois Press

University of North Carolina Press

University Press Florida

Waldencorart Inc.

YBI African Apparel

Zee Crafts

Thursday Lunch

Freshly Baked Rolls

Garden Salad (Build Your Own)

Chicken Caponata

Sliced Top Round of Beef

Rice Pilaf

Garden Fresh Vegetables

Red Velvet Cake, Pecan Pie, Key Lime Pie

Iced Tea and Starbucks Coffee

Menus*

JAAH Reception

Stations: Pina Colada Shrimp, Miniature Chicken Cordon Bleu and Raspberry Brie

Displays:

Imported and Domestic Cheese and Fruit Platter

Carving Station (Steamship of Beef)

Pasta Station

Chef’s Choice of Vegetables

Whole Roasted Potatoes

Assorted Desserts

Fruit Punch and Cash Bar

Friday BANQUET

Freshly Baked Rolls

Garden Salad (Build Your Own)

Baked Chicken

Fried Catfish

Potato Salad

Collard Greens

Chocolate Layer Cake, Banana Cream Pie, Coconut Cake

Iced Tea and Starbucks Coffee

Saturday Banquet

Freshly Baked Rolls

Georgian Salad

Airline Chicken

Mashed Potatoes

Brocolini & Carrots

Chocolate Truffle Cake

Starbucks Coffee

*Each of the lunches has a vegetarian option.

Saturday Lunch

Freshly Baked Rolls

Garden Salad (Build Your Own)

Brown Butter Chicken Breast with Root Vegetables

Blackened Tilapia

Hoppin John

Sautéed Green Beans and Onions

German Chocolate Cake, Lemon Merengue Pie and Fruit Medley with Sambuca

Iced Tea and Starbucks Coffee

Sunday Breakfast

Breakfast Pastries

Scrambled Eggs

Bacon/Sausage

Grits/Potatoes

Juice

Coffee

Abello Hurtado, Maria Ximena, 104

Acker, Daniel R, 063, 194

Adams, Dell, 100

Adams, John Hurst, 319

Adams, Sameila, 264

Adams, William Horatio, 302

Adams-Bass, Valerie N., 038, 106, 239

Adell, Sandra, 181

Adkins, Jan Batiste, 063

Aghahowa, Brenda, 095

Agosto, Vonzell, 146, 285

Agyepong, Tera Eva, 299

Akbar-Williams, Tahirah, 171, 256

Akinsegun, Osuntinibu, 059

Aldridge, III, Daniel W., 249 Alexander, Blayne, 319

Alexander, Jim, 268

Alexander, Representative Kimberly, 154

Alexander, Shawn Leigh, 048, 100, 293

Alexander, William, 245

Alfonso, Rowena Ianthe, 042

Ali, Amir, 234

Alridge, Derrick, 008, 088, 099, 125, 144, 186, 266

Aman, Peter, 167

Anderson, Carol, 270

Anderson, Diane, 024

Anderson, Lauren Kientz, 145 Anthony, TaKeia, 041, 264

Antonin, Henrietta, 320

Apparicio, Alexis, 019

Araujo, Ana Lucia, 031, 314

Armstead, Myra, 036

Armstrong, Julie Buckner, 250

Armstrong Dunbar, Erica, 243, 257

Arrington, Lauren, 116

Art Publishing and Distribution by Charles Bibbs, 070, 115, 232

Arthur, Rosailand, 027

Ashford, Shetay, 146

Association Book Exhibit, 070, 115, 232

Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture and History, 070, 115, 232

Augustine, Jean, 090, 303

Austin, Paula C, 021

Austin, Stanley, 059

Autrey, Dorothy, 291

Awad, Rian Hamadnalla, 251

Baggett, Antrece, 262

Bailey, A. Peter, 100

Bailey, Dorothy F, 003, 209, 237

Bailey, Richard, 100

Bailey, Ronald W, 132, 290

Bailey, T’Shaka, 198

Bailey, Telisha D, 292

Balto, Simon, 077

Bandele, Ramla Marie, 169

Banks, Cerri Annette, 107, 165

Banton, Arthur, 148

Barnes, Karl, 196

Barnes, Tanesha, 032

Barr, Mary, 029, 077

Barr-Davenport, Leona, 167

Barrett, Marsha, 078, 233

Bascomb, Lia T., 147, 276

Battle, Thomas C, 003

Battle-Baptiste, Whitney, 216, 298

Baumgartner, Kabria, 243

Bay, Mia, 144

Beaty, Anita Law, 196

Bell-Thomas, Kanika, 309

Beltramini, Enrico, 221

Benson, Devyn Spence, 130

Benson II, Richard D., 184, 278

Bentley-Edwards, Keisha L, 038

Bernier, Julia Wallace, 294

Berry, Daina Ramey, 273

Berry, Mary Frances, 099, 100

Bethel, Kathleen, 170

Bethune, Evelyn, 100

Bethune-Brown, Camille, 305

Bibbs, Charles, 319

Billingsley, Andrew, 106

Binta, Carol, 100

Biondi, Martha, 003, 008, 042, 125, 160, 296

Blackman, Dexter, 043, 247

Blackwell, James, 281

Blandford, Cynthia, 037

Blount, Tamika, 315

Blum, Michael, 008, 153

Boers, David, 029

Bolden, Tony, 310

Bond, Kathleen McClain, 006

Bond, Michael Julian, 226

Bonilla, Eddie, 281

Bonner, Claudine, 090

Boston, Thomas “Danny”, 308

Bosworth, Greg, 295

Bouldin, Kristin, 254

Bowles, Laurian, 249

Boyd, Kelli, 299

Boyd III, Miller William, 254

Boylorn, Robin, 040

Bracey, John, 048, 059, 088, 100, 268

Bradford, Joy, 309

Bradley, Regina, 176, 196, 217

Branch, Chelsea, 054

Branch, Cherisse Jones, 145, 211

Branch, Monsignor Edward, 167

Branham, LaTonya M, 100

Brawley, Otis, 200

Breanna, McCallum, 016

Brenda, Flanagan, 249

Bridges, Eric, 315

Brimmer, Brandi C, 055, 076

Brisbon, Lauren, 028

Briscoe, Natosha, 241

Bristol, Travis, 082

Bristow, Margaret Bernice Smith, 148, 191

Brodnax, David, 168

Brooks, Cecelia, 124

Brooks, Erik, 100

Brooks, Kevin L., 053

Brooks-Tatum, Shanesha, 079

Brown, Aleia M, 085

Brown, Anthony L., 082, 197

Brown, Carolyn Jean, 120

Brown, Drew, 043

Brown, Frank, 283

Brown, Keffrelyn D., 197

Brown, Kimberly Juanita, 108

Brown, Kimberly, 075

Brown, Korey, 105

Brown, Nikki, 250

Brown, Scot, 210, 310

Brown II, M. Christopher, 058, 172

Broyld, Dann J., 091, 259

Bruce, Representative Roger, 154, 167

Brunson, Takkara, 130

Bryant, John Hope, 308

Bunch, Lonnie, 167

Burch, Kerry, 052

Burden, Charisse, 012

Burgos, Adrian, 201 Burke, Diane Mutti, 163

Burnside, Timothy Anne, 140

Burrell Wood, Aja, 176

Burrowes, Nicole, 274

Burton, LeVar, 283

Burton, Nsenga, 309

Burton, Sammie, 095

Bush, Christina, 217

Butler, Deidre Hill, 206

Butler, Joshua W, 122

Bynum, Cornelius, 003, 008, 028, 125, 186

Bynum, Lee, 158

Bynum, Thomas L, 085

Byrd, Brandon, 144, 293

Calloway Thomas, Carolyn, 244

Cameron, Christopher, 008, 087, 144

Campbell, Emahunn Raheem Ali, 056, 243

Campbell, Emory S, 047, 063, 284

Campbell, Joie, 236

Canton, David Alvin, 182

Carpenter, Faedra, 220

Carroll, Carolyn A, 054

Carswell, Angela, 283

Carter, Brittany, 096

Carter, Daryl Anthony, 078

Carter, David C., 078

Carter, Lawrence Edward, 283

Carter, Niambi M, 086

Carter-David, Siobhan, 150

Carter-Jackson, Kellie, 178

Cartwright, Joan, 100, 182

Carty, Yasmin, 100

Casellas, Zaira Rivera, 248

Celeste, Manoucheka, 016, 175

Cha-Jua, Sundiata Kieta, 099

Chamberlain, Daphne, 292

Chambers, Glenn, 281

Chambers, Jason P., 272

Chambliss, Julian, 129

Chapman, Rava Shelyn, 073, 265

Chapman-Hilliard, Collette, 239

Charles, Julia, 056

Chatelain, Benedict, 068

Chatelain, Marcia, 272, 296

Chavis, Jr., Charles L, 055

Chennault, Ronald, 252, 266

Chestnut, Trichita, 046, 159

Childs, Kenneth, 234

Chiles, Farrell, 100

Chilton, Katherine, 076

Cilli, Adam Lee, 029, 062

Claiborne, Corrie, 184

Clark, Zende Larmar, 003, 097, 237

Cleage, Pearl, 177

Clemons, Kristal Moore, 252

Clifton-James, Licia Ellen, 191

Clinton, Catherine, 263

Cobb, Charles E., 297

Cobb, William Jelani, 078, 206

Cobb-Roberts, Deirdre, 146

Cochran, Shannon, 315

Cochran-Edwards, Tiffany, 283

Coleman-King, Chonika, 038

Collier-Thomas, Bettye, 099, 100, 199

Collins, Stephen, 194

Collins Rudolph, Sarah, 267

Colston-Brooks, Victoria, 073, 238

Compton, Margaret, 069

Conteh, Alhaji, 164

Cook Bell, Karen B., 076

Cook, Samuel DuBois, 156

Cooley, Will, 272

Cooper, Afua, 090

Cooper, Brittney, 040, 204

Cooper, Erica, 244

Cooper, Willie, 100

Cooper-Owens, Deirdre, 079

Copeland, Charlton, 252

Corey, Mary, 030

Corniel, Lissette Acosta, 314

Cortes, Krista, 017

Cottrol, Robert J., 031

Council, Shawn, 071, 122

Craft Tanner, Chanel, 040

Craig, Bradley L., 015

Crater, Paul, 069

Crawford, Malachi, 084, 124, 169

Crenshaw-Logal, Zena, 166

Crew, Spencer, 091

Crosby, Emilye, 153

Crossfield, Latangela Lajuan, 027, 151, 260

Cudjoe, Karen J, 106

Cumberbatch, Prudence, 199

Currie, Netisha, 159, 183

Curry, Constance, 100

Curry, Tommy, 141

Curwood, Anastasia C, 086

Cyrus, Sylvia Y., 003, 007, 008, 097, 125, 167, 237, 319, 320

Daboiku, Omope Carter, 190

Dagbovie, Pero, 099, 188, 258

Dagbovie-Mullins, Sika, 258

Dallas, Fenobia, 134, 219

Dancy, T. Elon, 172

Daniels, Andrea, 080

Daniels, Maurice, 100

Danns, Dionne, 173, 205

David, Marlo, 186

Davis, Cedric, 291

Davis, Chyna Yvonne, 057, 096, 127, 170, 238, 299

Davis, Damani, 159

Davis, Daniel R, 239

Davis, Ella J, 122, 241

Davis, James Earl, 172

Davis, Joshua Clark, 189

Davis, Patricia, 133

Davis, Sarajanee O, 042

Davis, Sarita, 116, 290

Davis, Stephanie Yvonne, 096, 127

Davis, Veronica Alease, 084

Davis-Faulkner, Sheri, 040

Day, Aaron, 100

de Chantal, Julie, 142

Deas, Eldrin Lamar, 021

DeBardelaben, LaNesha, 190, 275

Debnam, Jewell, 259

DeForest, Ricci, 264

Dennie, Nneka, 294

Densu, Kwasi, 259

Diaz, Maria, 017

Dickerson, Maniphone, 146

Dickerson, Sean, 285

Dickinson, Michael, 168

Dixon, Patricia, 299

Dobson, Abby, 032

Donaldson, Anthony, 065

Donaldson, Le’Trice, 218

Dorsey, Chianta, 140

Dotson, Jr, Jerome, 106

Dozier, Richard, 225

Drabinski, John E., 141

Drake, Simone, 301

Drummond, Traci JoLeigh, 092

Dudley, Gabrielle, 092

Duke, Eric D., 130

Duncan, Armanthia Nicole, 056, 218

Duncan, Natanya, 008, 015, 055, 130, 139, 204, 253, 257, 313, 316 Dunn, Barbara Spencer, 035, 067, 209, 237

Dunn, Stephane, 184

Duster, Michelle, 008, 139, 161, 185, 208, 212, 228, 277, 317, 318

Earl-Lewis, Monique, 184

Eaton-Martinez, Omar, 248

Eaves, LaToya, 174, 289

Edwards, Artrisia, 320

Edwards, Janelle, 275

Edwards, Ricardo J, 170

Effinger-Crichlow, Marta, 044, 100

Eiland, Le’Mil, 165, 220

Eisenstadt, Peter, 193

Elgersman Lee, Maureen, 018, 061

Ellis, Kelly, 095

Ellis, Reginald K, 034, 061, 214

Erwin, Theodore and Elsie, 180

Evans, Curtis, 145

Evans, Meredith, 025

Evans, Stephanie, 008, 037, 079, 125, 175, 206, 226, 309

Everyone’s Place, 070, 115, 232

Ewing, K. T., 056

Ezeilo, Angelou, 035

Ezra, Michael, 203

Fache, Caroline, 249

Faniel, Maco L., 280, 311

Farmer, Ashley, 189, 297

Farmers Insurance, 070, 232

Faulkenbury, Evan, 104

Faussart, Helene, 178

Feigert, Jessie, 276

Fenner, Jasmine, 014

Ferdinand, Renata, 044

Fergus, Devin, 301

Ferguson, Cheryl, 109

Ferguson, Mary LaFrance, 047

Ferguson, Robert Hunt, 145

Fischer, Dawn-Elissa, 053

Fisher, Earle, 123

Fisher, Vivian, 307

Fisher-Hickman, Holly, 039

Flannery, Ifetayo, 117, 215

Fleming, John, 156

Flemming-Hunter, Sheila, 003, 007, 097, 156, 209, 312, 319

Flippin, William, 319

Flowe, Douglas, 233

Flowers, Tiffany, 100

Fludd, Representative Virgil, 154

Flynn, Joseph, 052, 136, 202

Forbes, Michael, 060

Ford, Charles, 034

Ford, Nitoshia L., 170

Ford, Richard, 149

Ford, Tanisha C, 066, 094, 150

Ford, Tanisha, 226

Foster, Lloren, 080

Foster, Makiba, 025

Foster, Pamela E., 084, 207, 241, 285

Fourmy, Signe Peterson, 263

Fox, Kyle R., 118 Frank, David B, 121

Franklin, Janice, 291

Franklin, V. P., 111, 173, 303 Fraser, Zinga, 086, 199

Frear, Yvonne Davis, 262

Fredericks, Brenda D, 134

Freelon-Foster, Dianna, 051

Freeman, Jonathan Richard, 279

Frielink, Sarah Lynne, 052, 202

Gabriel, Dexter, 020, 260

Gadsden, Brett, 255

Gaines, Rondee, 008, 141, 157, 279

Gardner, Bettye, 003, 156

Garrett-Scott, Shennette, 079, 212, 254, 262

Garrison-Harrison, Christy, 253

Gaskamp, Katherine, 054

Gatson, Torren, 085

Gault, Erika, 123

Gay, Agnolia Beatrice, 213, 239

Gayles, Jonathan I, 224, 261

Gershenhorn, Jerry, 169

Ghartey-Tagoe Kootin, amma, 181

Ghasedi, Nadia, 025

Gilbert, Alan, 036

Gilbert, Cornelius, 052

Gill, Tiffany, 150, 203, 316

Gillespie, Andra, 049

Gipson, Grace, 217, 276

Gist, Conra, 136, 202

Givens, Jarvis Ray, 074

Glymph, Thavolia, 187

Gondek, Abby, 058

Gonzalez, Aston, 243

Gonzalez Velez, Mirerza, 248

Gooch, Cheryl, 083, 100 Gore, Dayo, 286

Goseer, Erin, 100

Goudsouzian, Aram, 008, 078, 271, 297

Gourrier, Francis, 240

Graham, Brittaney N, 064

Graham, Natalie, 219

Grant, Carl, 197

Grant, George, 100

Greason, Walter, 129

Green, Harriett, 132 Green, Laurie, 250

Green Benjamin, Shanna, 257

Greene, Christina, 152

Greene, Kevin, 131, 151, 302

Greene, Wendy, 031

Greene II, Robert Jerome, 087, 104

Griffin, Christi, 269

Griffin, Farah, 316

Grim, Valerie, 206

Grimmett, Muriel, 029

Grinage, Raquel, 305

Grogan, David J., 166

Gross, Kali, 152, 204

Guariglia, Matthew, 221

Guidry, Carolyn Tyler, 320 Guild, Joshua, 094

Guillory, J. Anthony, 247

Guy-Sheftall, Beverly, 086, 204

Guzman, Will, 100

Hadley, Fredara M, 176

Hadley, James “Jack”, 069

Hafiz-Wahid, Fatima, 038

Hahn, Steven, 187

Haile, James, 141

Hall, Eric Allen, 271

Halliday, Aria S., 133, 235

Ham, Debra Newman, 143

Hamilton, Aretina, 019, 124, 174, 289

Hamilton, Jessica D.N., 117

Hamilton, Kenneth, 048

Hamilton, Tikia Kenise, 160

Hamlin, Francoise, 142, 255

Harnischfeger, Mark, 030

Harold, Claudrena, 064

Harper, Donna Akiba Sullivan, 177

Harper, Jim, 003, 014, 039

Harris, Christopher, 071

Harris, Duchess, 257

Harris, Felicia, 290

Harris, Janette Hoston, 100

Harris, Kyle, 192

Harris, LaShawn, 008, 076, 188

Harris, Leslie M., 187, 273

Harris, Robert L., 156

Harris, Sheena, 056, 075, 218

Harrison, Alferdteen B., 103, 120

Harrison, Faye V., 316

Harvey Wingfield, Adia, 301

Harwell, Debbie, 287

Haskins, Jewel, 128

Hayes, Floyd, 141

Hayes, Worth Kamili, 295

Haykal, Aaisha, 140

Haynes, Marcus Ta’von, 057, 127, 238

Haywood, D’Weston, 065

Heath, R. Scott, 053

Helgeson, Jeffrey, 008, 296

Helton, Laura E., 274

Henderson, Tammy, 234

Hendricks, Derick Antony, 195

Henley, Lauren, 233

Herd II, Ronald Cortez, 182

Herd-Clark, Dawn J., 192

Heritage International Fashions, 070, 115, 232

Herman, Lorenzo, 118

Hicks, Cheryl, 152, 209

Higginbotham, Evelyn, 003, 187

Higginson, John, 051, 226, 236

Hightower, Edward, 028, 050, 110

Hill, Laura Warren, 147, 203

Hilliard, Patsy Jo, 007

Hilliard-Nunn, Hakim, 198

Hilliard-Nunn, Patricia, 198

Hillsman, Eugene, 110

Hilton, Kelly, 171, 195, 249

Hine, Darlene Clark, 088, 270

Hines, Michael, 081

Hinton, Elizabeth, 311

Hobbs, Tameka Bradley, 018, 061, 100, 123

Hobson, Maurice J, 093, 155, 182, 196

Hoff, Tamara, 018

Holloway, Pippa, 311

Holmes, Kwame, 155

Hooper, Leta, 149

Hope, Jeanelle Kevina, 147

Hopson, Rodney, 252

Horhn, John, 276

Horne, Gerald, 012, 227, 303

Hornsby-Gutting, Angela, 193

Horrocks, Allison B, 221

Hoston Harris, Janette, 156

Hotchkins, Bryan Keith, 172

House, Anton D, 024

Houston, Akil, 019, 174, 289

Howard, Ashley M., 008, 077, 278

Howard, Jasmin, 302

Howard, Schillica, 066

Hucks, Tracy, 249

Hudson, Georgia, 213

Hudson, Redditt, 269

Huey, Ryan, 281

Hughes, Brandi, 108

Hughes, Eddie, 062

Hughes, Lyn

Hunt, Rebecca, 202

Hyres, Alexander, 074, 122

Irby-Ware, Veta, 053

Ivy, Nicole, 108

Jack, Bryan, 250

Jackson, Andrea, 092, 140

Jackson, Cathy, 245

Jackson, David H, 048, 214

Jackson, Ivan, 235

Jackson, Lawrence, 102

Jackson, Mark S., 190

Jackson, Shantina, 074

Jacobs Thompson, Sharita, 076, 275, 314

Jamison, David Michael, 284

Jamison, Felicia, 236

January, Karen, 021, 100 Jarrett, Robin, 259

Jefferson, Robert Franklin, 151, 182

Jefferson, Karen, 256

Jeffries, Bayyinah S., 013, 289

Jeffries, Hasan, 065, 153

Jelks, Randal Maurice, 031, 141, 188, 240, 310

Jennings, John, 129

John, Beverly M, 047

Johnson, Andre E., 068, 123

Johnson, Birgitta Joelisa, 176

Johnson, Doria, 061

Johnson, Frank, 207

Johnson, Jessica Marie, 144, 304, 316

Johnson, Karen, 081, 266

Johnson, Latoya, 170

Johnson, Patrick, 217

Johnson, Pearlie Mae, 134

Johnson, Roman, 135

Johnson, Sylvester, 214

Johnson, W. Chris, 286, 297

Johnson, Yvette, 267

Jones, Alisha, 176

Jones, Mack H., 089

Jones, Ida, 197

Jones, Jacqueline C., 157

Jones, Jennifer D., 160

Jones, Lindsey Elizabeth, 074

Jones, Martha S., 031, 187

Jones, Norrece, 163

Jones, Patrick, 077

Jones, Ralph, 167

Jones, Ricky, 100

Jones, Shermaine, 102

Jones, Tayari, 177

Jones-Sneed, Frances, 122, 216, 242, 298

Jordan, Jamon, 042, 063, 300

Jordon, Ashley, 024

Joseph, Peniel, 203, 297

Joslin-Knapp, Sydney, 174, 289

Journal of African American History, 070, 115, 232

Jowers-Barber, Sandra, 083

Kachun, Mitch, 157

Kai, Nubia, 100, 246, 285

Kanu, Christina, 057, 096

Kart, Susan, 313

Keeton, Kymberly Mieshia Dionne, 285

Kemp, Kathryn, 100

Kerr-Ritchie, Jeffrey, 076, 187

Kessler, Bryan, 292

Kimberly, Odusanya, 016

Kimble, Lionel, 003, 008, 098, 101, 211, 224, 231, 256, 296

Kinard, Joy, 035, 128, 225, 312

Kinchen, Shirletta J., 155

King, Amina, 319

King, Barbara, 100

King, Joyce E, 082

King, Kenya, 003

King, LaGarrett, 197

King, Shannon, 155, 233, 275

Kinlow, Matthew, 171

Kokayi, Assata, 199

Kossie-Chernyshev, Karen, 262

Kouadio, Ajua, 107

Krauthamer, Barbara, 273

Kuchle, Spencer, 165

LaCott, Ignace, 073

Lacy, Travis K., 300

Lafayette, Dr. Bernard, 269

Laird, Alan, 151, 171

Lake, Tara, 207

Lambert, Eve, 044

Lang, Clarence, 008, 155

Lanois, Derrick, 033, 218

Larmaya, Kilgore, 016

LaRoche, Cheryl, 126

Law, Matthew, 037

Lee, Julia, 016, 175

Lee Shetterly, Margot, 257

LeFlouria, Talitha, 100, 152, 188

Leggs, Brent, 225

Lentz-Smith, Adriane, 051

Leon, Alexxa, 122

Levering-Lewis, David, 319

LeVias, Arcadia, 241

Levy, Jessica Ann, 255

Levy, LaTasha B., 186, 274

Levy, Peter, 034

Lewis, John, 319

Lewis, Kay Wright, 245, 314

Lewis, Nghana, 258

Lewis, Regina, 023, 026, 136

Lewis, Thabiti, 043

Lewis-McCoy, L’Heureux, 301

Library Company of Philadelphia, 070, 115, 232

Liuzzo Lillieboe, Mary, 267

Ligon, Tina L, 159, 183

Lindsey, Treva, 008, 204

Linker, Destiney Lynn, 236

Little, Monroe, 003, 237

Little, Sharoni, 244

Littlefield, Daniel, 163

Littlejohn, Jeffery, 034, 054, 280

Littleton, La’Neice, 073, 265

Livingston, Samuel T., 184

Loder-Jackson, Tondra, 081

Loewen, James W, 067

Lofton, Richard, 081

Lofton, Robin, 070, 115, 232

Lomax, Mark Ogunwale, 167

Long, Khalid, 220

Losier, Toussaint, 223

Lotson, Griffin, 121

Louis, Diana, 102

Love, Jade, 021

Love, Johnnieque Blackmon, 008, 237, 256, 307

Lovett, Laura, 142

Lowe, Tony B, 194, 221

Lowe, Turkiya L, 006, 050

Lowery, Lauren G., 140

Luckett, Robert, 120

Lyle, Anndretta, 310

MacLeish, Peter, 200

Madison, Cynthia, 192 Madzimoyo, Ayana, 320

Madzimoyo, Ife, 135

Maginn, Andrew Wyatt, 195 Magras, Lydia, 095

Makalani, Minkah, 012, 130, 286

Mann, Kimberly, 091

Mann, Regis Marlene, 258

Manning-Miller, Carmen, 045

Mares, Richard M, 060

Marsalis, Delfeayo, 178

Marshall, Amani, 239

Martin, Arthuretta H, 166

Mason, Patience, 080

Massenburg, Moses, 118, 319

Matlock, Charles, 140

Matthews, Lopez, 046

Maultsby, Portia, 210

McAllister, Marvin, 220

McCall, Josephine Bolling, 100

McCall, Nathan, 049

McCaskill, Barbara, 069, 100 McCoy, Austin, 255

McCray, Kenja R, 207, 253

McCray, Michael, 166

McCune, Jeffrey Q., 025

McCurtis, Marlene, 287

McCutcheon, Priscilla, 174, 289

McDaniels III, Pellom, 021, 069, 271

McDole, Ayondela, 066

McDonald, George, 035

McDougal, Serie, 240

McDowell, Deborah E., 274

McDuffie, Erik, 037, 193

McGruder, Kevin, 100

McGuire, Danielle, 051, 153

McKinley, Catherine, 150

McKinney, Charles, 008, 078

McKinney, Cynthia, 315

McKisick, Derrick D., 168

McKnight, Utz, 141

McLeod, Jacqueline, 079, 163

McNair, Kimberly, 217

McNeil, Chesley, 167

Mcneil, Genna, 100

Mears, Tanya, 103

Medford, Edna Greene, 003, 100

Melancon, Trimiko, 100

Melton, McKinley, 101

Menzise, Jeffrey, 242

Mickens, Ronald, 058

Middle Tennessee State University, 070, 115, 232

Miletsky, Zebulon, 008, 077, 182, 266

Miller, Rasul, 223

Mills, Jeri, 067

Mills, ShaVonte’, 083

Millward, Jessica, 187, 304

Milteer, Warren, 072

Minamoto, Kunihiko, 033

Mingo, AnneMarie, 137

Mitchell, Elise Agatha, 015

Mitchell, Martin, 319

Mitchell, Representative Billy, 154

Mitchell, Roland Walker, 172

Mixon, Gregory, 028

Momon, Tiffany, 085

Monnie, Bill, 100

Montooth, Jennifer, 305

Montrie, Chad, 300

Moore, Alicia, 023, 026, 202

Moore, Cornelius, 114, 306

Moore, Erin H, 071

Moore, Isabell Lola, 169

Moore, Louis, 271

Moorhead, Deborah, 259

Morehouse, Lawrence, 158

Morgan, Kelli, 066

Morgan-Brown, MaryNell, 216, 298

Moriah, Kristin, 036

Morris, Aldon, 100

Morris, Burnis R, 045

Morris, Courtney Desiree, 137

Morris, Jamae, 135, 290

Morris, Susana, 040

Morris, Tiyi, 100, 251, 287

Morrison, Amani, 131

Morton-Young, Tommie, 100

Mosby, Representative Howard, 154

Moses, Raven M., 117

Moses, Sibyl, 062

Mosley, Derek, 092

Moten, Crystal, 077

Moultrie, Monique, 068

Muhammad, Baiyina W., 013, 072, 143

Muhammad, Nafeesa Haniyah, 253

Murch, Donna, 223

Mustakeem, Sowande, 025, 152

Mwanzia Koster, Mickie, 147

Myles, Sharnell, 309

Myrick-Harris, Clarissa, 226

Nadasen, Premilla, 100

Nadine V. Wedderburn, Nadine V., 216, 298

National Museum of American History, 070, 115, 232

National Park Service Southeast Regional Office, 070, 115, 232

Ndege, Conchita, 020

Neal, La Vonne, 023, 026, 202

Neblett, Asma, 256

Nellon, Chy’na, 149, 213, 239

Nelson, Alondra, 316

Nelson, Claudia D, 106, 191, 259

Neucere, Elizabeth, 280

Nevius, Marcus P., 065

Newby-Alexander, Cassandra, 245

Newport, Melanie, 223

Nichols, Jason, 248

Nicol, Donna J, 219

Nishimoto, Azusa, 227

Nix, Keturah, 279

Nix, Jr., Echol Lee, 100, 123

Norman, Michael “Gradie”, 280

Norwood, Arlisha, 075

Nosakhere, Akilah, 307

Nunn, Kenneth, 198

O’Brien, M. J., 100 Oduguwa, Moriayo MaripazShenee, 066

Ofili, Elizabeth, 200

Ogunsola, Dellita Martin, 106 Okedeyi, Risikat, 105

Okoh, Harry, 207

Oligmueller, Lisa, 104

Omari, Safiya, 290

Onaci, Edward, 020, 186, 278

Onishi, Yuichiro, 227

Ortner, Johanna Maria, 294

Owens, Destiny, 014

Owens, Emily, 243

Owens-Lalude, Judith C., 134

Pack, Uraina N, 284

Paige, Gina, 003, 209

Palmer, Annette, 003, 097, 143

Parham, Loretta, 226

Parker, Alison M., 100, 193

Parker, Freddie L., 065

Parker, Nakia D, 263 Parker, Robert, 091, 128

Parks, Fayth M., 047

Parsons, Anne E., 311

Parsons, Elaine Franz, 311

Pasquerella, Lynn, 165

Patterson, Sydney-Paige, 133

Patterson, Tiffany Ruby, 270, 316 Patton, Stacey, 204

Peoples, Gabriel, 102

Penguin Random House, 070, 115, 232

Perkins, Kathy A, 181

Perkins, Linda Marie, 058, 205

Perro, Ebony, 028, 057, 096, 127, 265

Perry, Kennetta Hammond, 094, 130

Peskine, Alexis, 178

Peterson, James, 252, 313

Peterson-Quantana, Tanasha, 014

Phelps, Kenyatta, 018

Pheonix, Sandra, 132

Phillips, Kenvi, 046

Phillips-Lewis, Kathleen, 226

Pimblott, Kerry, 042, 278

Platt, Michael, 178

Polk, Khary, 036

Porter, Lavelle, 260

Power-Greene, Ousmane Kirumu, 037

Pratcher II, Anthony, 223

Price, Delaina, 071

Price, Melanye, 304

Price, Melynda x, 051

Pruitt, Bernadette, 262

Publishing, McFarland, 070, 115, 232

Pumphrey, Shelby, 275

Purdy, Michelle A., 173, 205

Purkiss, Ava, 274

Purnell, Brian, 153

Quiros, Ansley L, 122

Rabe, Rob, 045

Rael, Patrick, 122

Rahman, Ahmad, 060

Raimist, Rachel, 040

Raines, Tara, 016

Ramsey, Sonya, 020

Randolph, Adah, 081

Rash-Sawyer, Donna, 041

Ratchford, Jamal, 247

Ray, Louis, 029, 104

Reed, Kasim, 007

Reed, Marquita, 085

Reid, Andy, 135

Reid, Patricia, 008, 168, 187

retiredslaves.com,, 070, 115, 232

Rice, Albert “AJ”, 012

Rice, Dr. Valerie Montgomery, 200

Richardson, Riché, 177

Richie, Rashad, 154

Richmond, Afrah, 087

Rickford, Russell, 189

Rivers, Larry O., 068

Roane, James, 064

Roberts, Christopher, 117

Roberts, Juanita, 109

Robertson, Ashley, 075

Robinson, Brian, 148

Robinson, Howard Overton, 291

Robinson, Julia M, 168

Robinson, Lasean Robinson, 143

Robinson, Sharon E., 307

Rodriguez, Cheryl R., 175

Rodriguez, Kaelyn D, 017

Rogers, Justin Isaac, 171, 254

Rooks, Noliwe, 177

Rosa, Andrew Juan, 195

Rose, Stephany, 289

Rose-Rodriguez, Lisa Angela, 020

Rosenthal, Danielle, 276

Ross, Donata Russell, 100, 283, 308

Ross, Kendra Janelle, 032

Rothstein, Blair, 222

Rowley, Larry Lee, 186

Rouse, Jacquelyn, 226

Roy, Ethan Staten, 014, 241

Royster, Michael D, 021, 110

Rucker, Sandra, 027

Rucker, Walter C, 020, 100

Rydolph, Sarah Collins, 267

Runstedtler, Theresa, 201, 271

Russell, Alexandria, 062

Russell Ross, Donata, 100

Ryan, Corey, 280

Saffold, Jacinta Renee, 133

Sakashita, Fumiko, 227

Salaam, Omar J., 083, 164

Sall, Dialika, 064

Samuel, Gail, 109

Sanchez, Sonia, 059, 268, 306

Sanderfer, Selena, 080

Sanders, Crystal, 008, 137, 173, 267

Sanders, Katrina Marie, 205 Santos, Mayra, 248

Satcher, Dr. David, 200 Saunders, Lynsey Marie, 134

Sawyer, Don, 107

Schlichtmann, Karleen, 016

Schweninger, Loren, 163

Scott, Alexis, 320

Scott, Daryl Michael, 003, 007, 008, 059, 091, 097, 167, 209, 237, 283

Scott, DeWitt, 083, 149 Scott, Lakia M, 084, 149

Scott, Michelle R., 008, 158, 210, 305

Scott, Mikana, 215

Scott Giles, Freda, 181

Scruggs, Camesha, 054

Sdunzik, Jennifer, 063

Seawell, Stephanie, 278

Semmes, Clovis, 272

Seniors, Paula, 003

Sessions, Brittany, 261

Shabazz, Amilcar, 300

Shakir, Ameenah, 214, 259

Sharer, John, 100

Sharpley-Whiting, Tracy D, 270

Shaw, Stephanie, 293

Sheldon, Andrew “Andy”, 222

Shellum, Brian George, 128 Sherman, Eugene, 100

Shropshire, Shonda, 050

Silvera, Torah M, 251

Simama, Jabari, 089

Simmons, Dwan, 301

Simmons, Matthew E., 117

Simpson, Cynne, 059

Simpson-Wilkey, LaJuan, 315

Sims, Katrina R, 292

Sims-Wood, Janet, 003, 097, 100, 209, 237

Sinha, Manisha, 294

Sistrunk, Walter Lee, 033

Sloan-Brown, Carol, 100

Smalls, Victoria A., 006

Smethurst, James, 100, 268

Smith, Billy Boyd, 235

Smith, Camille Rose, 019

Smith, Daniel, 100

Smith, Tamara, 039

Smith, Elaine M., 312

Smith, Gilbert, 003

Smith, Holly, 092

Smith, John Matthew, 271

Smith, Sharde McNeil, 290

Smith, Theophus “Thee”, 222

Smith, Tiffani J, 022, 260

Smith, Sr., Harvey J, 104

Smith-Stewart, Bonnyeclaire, 118, 265

Sneed, Kymara J., 192

Snider, Joleene Maddox, 067

Snyder, Jeffrey Aaron, 197

Solomon, Mattie, 100

Sotilleo, Sophia, 062

Spence, Cynthia, 226

Spencer, Joi, 067

Spencer, Robyn, 286

Sperrazza, Tyler, 137

St. Julien, Danielle, 300

Stanford-Randle, Greer Charlotte, 003, 190, 237

Stanley III, William, 225

Stanton, Robert, 059

Starks, Howard W, 033

Stephens, Ronald Jemal, 279

Steptoe, Tyina, 133

Stevenson, Brenda, 163, 273

Steward, Tyran Kai, 201

Stewart, Angela Daphne, 120

Stewart, James, 003, 088, 099, 150, 156, 308

Stone, Oliver, 019

Stout, Gayle J., 030

Stubblefield, Ronald, 234

Stubbs, Marcus, 080

Sturdevant, Katherine Scott, 194

Suarez, Camille, 124

Sulavik, Andrew T., 046

Sullivan, Louis W., 200

Summers, Brandi, 150

Sumpter, Althea Natalga, 121

Sunnenberg, Lenise Alexandra, 251

Sunni-Ali, Asantewa, 253

Swan, Quito, 094, 295

Tait, Althea, 049

Tarik, Latif A, 024

Tate, Candy, 049, 207, 268

Tate, Desta, 320

Taylor, Brittney Nikel, 064

Taylor, Keeanga Yamahtta, 012, 208, 296

Taylor, Nikki, 003

Taylor, Paul C, 137

Taylor, Susan L, 319

Taylor, Toniesha, 081

Taylor, Ula, 008, 013, 158, 304

Taylor-Watson, Kadari, 150, 235

Taylor-Webb, Traki, 074, 146, 205

Terry, Courtney, 073, 238, 265

Terry, David Taft, 055

The Foundation International, 070, 115, 187

The Scholars Choice, 070, 115

The University of Arkansas Press, 070, 115, 232

The University of Georgia Press, 070, 115, 232

Theodore, Ashley, 251

Theoharis, Jeanne, 203, 236

Thomas, Byron, 059

Thomas, Jasmine, 261

Thomas-Houston, Marilyn, 053, 132

Thompson, Celine I, 038

Thompson, Heather Ann, 311

Thompson, Shirley, 071, 242, 302

Thornton, Troy, 003, 097

Threat, Charissa, 153

Tidwell, Wylie Jason, 103, 239

Tilghman, John Randolph, 105, 295

Tillerson-Brown, Amy, 072, 143

Tinnie, Gene S, 194

Tinnie, Wallis, 124

Tiwalade, Egbe, 059

Toby, William, 200

Todd-Breland, Elizabeth, 173

Tolan, Paraska Lorraine, 284

Tomlinson, Linda Diane, 063, 253, 285

Townes, Mitzi, 291

Trent, Noelle, 314

Tsuruta, Dorothy Jane Randall, 053

Tucker, Veta Smith, 090

Turner, Sasha, 263

Uhuru, Jihad, 116

Umoja, Akinyele, 290, 319

Underwood, Aubrey, 164

University of Florida Press, 070, 115, 232

University of Illinois Press, 070, 115, 232

University of North Carolina Press, 070, 115, 232

Van Putten, Melodye Micere, 180

Vassall, Kweku, 116

Vaughn, Gladys Gary, 003

Vaught, Seneca, 039

Veras, Edlin, 261

Verges, Francoise, 091

Vigne, Elaine, 191

Villarreal, Christina M, 020

Vincent, Godrey, 295

Vivian, C.T., 320

Wade, Darren, 105

Walden, Laurence, 264

Waldecoart Art Inc., 070, 115, 232

Wales Freedman, Eden Elizabeth, 022, 120

Walker, Antiwan, 127

Walker, Dominic, 107

Walker, Dorothy, 291

Walker, Randolph Meade, 021

Walker, Sheila, 270, 303

Walker, Tamara, 150

Wallace, Michele, 204

Wallenstein, Peter, 072, 100

Walsh, Shane B., 183

Walton, David Mathew, 042, 060, 195

Ward, Jervette RaShaun, 218

Ward Jordan, Tanya, 166

Warren, Calvin, 108

Warren, Chezare, 082

Warren, Naomi, 244

Wash, Charles, 128

Washington, Delo Elizabeth, 047

Washington, Michael, 242

Washington Jr, Fred Samuel, 047

Waterhouse, Carlton M., 031

Waters, Brandi M., 015

Watson, Huewayne, 064

Webb, Na’eemah, 279

Webb, Sandra, 100

Webster, Crystal Lynn, 142

Weddington, Jordan, 305

Weems, Robert, 272

Weinfeld, David, 087

Wells, Brandy Thomas, 193

Wesley International Choir, 283

Whipple, Angela, 251

White, Deborah Gray, 273

White, Derrick, 008, 201, 221

White, Joyce, 118

Whitehead, Karsonya (Kaye) Wise, 136, 202

Wiemers, Alice, 249

Wiggins, Danielle Lee, 255

Wilbourn, Mack, 196

Wiliiams, Seretha, 120

Wilkins, Fanon Che, 210

Williams, Chad, 293

Williams, Concetta A., 095

Williams, Darius, 313

Williams, Doretha, 307

Williams, Douglas, 110, 259

Williams, Erica Lorraine, 175

Williams, Glovinia Lewis, 100

Williams, Hettie V, 302

Williams, Jennifer, 117, 215

Williams, John E., 131

Williams, Learotha, 207

Williams, Oscar R, 029, 131

Williams, Phyllis Jean, 100

Williams, Rhonda, 155, 188

Williams, Robert Isaac, 151

Williams, Sonja, 100, 126

Williams, Wanda, 183

Williams, Yohuru, 189, 297

Williams, Yolanda Yvette, 149

Williams, Zachary, 039

Williams II, Ronald, 013

Williamson, Abraham J., 041, 264

Williamson, Angela, 041, 100, 264

Willis, Daria, 018, 061

Wilson, Francille, 226

Wilson, Jessica Alyce, 146

Wilson, Shaunqula, 038

Winkler, Erin N., 206

Winslow, Barbara, 086

Winslow, Barbara, 100

Winstead, Wheeler, 126

Wisecarver, Roy, 254

Wohlford, Corinne, 233

Wolfskill, Phoebe, 134

Wolk, Sarah, 302

Wood, Jacqueline Edith, 022

Wood III, Augustus, 042

Woodard, Komozi, 203

Woodruff, Nan Elizabeth, 051

Woods, Louis, 085

Woods, Naurice Frank, 022

Woods, Sonja, 024

Woodson, Ashley, 082

Wright, Allison M., 030

Wright, Donela, 215

Wright, Eric D, 182

Wright, Joshua Kondwani, 240

Wright, Nazera, 157

Wright Rigueur, Leah, 160

Yancy, Dorothy C., 089

YBI African Apparel, 070, 115, 232

Young, Darius J., 214

Young, Lisa, 131

Young, US Ambassador Andrew J, 196, 269

Zee Crafts, 070, 115, 232

001. 7:00 am to 7:00 pm Registration Rotunda Pre-registration Office PRe-ReGIsTRaTIOn 9/23.

002. 8:00 am to 4:30 pm

Tour International Blvd. Portico (Bus departure area) Level 1 PRe-COnFeRenCe aFRICan aMeRICan HeRITaGe BUs TOUR.

003. 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Meeting Georgia 5-a-V Room ASALH EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING.

Participants:

Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Dorothy F Bailey, MNCPPC & Executive Branch, ASALH

Thomas C Battle, Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Zende Larmar Clark, Executive Council, ASALH National Secretary

Sylvia Cyrus, Executive Director, ASALH

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

Bettye Gardner, Coppin State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Evelyn Higginbotham, Harvard University & Executive Council, ASALH

Kenya King, Organizing Atlanta Branch & Executive Council, ASALH

Monroe Little, Indiana University & Executive Council, ASALH

Edna Greene Medford, Howard University, History Department & Executive Council, ASALH

Paula Seniors, Virginia Tech & Executive Council, ASALH

Janet Sims-Wood, Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Gilbert Smith, Executive Council, ASALH

Nikki Taylor, Texas Southern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Troy Thornton, Goldman Sachs & Co.& Executive Council, ASALH

Gladys Gary Vaughn, Executive Council, ASALH

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University & Executive Coucil, ASALH

Jim Harper, North Carolina Central University & Executive Council, ASALH

Gina Paige, African Ancestry & Executive Council, ASALH

Annette Palmer, Morgan State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Greer Charlotte Stanford-Randle, ASALH/ Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch at Dayton, OH & Executive Council, ASALH

James Stewart, Pennsylvania State University, (Emeritus) & Executive Council, ASALH

V.P Franklin, Editor Journal of African American History

Marilyn Thomas-Houston, Co-Editor, Fire!!!

La Vonne Neal, Co-Editor, Black History Bulletin

Alicia Moore, Co-Editor, Black History Bulletin

004. 10:00 am to 5:00 pm Meeting Georgia 6-a-V Room ASALH EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEETING(B).

005. 11:00 am to 7:00 pm

006. 4:30 pm to 6:30 pm

Presenters:

Special Session

Capital Ballroom north COMMEMORATING THE RECONSTRUCTION ERA AND CIVIL RIGHTS: THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE’S CALL TO ACTION IN ITS SECOND CENTURY.

Turkiya L Lowe, National Park Service

Victoria A. Smalls, History, Arts, and Culture Director

Kathleen McClain Bond, Natchez National Historical Park Sponsor:

National Park Service

007. 5:30 pm to 10:00 pm Reception

atlanta History Center OPenInG nIGHT ReCePTIOn.

Participants:

Kasim Reed, Mayor City of Atlanta

The Honorable Patsy Jo Hilliard, Former Mayor East Point GA, Centennial Atlanta Honorary Committee Co-Chair Emcee:

Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director, ASALH

008. 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm Meeting Georgia 6-a-V Room aCadeMIC PROGRaM COMMITTee MeeTInG.

Participants:

Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University & Executive Coucil, ASALH

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Michael Blum, Jarvis Chrisitan College

Christopher Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Sylvia Y. Cyrus, ASALH

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

Michelle Duster, Independent Writer

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Rondee Gaines, Miami University

Aram Goudsouzian, Universiry of Memphis

LaShawn Harris, Michigan State University

Jeffrey Helgeson, Texas State University

Ashley M. Howard, Loyola University New Orleans

Clarence Lang, University of Kansas

Treva Lindsey, Ohio State University

Charles McKinney, Rhodes College

Zebulon Miletsky, Stony Brook University

Patricia Reid, University of Dayton

Crystal Sanders, Pennsylvania State University

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Michelle R. Scott, UMBC

Ula Taylor, University of California UC Berkeley

Derrick White, Dartmouth College

Johnnieque Blackmon Love, University of Maryland Libraries

009. 7:00 am to 7:00 pm

010. 7:00 am to 7:00 pm

011. 7:00 am to 11:45 am

012. 12:00 pm to 1:50 pm

Chair:

Registration

Rotunda Pre-registration Office PRe-ReGIsTRaTIOn.

Registration

Georgia Registration Office OnsITe ReGIsTRaTIOn.

Tour International Blvd. Portico (Bus departure area) Level 1 aFRICan aMeRICan HeRITaGe BUs TOUR.

Panel session

atlanta 1 STRUCTURES OF DOMINATION IN/ON THE BLACK: AFRICANA STUDIES AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.

Gerald Horne, University of Houston

Participants:

Creating Race in the Post Civil Rights Era: Colorblindness and the Politics of Poverty in the Nixon Administration.

Keeanga Yamahtta Taylor, Princeton University

The Cold War and the Cultural Turn: Some Theoretical Sketches. Charisse Burden, University of California, Berkeley Languaging Detroit: Neocolonialism, Race, and Urban Politics. Albert “AJ” Rice, Michigan State University

Commentator:

Minkah Makalani, University of Texas at Austin

013. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

BLACK MUSLIM WOMEN ACTIVISM: RECENTERING THE DISCOURSE ON THE NATION OF ISLAM.

Ronald Williams II, African American Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Participants:

Reformer Burnisteen Sharrieff and the Final Call to Islam. Ula Taylor, University of California UC Berkeley

atlanta 2

Sister Captain: Black Muslim Women’s Leadership. Bayyinah S. Jeffries, Department of African American Studies, Ohio University

Finding My Grandmother, Finding Myself: NOI Pioneer, Mable Carrie Foreman (1908-1980). Baiyina W. Muhammad, North Carolina Central University

Commentator:

Ronald Williams II, African American Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

014. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

A CLOSER LOOK INTO THE LIFE OF JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN.

Jim Harper, North Carolina Central University & Executive Council, ASALH

Discussants:

Jasmine Fenner, North Carolina Central University

Ethan Staten Roy, North Carolina Central University

Destiny Owens, North Carolina Central University

Tanasha Peterson-Quantana, North Carolina Central University

atlanta 3

015. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

atlanta 4 THREE CENTURIES OF BLACK LIFE IN SLAVERY IN THE CARIBBEAN AND LATIN AMERICA.

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

Participants:

Queen Leonor’s War: Gender and Slave Resistance in Seventeenth-Century New Grenada. Bradley L. Craig, Harvard University Department of History

‘Smallpox Negroes’: Smallpox Inoculation and the Enslaved Black Body in the British West Indies 1756-1800. Elise Agatha Mitchell, New York University Department of History

Caught in the Act: Suicide and Slavery in 19th Century New Granada. Brandi M. Waters, Yale University - Departments of History & African American Studies

Commentator:

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

016. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Roundtable session atlanta 5 MENTORING THE NEXT GENERATION OF AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES STUDENTS AND LEADERS.

Chair:

Manoucheka Celeste, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Discussants:

Julia Lee, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Tara Raines, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Kilgore Larmaya, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Karleen Schlichtmann, university of Nevada Las Vegas

Odusanya Kimberly, University of Nevada Las Vegas

McCallum Breanna, University of Nevada Las Vegas

017. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Capital Ballroom north THE MISEDUCATION OF AND ABOUT THE AFROLATIN: CRITICAL DIALOGUES ON BEING BLACK AND BROWN.

Krista Cortes, University of California - Berkeley

Participants:

Bodies, Bodies Everywhere and not a Puerto Rican in Sight!: An exploration of the Black Puerto Rican (Afroboriqua) Body.

Krista Cortes, University of California - Berkeley

Dominican hair manifesto. Maria Diaz, Harvard University

Black Women in Mexican Art; A Colonial Legacy. Kaelyn D Rodriguez, University of California, Los Angeles

Commentator:

Maria Diaz, Harvard University

018. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 123 RISE TO THE OCCASION: BLACK WOMEN’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO CIVIL RIGHTS, EDUCATION, AND PHILANTHROPY.

Tameka Bradley Hobbs, Florida Memorial University

Participants:

Myra and Ruth Logan: Sisters for Civil Rights. Daria Willis, Lee College

Black Women and Education, Williamsburg, Virginia, 1870-1940. Maureen Elgersman Lee, Hampton University

When and Where They Entered: The Financial and Philanthropic Contribution of African American Women Post-Emancipation. Kenyatta Phelps, Lone Star College

“Black Women’s Activism at the University of Illinois, 1901-1939”. Tamara Hoff, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Commentator:

Tameka Bradley Hobbs, Florida Memorial University

019. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

NO HUMANS INVOLVED: THE CONTINUING INSIGNIFICANCE OF BLACK FEMALE BODIES.

Aretina Hamilton, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

Participants:

The Neglect of Black Women Through Prison Policies. Camille Rose Smith, Ohio University No One Knows My Name: Racial Profiling and African American Women. Alexis Apparicio, Ohio University

The History of Violence on Black Women’s Bodies. Oliver Stone, Ohio University

Commentator:

Akil Houston, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

020. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Edward Onaci, Ursinus College

Participants:

Paper session

Conference Room 127 aFRICans In THe aMeRICas.

Diaspora Docterine: The Transplantation of IFA from Nigeria to Cuba and Brazil. Past and Present Practices. Lisa Angela Rose-Rodriguez, UCONN, UCHC & Capital Community College

Obeah, Oaths, and Ancestors: Ritual Technologies and Mortuary Realms in the Gold Coast Diaspora. Walter C Rucker, Rutgers University

Over 100 Years or More of Inspirations from Africa in the Americas: Case Studies of Salvador, Brazil and New Orleans, La. Conchita Ndege, 1947

“Where liberty dwells, there is my country:” African-Americans and the British Emigration Scheme. Dexter Gabriel, SUNY-Stony Brook

Fugitive Slaves, Gender, and Power Geometries in Late Spanish Texas, 1820. Christina M Villarreal, History Department, University of Texas at Austin

Commentator:

Sonya Ramsey, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

021. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 129 dIsMIssInG and ReassessInG MyTHs aBOUT RaCe and GendeR.

Eldrin Lamar Deas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Participants:

Beastial Myth: A Critical Race Theory of African American Male Stigma. Michael D Royster, Prairie View A&M University

For the Love of Ebony Women. Jade Love, undergraduate

The Glass is Half Full: Resurrection of the Post Civil War Assessment of the State of African Americans. Randolph Meade Walker, Memphis organizing Branch

“I’m a Woman Who Knows Her Own Mind”: Narratives of Interiority and Black Life in Washington D.C. 1919 - 1942. Paula C Austin, Graduate Center CUNY

“I’m a Woman Who Knows Her Own Mind”: Narratives of Interiority and Black Life in Washington D.C. 1919 - 1942. Paula C Austin, California State University, Sacramento

Will The Real Sheroes Please Stand Up. Karen January, Educator and Author

Commentator:

Pellom McDaniels III, Emory University

022. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 131 THE NEW NEGRO MOVEMENT AND ITS BLACK ARTS LEGACIES.

Eden Elizabeth Wales Freedman, Adams State University

Participants:

A Seabed of BAM: Sounding the Impact of the 1968 Summer Issue of The Drama Review. Jacqueline Edith Wood, University of Missouri-Kansas City

Henry Ossawa Tanner in the Time of the New Negro Movement. Naurice Frank Woods, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Playing in the Light: An Analysis of “Progressive” Black Masculinities in Literature. Tiffani J Smith, Claremont Graduate University

Commentator:

Eden Elizabeth Wales Freedman, Adams State University

023. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Leaders:

Special Session

Georgia 10 TEACHERS WORKSHOP STUDENT SESSION.

La Vonne Neal, Northern Illinois University

Regina Lewis, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs

Alicia Moore, Southwestern University

Sponsor:

American Federation of Teachers

024. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 11 THE LIONS TELL THEIR STORY: A CENTURY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN PUBLIC HISTORY.

Latif A Tarik, Howard University

Participants:

Interpreting Our Heritage: Visibility and Omission the Presence of African Americans in the 21st Century. Ashley Jordon, National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center

Race Pride, Progress, and Class: African Americans and the Atlanta International Cotton States Exposition, 1895. Anton D House, Howard University

Claiming Space Within the Dominant Public Sphere: The History of African American Exhibitions, Fairs and Museums. Diane Anderson, Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

Howard University Moorland-Spingarn Contributions to Africana Archives and Repository. Sonja Woods, Howard University

Commentator:

Diane Anderson, Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture

025. 8:30 am to 9:50 am Roundtable session

Georgia 12 FROM THE STREETS TO THE CLASSROOM: COLLABORATING TO DOCUMENT A SOCIAL MOVEMENT.

Chair:

Nadia Ghasedi, Washington University

Discussants:

Meredith Evans, Washington University

Sowande Mustakeem, Washington University in St. Louis

Makiba Foster, Washington University in St. Louis

Jeffrey Q. McCune, Washington University in St. Louis

026. 8:30 am to 3:50 pm Special Session

13 TEACHERS WORKSHOP.

Leaders:

La Vonne Neal, Northern Illinois University

Regina Lewis, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs

Alicia Moore, Southwestern University

Sponsor:

American Federation of Teachers

027. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Leaders:

Workshop session

Georgia 2 --aV Room MORE THAN A GAME: USING GAMING TO ENGAGE AND TEACH IN THE DIGITAL AGE.

Latangela Lajuan Crossfield, Clark Atlanta University

Rosailand Arthur, Clark Atlanta University

Sandra Rucker, Clark Atlanta University

028. 8:30 am to 9:50 am Panel session

CIVIL WAR TO CIVIL RIGHTS: A STRUGGLE FOR HUMAN DIGNITY.

Chair:

Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University & Executive Coucil, ASALH

Participants:

Rufus B. Bullock and Convict Leasing in Post-Civil War Georgia. Edward Hightower, Clark Atlanta University

Pre-Civil Rights Discussions of the African American Churches During the Jim Crow Era. Lauren Brisbon, Clark Atlanta University

Color Cast (e): Reconstructing Black Identities from Reconstruction to Post-Racial America. Ebony Perro, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Gregory Mixon, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

029. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Louis Ray, Fairleigh Dickinson University

Participants:

Paper session

CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE URBAN NORTH.

Georgia 5-a-V Room

“The Greatest Good”: Black Professionals and the Early Civil Rights Movement in Pittsburgh, 1925-1940. Adam Lee Cilli, University of Maine

Continuity and Change: the African American Struggle for Civil Rights, 1954-1956. Louis Ray, Fairleigh Dickinson University; Muriel Grimmett, Independent scholar

Protest in Suburbia! The 1965 North Shore Summer Project for Fair Housing in Chicago’s Suburbs. Mary Barr, Clemson University School Desegregation Law: Amos et al v. Board of School Directors of the City of Milwaukee. David Boers, Marian University

Commentator:

Oscar R Williams, SUNY Albany

030. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 6-a-V Room

MOVInG BeyOnd THe aCadeMy: aFRICan aMeRICan HeRITaGe TOURIsM COMes OF aGe.

Mary Corey, The College at Brockport, Brockport, NY

Participants:

Public History’s Critical Role in Public Perceptions of African American History. Mary Corey, The College at Brockport, Brockport, NY

Teaching the Past: Public History and Public Schools. Mark Harnischfeger, Greece Central School District

Why here? Tracing the Intersection of Physical & Cultural Geography. Gayle J. Stout, Genesee Community College & Dansville, NY High School, Ret.

Commentator:

Allison M. Wright, The College at Brockport, Brockport, NY

031. 8:00 am to 3:50 pm

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room

SLAVERY, PUBLIC MEMORY, AND REPARATIONS: CONNECTING THE UNITED STATES, FRANCE, AND BRAZIL.

Chair:

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

Participants:

An African American Historian in Paris: Finding the History of Slavery in the City of Lights. Martha S. Jones, University of Michigan

Total Recall: Repairing the Public Memory of Slavery and Segregation. Carlton M. Waterhouse, Indiana University

Public Memory and Reparations for Slavery in Brazil and the United States. Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University

Racial Slavery and Reparations in Brazilian and American Race-Conscious Affirmative Jurisprudence. Wendy Greene, Samford University

Commentators:

Robert J. Cottrol, George Washington University

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

032. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) WHAT’S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT: THE POLITICAL DIMENSIONS OF LOVE WITHIN BLACK EXPRESSIVE CULTURE.

Kendra Janelle Ross, Cultural Worker/Independent Scholar

Participants:

Sonic Black Feminist Praxis: The Politics and Power of the Love Songs in Malindy’s Toolbox. Abby Dobson, Sonic Conceptual Artist/Independent Scholar

In Search of Fannie’s Song: Towards an Affective Politics of Love in Black Women’s Musical Expressions. Kendra Janelle Ross, Cultural Worker/Independent Scholar

The Politics of Emotion in Motown and Stax Love Songs. Tanesha Barnes, Cultural Critic

Commentator:

Abby Dobson, Sonic Conceptual Artist/Independent Scholar

033. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Derrick Lanois, Georgia State University

Participants:

Paper session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) LINGUISTICS AND BLACK EXPRESSION.

Life Story of Ernie A. Smith: Black Nationalist Language Ideology to Ebonics. Kunihiko Minamoto, Michigan State University

Mending the Divide: Why Theoretical Linguistics should be in the Mix. Walter Lee Sistrunk, St. John’s University

People without Tongues: An Ethnic Anomaly. Howard W Starks, WSU-Alluni

Commentator:

Derrick Lanois, Georgia State University

034. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) REPRESSION, REFORM, AND REVOLUTION: NEW STUDIES ON THE LONG CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

Charles Ford, Norfolk State University

Participants:

Florida State Normal and Industrial School for Coloreds: Thomas DeSalle Tucker and His Radical Approach to Black Higher Education. Reginald K Ellis, Florida A&M University

The Apotheosis of Booker T. Washington High School: History, Identity, and Educational Equity in Norfolk, Virginia. Jeffery Littlejohn, Sam Houston State University

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: The Urban Rebellion in York, Pennsylvania, A Case Study of a Nation on Fire in the late 1960s. Peter Levy, York College of Pennsylvania

Commentator:

Charles Ford, Norfolk State University

035. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

1 ON THE ROAD TO THE NPS CENTENNIAL: PARTNERING WITH THE NPS TO PREPARE HBCU STUDENTS AS THE NEXT GENERATION OF PARK STEWARDS.

Chair:

Barbara Spencer Dunn, DeVereux Family

Discussants:

George McDonald, National Park Service

Angelou Ezeilo, Greening Youth Foundation

Joy Kinard, National Park Service

035.1 see sessIOn 088.

036. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

“THE DEPLOYMENT OF SOLDIERING: BLACK AMERICANS FROM THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR THROUGH WORLD WAR I.”

2

Chair:

Khary Polk, Amherst College

Participants:

Caribbean Slave Revolt and Rank and File Patriot Abolitionism. Alan Gilbert, Denver University

“Doing Our Bit”: Race, Gender and the Aesthetics of War in WWI Propaganda. Kristin Moriah, CUNY Graduate Center Leveraging Military Service Against Jim Crow 1890 to 1914. Myra Armstead, Bard College

Commentator:

Khary Polk, Amherst College

037. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

“WE ARE THE ARBITERS OF OUR OWN DESTINY”: LIBERIA AND THE BLACK INTELLECTUAL AND RADICAL TRADITION.

3

Chair:

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

“The second battle for Africa has begun”: Rev. Clarence W. Harding Jr., Liberia, the US Midwest, and Garveyism, 1966-1980. Erik McDuffie, University of Illinois

“On the Mountain of the Lion: Edward Blyden and his 1885 Exile to Sierra Leone”. Matthew Law, Queens University Belfast “Benjamin Brawley’s Liberian Dream.” Ousmane Kirumu Power-Greene, Clark University

Commentator:

Cynthia Blandford, Honorary Consul General Republic of Liberia

038. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Roundtable session atlanta 4 (WE) MIND THE GAP: CULTURAL SUPPORT THAT STRENGTHENS BLACK STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT.

Chair:

Valerie N. Adams-Bass, University of California, Davis

Discussants:

Fatima Hafiz-Wahid, Temple University

Keisha L Bentley-Edwards, University of Texas, Austin

Chonika Coleman-King, University of Tennessee

Celine I Thompson, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine

Shaunqula Wilson, University of Texas, Dallas

039. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session atlanta 5

“POST-BROWN TO ‘POST-RACIAL ERA’: BLACK TEACHERS AND THE SEGREGATION OF THE AMERICAN MIND.”

Zachary Williams, University of Akron

Discussants:

Dr. Tamara Smith, I-LEAD Charter School; Independent Researcher

Holly Fisher-Hickman, Independent Researcher; Learning-Healing Institute, Inc

Seneca Vaught, Kennesaw State University

Jim Harper, North Carolina Central University & Executive Council, ASALH

040. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Capital Ballroom north TRANSFORMATIVE DIGITAL BLACK FEMINISMS: A CRUNK FEMINIST COLLECTIVE ROUNDTABLE.

Rachel Raimist, University of Alabama

Discussants:

Robin Boylorn, University of Alabama

Brittney Cooper, Rutgers University

Chanel Craft Tanner, Emory University

Sheri Davis-Faulkner, Georgia Tech

Susana Morris, Auburn University

041. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 123 ACTIVISTS, EDUCATION, AND ASALH: A CENTURY OF JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA’S AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY.

Abraham J. Williamson, Harvard Law School

Participants:

A. Philip Randolph: An American Hero. Donna Rash-Sawyer, Florida State Community College at Jacksonville South 150 years of Higher Education in the Deep South: Edward Waters College. TaKeia Anthony, Edward Waters College Preserving Jacksonville’s African-American History: A brief history of the James Weldon Johnson Chapter of ASALH. Angela Williamson, ASALH JWJ Branch, Clay County Historic Preservation Board, Southern New Hampshire University

Commentator:

TaKeia Anthony, Edward Waters College

042. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University

Participants:

Paper session

BLACK POWER IDENTITY AND SOCIAL ACTIVISM.

Conference Room 125

“If There’s a Hell Below, We’re All Going to Go!”:The Black Working Class and Black Power in the Atlanta Freedom Struggle, 1970-1973. Augustus Wood III, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

“My Mind is Black”: Black Power and BUILD in 1960s Buffalo, New York. Rowena Ianthe Alfonso

A Five-Fold Foundation of Faith: How Black Religion in Detroit Radicalized Black America. Jamon Jordan, ASALH-Detroit, Vice President; Founder & CEO of Black Scroll History & Tours

Where is Africa? Who is African?: Africa and identity amongst Black Power era high school students in Detroit, Michigan. David Mathew Walton, Michigan State University

“Is this Mississippi?” Black Power Politics, Student Activism, and the Perpetuation of Exceptional Southern Racism.

Sarajanee O Davis, Ohio State University

Commentator:

Kerry Pimblott, University of Wyoming

043. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Panel session

CONCEPTUALIZING AFRICANA SPORTING STUDIES.

Chair:

Drew Brown, University of Houston

Participants:

Black Masculinity on Display at the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. Thabiti Lewis, Washington State University at Vancouver “The Myth of the Black Athlete”: The Need to Incorporate African American Studies into the Study of Athletics as a Black Advancement Strategy. Dexter Blackman, Loyola Marymount University

The Cultural Meaning of Sport to Black Folk. Drew Brown, University of Houston

Commentator:

Thabiti Lewis, Washington State University at Vancouver

044. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Panel session

DO REMEMBER ME: BLACK WOMEN’S SUBJECTIVITY AND INVISIBILITY IN CULTURE AND THE ARTS.

Chair:

Marta Effinger-Crichlow, New York City College of Technology - CUNY

Participants:

‘I Wish My Momma Was Here’: A Black Feminist Reading of Gregory Porter’s Music. Marta Effinger-Crichlow, New York City College of Technology - CUNY

Whatever Happened to Maidie Norman?: Twentieth Century Arts Activist, African American Theatre Educator, and Hollywood Actress. Eve Lambert, Albany State University

I am Renisha McBride. Renata Ferdinand, New York City College of Technology - CUNY

Commentator:

Renata Ferdinand, New York City College of Technology - CUNY

045. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Burnis R Morris, Marshall University

Participants:

Panel session

CaRTeR G. WOOdsOn: THE PRESS AND POLITICS IN THE 1930S.

Georgia 10

Carter G. Woodson’s newspaper columns, 1931-1937. Burnis R Morris, Marshall University

The Black press and the Democratic Party in the 1930s. Rob Rabe, Marshall University

Carter G. Woodson and political agenda-building during the 1930s. Carmen Manning-Miller, The Lincoln University, PA

Commentator:

Carmen Manning-Miller, The Lincoln University, PA

046. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Library Session

Georgia 11 DIGITIZING THE BLACK EXPERIENCE: BUILDING “DIGITAL HOWARD” AND THE “PORTAL TO THE BLACK EXPERIENCE”.

Trichita Chestnut, National Archives and Records Administration

Participants:

“The Portal to the Black Experience.” Andrew T. Sulavik, Howard University

Building Digital Howard. Kenvi Phillips, Howard University

Digital Howard in Action. Lopez Matthews, Howard University

Commentator:

Trichita Chestnut, National Archives and Records Administration

047. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

THREE WOMEN SCHOLARS GUARDING GULLAH: HONORING WOODSON’S VISION & DOCUMENTING CULTURAL HERITAGE IN THE SOUTH CAROLINA LOW COUNTRY.

Chair:

Emory S Campbell, Past Director of Penn Center

Participants:

Culture & Family: The Education of a Native Daughter. Delo Elizabeth Washington, Independent Scholar

Identity & Agency: Lessons from the Life of Robert Smalls. Fayth M. Parks, Georgia Southern University

Culture & Social Change. Beverly M John, Chicago State University

Commentators:

Fred Samuel Washington Jr, Independent Scholar

Mary LaFrance Ferguson, Beverly John

048. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia-2-a-V Room BOOKER T.WASHINGTON- HIS IMAGE AND LEGACY AFTER 100 YEARS.

John Bracey, University of Massachusetts - Amherst

Discussants:

Shawn Leigh Alexander, Kansas University

Kenneth Hamilton, Southern Methodist University

David H Jackson, Florida A&M University

049. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Presidential session Georgia 3-a-V Room BLACK ART, ENTERTAINMENT, AND SPORTS: THE DIALECTIC OF POLITICAL ACTIVISM.

Chair:

Andra Gillespie, Emory University

Participants:

Discomfort & Art: A Dialectic in Mari Evans’ Ouevre. Althea Tait, SUNY Brockport

Participant Observer: The Documentary Photography of Jim Alexander. Candy Tate, Emory University

LeBron James, Sports and Racial Healing. Nathan McCall, Emory University

050. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Private session

Participants:

Georgia 4-a-V Room THE 5WS AND A H FOR NATIONAL PARK SERVICE CAREER OPPORTUNITIES.

Turkiya L Lowe, National Park Service

Edward Hightower, Clark Atlanta University

Shonda Shropshire, National Park Service

051. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Roundtable session

Georgia 5-a-V Room RETHINKING VIOLENCE IN THE FREEDOM STRUGGLE.

Chair:

John Higginson, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Discussants:

Adriane Lentz-Smith, History Department, Duke

Melynda x Price, University of Kentucky

Danielle McGuire, Wayne State University

Dianna Freelon-Foster, Southern Echo

Nan Elizabeth Woodruff, Pennsylvania State University

052. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

W.E.B. DU BOIS’ DISCOURSE ON THE SOUL AS A HEURISTIC DEVICE FOR SOCIAL JUSTICE IN HIGHER EDUCATION.

Georgia 6-a-V Room

Joseph Flynn, Northern Illinois University

Participants:

W.E.B. Du Bois’ Discourse on the Soul as a Heuristic Device for Social Justice in Higher Education. Sarah Lynne Frielink Platonic and Freirean Interpretations of W.E.B. Du Bois’s “Of the Coming of John.” Kerry Burch, Northern Illinois University

Reviving W.E.B. Du Bois’ Legacy of Liberal Arts and the Humanities in Adult and Higher Education. Cornelius Gilbert, Northern Illinois University

Commentator:

Cornelius Gilbert, Northern Illinois University

053. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room DOING WOMANIST WORK (INVITED SESSION SPONSORED BY FIRE!!!).

Marilyn Thomas-Houston, University of Florida

Participants:

Theorizing African Diaspora Womanism (Independent of European Diaspora Feminism). Dorothy Jane Randall Tsuruta, San Francisco State University

Transformative Language Requires the Use of a Womanist Lens. Veta Irby-Ware, San Francisco State University

Womanist Approaches to Preserving the Lives of Black Males. Kevin L. Brooks, Ohio State University

Hiphop Womanist Inquiry. Dawn-Elissa Fischer, San Francisco State University

Commentator: R. Scott Heath, Georgia State University

054. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) ACTIVISM, CONSERVATISM, AND DESEGREGATION IN EAST TEXAS.

Camesha Scruggs, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Participants:

Christia Adair: Texas Heroine. Chelsea Branch, Independent Scholar

Maintaining the Status Quo Ante: Dr. James G. Gee’s Internal Struggles as President of East Texas State University. Katherine Gaskamp, Sam Houston

The Resistance, Actions, and Outcome: The Desegregation of Sam Houston State Teachers College. Carolyn A Carroll, Sam Houston State University

Commentator:

Jeffery Littlejohn, Sam Houston State University

055. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) aFRICan aMeRICan COMMUnITy FORMs and FUnCTIOns In THe POsT-ReCOnsTRUCTIOn aMeRICan sOUTH.

David Taft Terry, Morgan State University

Participants:

Black Women and Community Building in Post-Civil War U.S. History. Brandi C Brimmer, Morgan State University

Complicating White Supremacy in Post-Emancipation North Carolina: Henry Berry Lowrie and the Case of the Lumbee. Charles L Chavis, Jr., Morgan State University

The Urban South and Jim Crow’s Rise: Re-Mapping Migration and Re-Aligning the Critical Turns. David Taft Terry, Morgan State University

Commentator:

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

056. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby)

BETTING ON BLACK: TRIALS AND TRIUMPHS OF BLACK SCHOLARS ENTERING INTO THE JOB MARKET.

Armanthia Nicole Duncan, The University of Massachusetts-Amherst Discussants:

Emahunn Raheem Ali Campbell, Washington and Lee Unviersity

K. T. Ewing, Tennessee State University

Sheena Harris, Tuskegee University

Julia Charles, Auburn University

056.1 see sessIOn 012.

057. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

BEING MARY JANE IN AN EMPIRE FULL OF SCANDALS: BLACK WOMEN IN AMERICAN POPULAR CULTURE.

Christina Kanu, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

“From the Big House to the White House: Historical Narratives of Black Women’s Identity”. Ebony Perro, Clark Atlanta University

“It’s Handled: Olivia Pope, Womanism, and the Surrendering of Black women’s bodies.” Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Marcus Ta’von Haynes, Clark Atlanta University

12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

FISK UNIVERSITY: RESEARCHING HISTORIC INCIDENTS and COnTeMPORaRy IssUes.

Chair:

Ronald Mickens, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

Fisk Fictions: Ruth Landes and Elmer Imes 1937-1941. Abby Gondek, Florida International University

African American women faculty and administrators during the presidencies of Thomas E. Jones and Charles S. Johnson, 1929-1956. Linda Marie Perkins, Claremont Graduate University For the Love of Money: Fisk University and the Stieglitz Art Collection, 1949-2012. M. Christopher Brown II, American Association of State Colleges and Universities

Commentator:

Ronald Mickens, Clark Atlanta University

059. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Luncheon

Capital Ballroon Center and south EDUCATORS LUNCHEON.

Robert Stanton, National Park Service (Retired), Centennial Honorary Committee

Stanley Austin, National Park Service, Southeast Region

John Bracey, University of Massachusetts - Amherst, Centennial Honorary Committee

Greetings:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Executive Council, ASALH, Centennial President

Speaker:

Sonia Sanchez, Temple University--Emeritus

Invocation & Grace:

Iya Alake Akinsegun, Yoruba People

Emcee:

Cynne Simpson, WAGA-TV, Atlanta

Benediction:

Rev. Byron Thomas, Ben Hill United Methodist Church

060. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 125 BLACK INTERNATIONALISM, REPRESSION, AND RESISTANCE.

David Mathew Walton, Michigan State University

Participants:

State Power, International Travel, and African Americans in the Cold War: Paul Robeson, Robert F. Williams, and Richard Gibson. Richard M Mares, Michigan State University

Black Consciousness in Exile: The Experiences of Black Consciousness Exiles throughout the Diaspora during the Black Consciousness Era. David Mathew Walton, Michigan State University

From Compton to Soweto: Kendrick Lamar’s To Pimp a Butterfly and Post Black Power and Black Consciousness Realities in the U.S. and South Africa. Michael Forbes, College of Wooster

Commentator:

Ahmad Rahman, University of Michigan - Dearborn

061. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 127 STRANGE FRUIT, BITTER SEEDS: THE COMPLEX SURVIVAL M.

Reginald K Ellis, Florida A&M University

Participants:

Strange Fruit, Bitter Seeds: The Echoes of Lynching Violence in African American Families. Tameka Bradley Hobbs, Florida Memorial University

Mother Taught Me Well: Ruth Logan Roberts, the Great Migration, and Keeping the Family Together. Daria Willis, Lee College

Strange Fruit in the Family: The Aftermath of the Lynching of Anthony Crawford. Doria Johnson, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Commentator:

Maureen Elgersman Lee, Hampton University

062. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Adam Lee Cilli, University of Maine

Participants:

Paper session

PReseRVInG and PResenTInG THe PasT.

Conference Room 129

Memory in Action: The Role of Making Historical Collections Meaningful to Researchers. Sophia Sotilleo, Lincoln University

Possible Reconsideration to the Library of Congress Classification System’s Liberal Placements of African American Psychology and African American Social Science. Eddie Hughes, Southern University

Sites Seen and Unseen: A Question of Legitimacy in African American Women’s Representation in National Park Service Historic Sites. Alexandria Russell, University of South Carolina

Preserving the Past: The Office of the Grand Librarian in the Order of the Eastern Star (PHA), 1914-2014. Sibyl Moses, Library of Congress

Commentator:

Adam Lee Cilli, University of Maine

063. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 MIGRATION AND BLACK COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT.

Emory S Campbell, Past Director of Penn Center

Participants:

African American YMCA’s and the Rosenwald Fund. Daniel R Acker, Public Historian

Black Before Bankruptcy: The 10 Most Important Sites in the Building of Black Detroit. Jamon Jordan, ASALH-Detroit, Vice President; Founder & CEO of Black Scroll History & Tours

The Migration of African Americans to Northern California’s Bay Area since before Statehood. Jan Batiste Adkins, San Jose Evergreen Community College District

Indiana Towns Communities and the (Re)production of Social Misery. Jennifer Sdunzik, Purdue University

Commentator:

Linda Diane Tomlinson, Fayetteville State University

064. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 10 BLACK MIGRANTS, METHODOLOGIES, AND MOBILITIES.

Huewayne Watson, Independent Scholar

Participants:

“Southern Memories: Excavating The Power of Post-1970 Return Narratives”. James Roane, Columbia University

“Reading the Black Body within Sartorial Performance.”. Brittney Nikel Taylor, Columbia University, IRAAS

“Traversing Transnational Black Identities: Afro-Latinas and the Resurgence of the Natural Hair Movement. ”. Brittaney N Graham, Columbia University

“The Other African Americans: Race, Ethnicity and the Children of West African Immigrants.”. Dialika Sall

Commentator:

Claudrena Harold, University of Virginia

065. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 12 MIGRATIONS, MOBILIZATIONS, AND MOVEMENTS: FROM THE NEW NEGRO TO BLACK POWER.

Freddie L. Parker, North Carolina Central University

Participants:

From Log Cabin to the Pulpit: William H. Robinson’s Postbellum Odyssey. Marcus P. Nevius, The Ohio State University “Go To It, My Southern Brothers”: The Chicago Defender, Great Migration, and Construction of Urban Black Manhood. D’Weston Haywood, University of Louisiana at Lafayette Ain’t No Love in the Heart of “Soul City”: The Early Life of Harvey Gantt as Soul City’s Planner and an Alternative for Black Power 1966-1980. Anthony Donaldson, University of Florida

Commentator:

Hasan Jeffries, Ohio State University

066. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Georgia 2 --aV Room HAIR AND THE AESTHETICS OF BLACK FEMININITY.

Tanisha C Ford, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Participants:

Black Hair and Politicized Aesthetic Turns. Schillica Howard, Georgia State University

Fat, Black and Ugly: The Politics of the New Millennium Mammy. Ayondela McDole, Syracuse University

New Directions in Black Women’s Visual History. Kelli Morgan, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Tame Her Mane: The Perceptions of Natural Hair and its Effects on Black Women’s Self-Esteem and Relationships. Moriayo Maripaz-Shenee Oduguwa, Calfornia State University, Fullerton Undergraduate Commentator:

Tanisha C Ford, University of Massachusetts Amherst

067. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Panel session

Georgia 3-a-V Room THE SLAVE COMMUNITY AT DEVEREUX MONTE VERDE PLANATION: ALL LINES LEAD TO TABBY AND sCOTT.

Chair:

Joi Spencer, San Diego State University

Participants:

The Slave Community at the Monte Verdi Plantation: All lines lead to Tabby DeVereux (1787). Joleene Maddox Snider, Texas State University

Stephen F. Austin University Features the DeVereux Family. Jeri Mills, Historian/Researcher

The Nadir of Race Relations in the U.S.: Survival through intelligence and ingenuity. James W Loewen, University of Illinois

The Impact of Scott and Tabby’s Monte Verdi Descendants, on Rusk County Texas During the early 1900s. Barbara Spencer Dunn, DeVereux Family

Commentator:

Joi Spencer, San Diego State University

068. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Panel session

Georgia 5-a-V Room RELIGION, SEXUALITY, AND BLACK LIBERATION AND THE BLACK CHURCH.

Outsiders Within: Everyday Faith as a Site of Black Lesbian Activism. Monique Moultrie, Georgia State University Rebellion through Religion: Henriette Delille and the Sisters of the Holy Family. Benedict Chatelain

The Pulpit, Platform and Press: Bishop Henry McNeal Turner and the Rhetoric of Freedom. Andre E. Johnson, Memphis Theological Seminary

“A New Social Awakening”: Howard University’s Rankin Network and the 1956 Tallahassee Bus Boycott. Larry O. Rivers, University of West Georgia

069. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 6-a-V Room

EARLY AFRICAN AMERICAN FILMS: LEISURE AND LIFE IN JIM CROW GEORGIA.

Margaret Compton, Brown Media Archives, University of Georgia Libraries

Participants:

African American Life (Living, Working & Playing) at Pebble Hill Plantation: 1900s to 1940s. James “Jack” Hadley, The Jack Hadley Black History Museum

The Discovery, Preservation, and Use of the John and Lillian Goodlett Films. Paul Crater, Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center

From Ball Field to Battlefield: Athletics and Military Service in the Wartime Work of J. Richardson Jones. Barbara McCaskill, Dept. of English, University of Georgia

Commentators:

Margaret Compton, Brown Media Archives, University of Georgia Libraries

Pellom McDaniels III, Curator of African American Collections, Emory University

070. 12:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Participants:

Art Publishing and Distribution by Charles Bibbs Association Book Exhibit

Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture & History

Everyone’s Place

Farmers Insurance

Foundation International Heritage International Fashions

Journal of African American History Library Company of Philadelphia

McFarland Publishing

Middle Tennnessee State University

National Museum of American History

071. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

exhibitors Georgia 7, 8 and Pre-function Area (Exhibits) EXHIBITORS.

National Park Service-Southeast Regional Office Penguin Random House retiredslaves.com

Robin Lofton

Scholars Choice

University of Arkansas Press

University of Georgia Press

University of Illinois Press

University of North Carolina Press University Press Florida Waldencorart Inc.

YBI African Apparel Zee Crafts

ECONOMIC NATIONALISM AND RACIAL SELF-HELP.

Black Economics During the Obama Administration. Shawn Council, CCSY

Making Change Happen: The Legacy of African American Philanthropy. Erin H Moore, Community Investment Network

Marcus Garvey “The Father of Black Nationalism.” Christopher Harris, Phi Beta Sigma “We Have a Business We Should Be Proud of”: Black Cooperative Enterprises in the Age of Jim Crow, 1920-1945. Delaina Price, Yale University

Commentator:

Shirley Thompson, The University of Texas at Austin

072. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) NEW VIEWS OF THE POST-CIVIL WAR SOUTH.

Amy Tillerson-Brown, Mary Baldwin College

Participants:

Black Electoral Power in the Post–Civil War United States: African American State Legislators, 1865–1915. Peter Wallenstein, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Life under a New Order: Antebellum Free People of Color in Reconstruction North Carolina. Warren Milteer, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Race and Criminality in Post-War Central Virginia. Amy Tillerson-Brown, Mary Baldwin College

Commentator:

Baiyina W. Muhammad, North Carolina Central University

072.1 see sessIOn 048.

073. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

BLACK SEXUALITIES: TRANSFORMING THE UNTHINKABLE AND UNIMAGINABLE INTO POWER.

La’Neice Littleton, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

atlanta 1

“Maya and Karrine: Taking Back Respectability and Owning Pleasure”. Victoria Colston-Brooks, Clark Atlanta University “Through the Gaze of Black Gays : The Neglected X Factor in the Quest for Freedom”. Ignace LaCott, Clark Atlanta University “Spiritual-Erotic Agency and Atlanta Strippers: A Transformative Model for Expanding Consciousness, Identity and Africana Liberation”. Rava Shelyn Chapman, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Courtney Terry, Clark Atlanta University

074. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 2

BLACK TEACHERS AND THE PROGRESSIVE EDUCATION MOVEMENT: THEIR VISIONS, THEIR WORKS, THEIR VOICES!

Traki Taylor-Webb, Bowie State University

Participants:

The Meanings of Progress: Progressive Reform and Juvenile Justice in Virginia, 1915-1940. Lindsey Elizabeth Jones, University of Virginia

A “Progressive” Alternative: The Educational Thought of Carter G. Woodson. Jarvis Ray Givens, UC Berkeley

Performance, Propaganda and the Politics of Respectability: The Progressive Era Plays of Nannie Helen Burroughs. Shantina Jackson, University of California, Berkeley

The Practical Pedagogue: Mary McLeod Bethune’s Evolving Educational Philosophy, 1904-1920. Alexander Hyres, University of Virginia

Commentator:

Traki Taylor-Webb, Bowie State University

075. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 3

BEHIND EVERY HBCU: BLACK WOMEN TRANSFORMING EDUCATION, POLITICAL ACTIVISM AND BEAUTY CULTURE PRIOR TO THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS ERA.

Ashley Robertson, Bethune-Cookman University/Bethune Foundation

Participants:

African-Centered Education as a means To Economic Stability: A Nationalist View of Margaret Murray Washington. Sheena Harris, Tuskegee University

White Racism, Black Beaches: Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune’s Fight for Social Justice in Florida. Ashley Robertson, Bethune-Cookman University/Bethune Foundation

The Black Beauty Ambassador: Maryrose Reeves Allen & The Founding of the Department of Physical Education for Women at Howard University. Kimberly Brown, Alabama State University

Commentator:

Arlisha Norwood, Howard University

076. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

atlanta 4 BLACK WOMEN’S STRUGGLES DURING THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION ERA.

LaShawn Harris, Michigan State University

Participants:

Held for Safekeeping: Black Women Imprisoned in Maryland during the Age of the Civil War. Sharita Jacobs Thompson, Independent Scholar

“For a Time Such as This”: Enslaved Women, War and Freedom in Southern Louisiana and Low Country Georgia, 1861-1865. Karen B. Cook Bell, Bowie State University

Southern Black Women, Widowhood, and the Meaning of Labor in Civil War Era North Carolina. Brandi C Brimmer, Morgan State University

‘The Proceeds of My Own Labor’: Gender and Urban Freedom in the District of Columbia. Katherine Chilton, San Jose State University

Commentator:

Jeffrey Kerr-Ritchie, Howard University

077. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Roundtable session atlanta 5 HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT: NEW DIRECTIONS IN BLACK FREEDOM STUDIES IN THE JIM CROW NORTH.

Chair:

Patrick Jones, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Discussants:

Zebulon Miletsky, Stony Brook University

Simon Balto, Ball State University

Crystal Moten, Dickinson College

Ashley M. Howard, Loyola University New Orleans

Mary Barr, Clemson University

078. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Capital Ballroom north THE OBAMA BLACK HISTORY ROUNDTABLE.

Aram Goudsouzian, Universiry of Memphis

Discussants:

Daryl Anthony Carter, East Tennessee State University

William Jelani Cobb, University of Connecticut

David C. Carter, Auburn University

Marsha Barrett, Mississippi State University

Charles McKinney, Rhodes College

079. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Capital Ballroom south

DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS SESSION III

OUR HEALTH IS OUR WEALTH: “SOMETIMES YOU JUST NEED TO DO YOU!”

Shennette Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi

Discussants:

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Shanesha Brooks-Tatum, Agnes Scott College

Deirdre Cooper-Owens, Queens College

Jacqueline McLeod, Metropolitan State University of Denver

080. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 123 BLACK ACTIVISM ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES.

Lloren Foster, Western Kentucky University

Participants:

The Need for Black Cultural Centers on College Campuses. Marcus Stubbs, Western Kentucky University

Organizing for Collective Action: A Model for Mobilizing the Collegiate Community. Andrea Daniels, Western Kentucky University An End to the Era of Mass Incarceration: Educating Students about Their Legal Rights. Patience Mason, Western Kentucky University

Commentator:

Selena Sanderfer, Western Kentucky University

081. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

SANKOFA: LOOKING BACK TO EDUCATE OUR FUTURE.

Toniesha Taylor, Prairie View A & M University

Participants:

Conference Room 125

A History of the Presence: Oppression, Confinement and the Struggle for Transformation. Richard Lofton, Johns Hopkins University

How the Labyrinthine Alliance of Black Teachers Associations and the Association for the Study of Negro Life Advanced Century of Public Education in Birmingham, Alabama. Tondra Loder-Jackson, University of Alabama at Birmingham

Madeline Stratton Morris and Black History in the Classroom. Michael Hines, Loyola University Chicago Re-Reading and Imagining the Impact of the Miseducation of the Negro: Am Analysis of Woodson’s Words for Teachers. Adah Randolph, Ohio University

Commentator:

Karen Johnson, University of Utah

082. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 127 THE MAN, THE MYTH, THE LEGEND: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON BLACK MALE TEACHERS.

Ashley Woodson, University of Pittsburgh

Participants:

Male as Metaphor: A Counterstory of a Black, Transgender Male Pre-service Teacher. Ashley Woodson, University of Pittsburgh

Culturally Responsive Discourse, Black Male Teachers, and the Negotiation of Multiple Stakeholder Relationships. Chezare Warren, Michigan State University

Black Men of the Classroom: An Exploration of how the Organizational Conditions, Characteristics, and Dynamics in Schools Affect Pathways into the Profession, Experiences, and Retention. Travis Bristol, Stanford University

On Black Male Teachers as Human Kinds. Anthony L. Brown, University of Texas at Austin

Commentator:

Joyce E King, Georgia State University

083. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

RACE, GENDER, AND EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHIES.

Cheryl Gooch, On Africa’s Land: The Forgotten Stories...

Participants:

Conference Room 129

An Historical View of African American Male Principals. Omar J. Salaam, The University of South Florida Leading Ladies: An Examination of Black Female Administrators in Higher Education. DeWitt Scott, Chicago State University Which Shall We Choose?: An Analysis of the Educational Philosophies of Anna Julia Cooper and Charlotte Hawkins Brown. ShaVonte’ Mills, Pennsylvania State University

Commentator:

Sandra Jowers-Barber, University of the District of Columbia Community College

084. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Malachi Thompson, University of Houston

Participants:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 THe MIssIOn and MeanInG OF HBCUs.

Mining Historically Black College Newspapers for History and Heritage. Pamela E. Foster, Afro-American Historical and Genelogical Society

Southern Historically Black College and Universities: Moral Truth or Dare. Veronica Alease Davis, Independent Researcher Through a Multi-Generational Lens: Reflections on One Family’s Black College Experience. Lakia M Scott, Baylor University

Commentators:

The audience

085. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 10 MATERIALS, MEMORY, PLACE: THE PUBLIC HISTORY OF THE BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLE.

Thomas L Bynum, Middle Tennessee State University

Participants:

“War people, that is how we must be”: Quilting the Black Freedom Struggle. Aleia M Brown, Middle Tennessee State University In the Shadows of Freedom: Contextualizing 18th and 19th Century Charleston Slave Badges. Torren Gatson, Middle Tennessee State University

“Saving the world, Slaying Monsters and Adventures: How African American women are craving a space in science fiction and fantasy.”. Marquita Reed, Middle Tennessee State University

We Were There: Examining Place, Race, and Memory in New Town. Tiffany Momon, Middle Tennessee State University

Commentator:

Louis Woods, Middle Tennessee State University

086. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 11 MORE THAN A FIRST: SHIRLEY CHISHOLM’S HISTORICAL AND POLITICAL LEGACY.

Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Spelman College

Discussants:

Anastasia C Curwood, University of Kentucky

Zinga Fraser, Brooklyn College

Barbara Winslow, Brooklyn College

Niambi M Carter, Temple University

087. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

HISTORICAL MEMORY AND CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISM IN THe aFRICan aMeRICan TWenTIeTH CenTURy.

Christopher Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Participants:

A Pragmatist Prelude to the Harlem Renaissance: Alain Locke’s Speeches to the Negro Historical Societies in 1911. David Weinfeld, Queens College

African American Students in the Making of Black Studies at Harvard. Afrah Richmond, University of Bridgeport African Americans and the 1970s New South. Robert Jerome Greene II, University of South Carolina

Commentator:

Christopher Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

088. 10:00 am to 11:50 pm

Leaders:

Workshop session

Georgia 2-a-V Room DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS SESSION I: “AND WHO ARE YOU? WHAT DO YOU DO?”

John Bracey, University of Massachusetts - Amherst

Darlene Clark Hine, Northwestern University

James Stewart, Pennsylvania State University (Emeritus)

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

089. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Presidential session Georgia 3-a-V Room PLOTTING THE FUTURE OF HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES: A FOCUSED DIALOGUE ABOUT TRANSPARENCY.

Participants:

The Current Status and Significance of Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Dr. Dorothy C. Yancy, President Emerita, Johnson C. Smith University (Charleston, North Carolina) and Shaw University (Raleigh, North Carolina)

The Future of Historically Black Colleges: Projecting and Thinking Creatively. Dr. Jabari Simama, President, Georgia Piedmont Technical College (Atlanta, GA)

Creating Institutional Structures and Processes: A Model for the Future. Dr. Mack H. Jones, Political Science, Clark Atlanta University

Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Spelman College

Sponsor: Southern Education Foundation

090. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 4-a-V Room BORDERLANDS AND BORDERLINES: AFRICAN AMERICAN AND AFRICAN CANADIAN LIVES ON THE LINE.

Jean Augustine, Commissioner, Province of Canada

Participants:

Mary and Henry Bibb, the “Voice of the Fugitive” in the Detroit River Borderland. Afua Cooper, Dalhousie University, Colonial Slavery: Resistance and Cooperation in the US/Canada Borderland. Veta Smith Tucker, Grand Valley State University (retired)

Open Wounds: A window into day-to-day experiences of Black steelworkers in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Claudine Bonner, Arcadia University

Commentator:

Jean Augustine, Commissioner, Province of Canada

091. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 5-a-V Room TRUTH & TRANSITION: ENVISIONING INTERPRETATION OF SLAVERY, RESISTANCE, AND FREEDOM IN PUBLIC SPACES.

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Participants:

Truth & Transition: Envisioning Interpretation of Slavery, Resistance, and Freedom in Public Spaces. Kimberly Mann, United Nations; Francoise Verges, International Consultant; Spencer Crew, George Mason University; Robert Parker, National Park Service

United Nations Remembering Slavery Program. Kimberly Mann, United Nations International Perspective: Committee for the Memory and History of Slavery. Francoise Verges, International Consultant Planning & Partnership: Harriet Tubman National Monument. Robert Parker, National Park Service

Commentator:

Dann J. Broyld

092. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Library Session Georgia 6-a-V Room 1968 AND BEYOND: NEW OPPORTUNITIES IN CIVIL RIGHTS RESEARCH IN ATLANTA.

Chair:

Andrea Jackson, Archives Research Center, Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library Discussants:

Traci JoLeigh Drummond, Georgia State University

Holly Smith, Spelman College

Derek Mosley, Archives Research Center, Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library

Gabrielle Dudley, Emory University

093. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Private session Georgia 9-a-V Room UNCF/MELLON PROGRAM.

Participant:

Maurice J Hobson, Georgia State University

094. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) FEAR OF A BLACK PLANET: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE GLOBAL BLACK POWER MOVEMENT AND ITS LEGACIES.

Joshua Guild, Princeton University Discussants:

Tanisha C Ford, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Kennetta Hammond Perry, East Carolina University

Quito Swan, Howard University

Joshua Guild, Princeton University

095. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) LITERACY IN AFRICAN AMERICAN LIVES.

Concetta A. Williams, Chicago State University Discussants:

Kelly Ellis, Chicago State University

Brenda Aghahowa, Chicago State University

Lydia Magras, Chicago State University

Sammie Burton, Chicago State University

096. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby)

MOVING FROM MARGIN TO CENTER: OUR LIVES MATTER TOO.

Stephanie Yvonne Davis, University of North Florida

Participants:

Reimagining the Inferiority Complex in Black Women Leadership Roles. Christina Kanu, Clark Atlanta University

Barbaric Convention: Police Brutality Enforced Upon Black Women. Brittany Carter, Clark Atlanta University

At our Expense: Black Women & Sacrificial Motherhood. Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Ebony Perro, Clark Atlanta University

097. 4:00 pm to 5:30 pm Meeting

Georgia 2 --aV Room ASALH BUSINESS MEETING.

Participants:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Janet Sims-Wood, Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Zende Larmar Clark, Executive Council, ASALH National Secretary

Troy Thornton, Goldman Sachs & Co.& Executive Council, ASALH

Sylvia Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director

Annette Palmer, Morgan State Univerity & Executive Council, ASALH

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

098. 5:30 pm to 7:30 pm

Chair:

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 MOUNTAINS THAT TAKE WINGS: ANGELA DAVIS & YURI KOCHIYAMA - A CONVERSATION ON LIFE, STRUGGLES & LIBERATION, 97 MINUTES).

Michelle Duster, Independent Scholar

099. 5:45 pm to 7:45 pm

Chair:

Plenary session

Capital Ballroom north THE SCHOLARSHIP, ACTIVISM, AND INSTITUTIONAL WORK OF V.P. FRANKLIN.

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

Presenters:

Mary Frances Berry, University of Pennsylvania

Sundiata Kieta Cha-Jua, University of Illinois

Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University

James Stewart, Pennsylvania State University (Emeritus)

Bettye Collier-Thomas, Temple University

100. 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm

Participants:

Dell Ray Adams, A Walk in the Face of Life

Special Session

AUTHORS’ BOOK SIGNING.

Shawn Alexander, WEB DuBois An American Intellectual and Activist

Bailey-Bankston, Beneath the Bars of Justice

Richard Bailey, Neither Carpetbaggers nor Scalawags: Black Officeholders During the Reconstruction of Alabama 1867-1878 • They Too Call Alabama Home: African American Profiles

Peter Bailey, Witnessing Brother Malcolm X: The Master Teacher A Memoir

Mary Frances Berry, We are Who We Say We Are

Evelyn Bethune, Bethune: Out of Darkness Into the Light of Freedom • Call & Response: The Grandchildren Reply

Carol Binta Nadeem, Civilized Blacks: Free American Negroes In The 1870’s Whose Lives Paralleled The Life Of Booker T. Washington

John Bracey, James Smethurst & Sonia Sanchez, SOS-Calling All Black People

LaTonya Branham, CultureSeek: Connecting to African and African American History

Erik Brooks, Tigers in the Tempest

Joan Cartwright, A History of African American Jazz and Blues • Amazing Musicwomen

Yasmin Carty, Proverbs and Phrases with Meanings

Farrell Chiles, African American: Warrant Officers... In service to Our Country

Bettye Collier-Thomas, Jesus, Jobs, and Justice

Willie Cooper, The Forgotten 14, Civil War Heroes

Constance W. Curry, Silver Rights

Marta Effinger-Crichlow, Staging Migrations Toward an American West: From Ida B. Wells to Rhodessa Jones

Maurice Daniels, Saving the Soul of Georgia: Donald L. Hollowell and the Struggle for Civil Rights

Tiffany A. Flowers, The Rooftop Club Books Series: Meet the Rooftop Club

Cheryl Gooch, On Africa’s Lands: The Forgotten Stories of Two Lincoln Educated Missionaries in Liberia

George Grant, In Honor Of... Libraries Named for African Americans

Donna Gray-Banks, Ilas Diamonds • Ilas Diamonds II

Will Guzman, Civil Rights in the Texas Borderlands: Dr. Lawrence A. Nixon & Black Activism

Janette Hoston-Harris, In Memoriam: Charles Harris Wesley

Tameka Hobbs, Democracy Abroad, Lynching at Home: Racial Violence in Florida

Karen January, Lessons Mama Never Taught Me What Every Woman Should Know

Ricky L. Jones, Black Haze Violence, Sacrifice, and Manhood in Black Greek-letter Fraternities

Nubia Kai, Kuma Malinke Historiography: Sundiata Keita to Almamy Samori Toure

Kathryn Kemp, Anointed To Sing The Gospel: The Levitical Legacy of Thomas A. Dorsey • Make Joyful Noise: A Brief History of Gospel Music Ministry in America

Lionel Kimble, Jr., A New Deal for Bronzeville: Housing, Employment, and Civil Right In Black Chicago, 1935-1955

Barbara King, Transform Your Life, In TYL

Talitha LeFlouria, Chained in Silence: Black Women and Convict Labor in the New South

Josephine McCall, The Penalty for Success: My Father was Lunched in Lowndes County, Alabama

Barbara McCaskill, Love, Liberation, and Escaping Slavery: William and Ellen Craft in Cultural Memory • Running a Thousand Miles for Freedom: The Escape of William and Ellen Craft from Slavery. Introduction by Barbara McCaskill.

Kevin McGruder, Race and Real Estate; Conflict and Cooperation in Harlem, 1890 - 1920

Genna Rae McNeil, Witness Two Hundred Years of African-American Faith and Practice at the Abyssinian Baptist Church of Harlem, New York

Edna Green Medford, Lincoln and Emancipation

Trimiko Melancon, Unbought and Unbossed: Transgressive Black Women, Sexuality, and Representation • Black Female Sexualities

Erin Gosser Mitchell, Born Colored Life Before Bloody Sunday

William Monnie, Selma And Its Aftermath: A Photographic Journey by Civil Rights Worker Bill Monnie

Aldon Morris, The Scholar Denied: D. W. B. Du Bois and the Birth of Modern Sociology

Tiyi Morris, Womanpower Unlimited and the Black Freedom Struggle in Mississippi

Tommie Morton-Young, Many Roads Traveled or Twenty years in Bondage

Premilla Nadasen, Household Workers Unite: The Untold Story of African American Women who Built a Movement

Echol Nix, In the Beginning: The Martin Luther King, Jr. International Chapel at Morehouse College

M. J. O’Brien, WE SHALL NOT BE MOVED

Alison Parker, Interconnections: Gender and Race in American History

Walter Rucker, Gold Coast Diasporas: Identity, Culture, and Power (Blacks in the Diaspora Series)

Donata Russell Ross, How I Broke Through Segregation to Launch a Business Empire by Herman Russell

Sonia Sanchez, SOS—Calling All Black People

John Sharer, The Cockney Lad and Jim Crow

Janet Sims-Wood, Dorothy Porter Wesley at Howard University

Karen Sloan-Brown, A Reflection: What a Difference a Day Makes, What About 100 Years?

Daniel Smith, African Americans and Charleston: Histories Intertwined

Mattie Solomon, What Did Your Parents Do To You?

Peter Wallenstein, Race, Sex, and the Freedom to Marry: Loving v. Virginia

Glovinia Williams, Do You Believe God? If So It’s Time To Step Out On Faith, Life Applications For Kingdom Living

Phyllis Jean Williams, The Secret Legend of Three Kings

Sonja Williams, Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio and Freedom

Angela Williamson, Bakers Dozen

Barbara Winslow, Shirley Chisholm Catalyst for Change

101. 7:45 pm to 9:45 pm

Film Festival session Georgia 13 ALICE WALKER: BEAUTY IN TRUTH BY PRATIBHA PARMAR, 84 MINUTES. Chair:

McKinley Melton, Gettysburg College

102. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm Panel session atlanta 2 MAD BLACK PEOPLE BEING MAD: VIRALITY, MENTAL ILLNESS, AND RAGE IN AFRICAN AMERICAN LIFE. Chair:

Lawrence Jackson, Emory University Participants:

Turn That Shit Down: The Mutation of Radio Raheem in Popular Culture and Everyday Life. Gabriel Peoples, University of Maryland, College Park

“To Say Nothing of My Soul”: Madness among African Americans in Slavery and Freedom. Diana Louis, Indiana University “Choking Down That Rage”: Rage as The Existential Condition of Blackness. Shermaine Jones, Virginia Commonwealth University Commentator:

Lawrence Jackson, Emory University

103. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Paper session atlanta 4 RACE AND SLAVERY FROM THE FOUNDING TO RECONSTRUCTION.

Chair:

Jennifer Harbor, University of Nebraska, Omaha Participants:

An African American Perspective of Margaret Walker’s Jubilee. Alferdteen B. Harrison, Retired Prof.. of History

The Most Heinous Crime Ever Committed: Fortune and the Great Fire of Newport, Rhode Island. Tanya Mears, Worcester State University

Black Legal Studies and the American Constitution. Wylie Jason Tidwell, Walden University

104. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

atlanta 5 CIVIL RIGHTS AND THE POLITICIZATION OF THE STRUGGLE FOR EQUALITY.

Maria Ximena Abello Hurtado, Afro-Am Department at University of Massachusetts, Amherst Participants:

African Americans and the Newest South of the 1970s. Robert Jerome Greene II, University of South Carolina Consequences of the Tax Reform Act of 1969 on the Black Freedom Movement. Evan Faulkenbury, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

The Second American Revolution- Abstract. Harvey J Smith, Sr., Innovative Diversity Presentations & Training

The Way Modern Organizations Think and Talk About Diversity. Lisa Oligmueller, Speaker

Commentator:

Louis Ray, Fairleigh Dickinson University

105. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 125 BLACK IMAGES IN POPULAR MEDIA.

Korey Brown, Prince George’s Community College

Participants:

“’Are Negro Girls Getting Prettier?’: Evolving Projections of Ideals and Images of Black Beauty in Ebony during the Black Power Movement, 1965--1975.” Korey Brown, Prince George’s Community College Baartman Revisited: Amber Rose and the Reclamation of the Black Female Form for Profit. Risikat Okedeyi, Prince George’s Community College

“I’m Fear ‘New York’”: The Historical Redefinition of “The Brute Negro” in Dating Reality Television. John Randolph Tilghman, Tuskegee University

Mammy in literature and film. Darren Wade, Howard University

Commentator:

Korey Brown, Prince George’s Community College

106. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Georgia 11 FAMILY, COMMUNITY, AND THE BLACK EXPERIENCE IN THE 20TH CENTURY.

Claudia D Nelson, Coppin State University

Participants:

“No More Park Sausages Mom Please”: Eating and Body Politics in 80s and 90s Hip Hop. Jerome Dotson, Jr, University of Arizona Black Families to the Future: Learning From the Past to Thrive in Future. Karen J Cudjoe, University of Cincinnati Creole Cuisine: “Dooky’s” As a Site of Black Resistance in New Orleans, Louisiana 1940-2015. Dellita Martin Ogunsola, University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)

Growing Up in Alabama: Black, Male, and Poor, 1926-1947: A Memoir. Andrew Billingsley, Howard University

Commentator:

Valerie N. Adams-Bass, University of California, Davis

107. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 2-a-V Room THE MISEDUCATION OF BLACK STUDENTS: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN EDUCATION.

Cerri Annette Banks, Mount Holyoke College

Participants:

The Ivory Road to the Ivy League: Narrative Sense-Making of Students of Color in Elite Schools. Dominic Walker, Columbia University in the City of New York

Silence in Educational Spaces. Ajua Kouadio, Columbia University in the City of New York

I Got a Story to Tell”: Youth Rap Verses as Critical Race Counter-Stories. Don Sawyer, Quinnipiac University

Commentator:

Cerri Annette Banks, Mount Holyoke College

108. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

CONFRONTING THE CRISIS: DEATH, REDRESS AND JUSTICE.

Brandi Hughes, University of Michigan

Participants:

Georgia

This Dogged Rejoinder: Anne E. Moody’s Elegy Before the Master Narrative. Brandi Hughes, University of Michigan Marks of Achievement: On (In)visible History and Public Mourning. Nicole Ivy, Indiana University

Black Anxiety: Confronting the Crisis of Anti-blackness in the 21st Century. Calvin Warren, George Washington University

Commentator:

Kimberly Juanita Brown, Harvard University

109. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Library Session

Georgia 5-a-V Room

HIDDEN NO MORE: A CENTURY OF DIGITIZED BLACK LIFE, HISTORY AND CULTURE AT TUSKEGEE UNIVERSITY.

Dana Ray Chandler, Tuskegee University

Discussants:

Juanita Roberts, Tuskegee University

SESSION CANCELLED

Gail Samuel, Tuskegee University

Cheryl Ferguson, Tuskegee University

Dana Ray Chandler, Tuskegee University

110. 8:00 pm to 9:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) RaCe, CRIMe, and sTaTe sUPeRVIsIOn.

Douglas Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Participants:

Governor Rufus B. Bullock, Railroad Expansion and Convict Leasing in Post-Civil War Georgia. Edward Hightower, Clark Atlanta University

Marijuana Policy in Seventies-Era New York: From Worse to Bad. Eugene Hillsman, Princeton University

The Making of African American Male Criminality: An Introduction. Michael D Royster, Prairie View A&M University

Commentator:

Douglas Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

111. 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm

Emcee:

Reception

Capital Ballroon Center and south CELEBRATING THE CENTENNIAL VOLUME OF THE JOURNAL OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY RECEPTION (JAAH).

V. P. Franklin, University of New Orleans

Sponsor:

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Office of the Provost University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, College of Arts & Sciences

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Office of Diversity and Multicultural Affairs

West Virginia University Press

John Powell

112. 7:30 am to 6:20 pm

113. 7:30 am to 6:00 pm

114. 8:00 am to 9:30 am

Chair:

Registration

Rotunda Pre-registration Office PRe-ReGIsTRaTIOn 9/25.

Registration

Georgia Registration Office On-sITe ReGIsTRaTIOn 9/25.

Film Festival session

BLACK JOURNAL, EXECUTIVE PRODUCER WILLIAM GRAVES, 60 MINUTES.

Cornelius Moore, California Newsreel

Reginald Ellis, Florida A&M University

Sponsor: California Newsreel

115. 8:00 am to 6:30 pm

Participants:

Art Publishing and Distribution by Charles Bibbs

Association Book Exhibit

Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture & History

Everyone’s Place

Farmers Insurance

Foundation International

Heritage International Fashions

Journal of African American History

Library Company of Philadelphia

McFarland Publishing

Middle Tennnessee State University

National Museum of American History

116. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Georgia 13

exhibitors Georgia 7, 8 and Pre-function Area (Exhibits) EXHIBITORS.

National Park Service-Southeast Regional Office

Penguin Random House retiredslaves.com

Robin Lofton

Scholars Choice

University of Arkansas Press

University of Georgia Press

University of Illinois Press

University of North Carolina Press

University Press Florida

Waldencorart Inc.

YBI African Apparel

Zee Crafts

Panel session

atlanta 1 BUILDING COMMUNITY THROUGH EDUCATION AND ECONOMICS.

Sarita Davis, Georgia State University

Participants:

Embodying Blackness: Hiring Practices and Perceptions of African American Identity within African American Businesses. Lauren Arrington, Georgia State University

Urban Fiction as a Pedagogical Tool. Jihad Uhuru, Georgia State University

Student Perspectives and Evaluations of African-Centered Educational Institutions. Kweku Vassall, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Sarita Davis, Georgia State University

117. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

I AM THE VESSEL: THE BLACK MIND AS A SITE OF RESISTANCE.

Jennifer Williams, Temple University

Participants:

2

Ubuntu in The Flesh: An Africana Spiritual Reclamation of Servant Leadership Through African Spirituality and Ancestral Veneration. Christopher Roberts, Temple University

The Community Kills Thyself: The Poison of The Closet of Omission. Matthew E. Simmons, Temple University

Reclaiming The Black Body From Allopathic Terrorism: A Luxocratic Approach. Jessica D.N. Hamilton, Temple University

Healing The Scars We Don’t See: (Re)Envisioning Culture As A Site Of Psychological Resistance and Reintegration. Raven M. Moses, Temple University

Commentator:

Ifetayo Flannery, Temple University

118. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

atlanta 3 A CENTURY OF CORRECTING BLACK MYTHS: CONSTRUCTING A POSITIVE BLACK IDENTITY.

Lorenzo Herman, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

Elucidating the Effects of Racialized Framing in the Media: The Power of Portraying a Negative Story. Kyle R. Fox, Clark Atlanta University

Black Women’s Literature: The Construction of a Gendered Identity in the Last Century. Joyce White, Clark Atlanta University

Disrupting Eurocentric Theorizing: Challenging a Century of White Supremacist Feminisms. Moses Massenburg, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Bonnyeclaire Smith-Stewart, Clark Atlanta University

119. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Leaders:

Workshop session atlanta 4 ARCHIVES ARE THE FUTURE: PRESERVING YOUR LEGACY.

Pellom McDaniels McDaniels III, Curator of African American Collections, Emory University

Patsy Fletcher, THREAD

SESSION CANCELLED

Gina Paige, African Ancestry & Executive Council, ASALH

120. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 5 MARGARET WALKER: THIS IS MY CENTURY.

Angela Daphne Stewart, Margaret Walker Center

Participants:

Margaret Walker: The Voice of the Invisible Woman in the Black Arts Movement. Robert Luckett, Jackson State University

“All I got to say”: Fictive Witnessing in Margaret Walker’s Jubilee. Eden Elizabeth Wales Freedman, Adams State University

Biographical/Historical Approach to Margaret Walker. Carolyn Jean Brown, Millsaps College

Text Mining and Quantitative Analysis: A New Way of “Reading” Margaret Walker. Seretha Wiliiams, Georgia Regents University

Commentator:

Alferdteen B. Harrison, Retired Prof.. of History

121. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

GULLAH GEECHEE CULTURE: SEEKING THE FUTURE THROUGH THE PAST.

Althea Natalga Sumpter, The Art Institute of Atlanta

Participants:

Conference Room 123

The Elders Remember: An Oral History of the Past with Hopes for the Future. Althea Natalga Sumpter, The Art Institute of Atlanta

An Overview of Gullah as a Language. David B Frank, SIL International Gullah: The Living Culture. Griffin Lotson, Sams Memorial Community Economic Development

Commentator:

Althea Natalga Sumpter, The Art Institute of Atlanta

122. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 125 RACE AND THE SOUTHERN CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.

Ella J Davis, Wayne County Community College

Participants:

‘It’s Gonna be the Devil’: Civil Rights Protest and Black Criminality in Americus Georgia in 1965. Ansley L Quiros, University of North Alabama

Police Brutality in the African American Community. Shawn Council, CCSY

Before Jim Crow: Convict Lease and the Limits of Liberalism in Reconstruction. Alexxa Leon, Bowdoin College; Patrick Rael, Bowdoin College

The Social Reconstruction of Georgia: Transition at the Local Level. Joshua W Butler, Florida State University

“‘The Noblest and Cheapest Defense of States’: Ideology Underlying Prisons and Public Schooling in Postbellum Virginia”. Alexander Hyres, University of Virginia

Commentator:

Frances Jones-Sneed, MCLA

123. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 127 RELIGION, ORALITY, AND BLACK FREEDOM RHETORIC.

Andre E. Johnson, Memphis Theological Seminary

Participants:

“The Lord Will Make A Way Somehow: An Overview of Gospel Music.” Echol Lee Nix, Jr., Furman University Black Power, Black Faith and Black Jesus: The Rhetoric and Theology of Rev. Albert Cleage, Jr. Earle Fisher, University of Memphis/Rhodes College

Speaking Literacy: Henry McNeal Turner and the African American Lyceum Tradition. Andre E. Johnson, Memphis Theological Seminary

The New Black Church Online: Black Youth and Technology. Erika Gault, Hilbert College

Commentator:

Tameka Bradley Hobbs, Florida Memorial University

124. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Malachi Crawford, University of Houston

Participants:

Paper session Conference Room 129 RACE AND RACIAL VIOLENCE.

Black Bodies [Dropping] in the Breeze: Black Spaces of Trauma [in America]. Aretina Hamilton, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

At What Cost? Hearing the Call for Help When American Black Leaders Oppressed Their Own. Cecelia Brooks, Oklahoma State University

Jim Crow Moves West: White Supremacy in Multiracial California, 1850 - 1914. Camille Suarez, University of Pennsylvania Violence and the “Race Card” in Twain and Faulkner. Wallis Tinnie, City of Miami

Commentators:

The audience

125. 8:30 am to 10:00 am Meeting

Conference Room 131 2016 CONFERENCE PLANNING MEETING.

Participants:

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University & Executive Coucil, ASALH

Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director, ASALH

126. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 10 THE LEGACY OF CARTER G. WOODSON, VANGUARD FOR THE NEXT CENTURY.

Cheryl LaRoche, University of Maryland

Participants:

Carter G. Woodson--From Legacy to Vanguard: Black History Into the Future. Cheryl LaRoche, University of Maryland Destination Freedom’s “Recorder of History”: A Radio Dramatization of Carter G. Woodson’s Life. Sonja Williams, Howard University

The Influence of the Ideas and Thoughts of Carter G. Woodson on the Cultural and Educational Systems Outside the United States. Wheeler Winstead, Howard University Center for African Studies

Commentators:

Sonja Williams, Howard University

Wheeler Winstead, Howard University Center for African Studies

127. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 11 BRING YOUR OWN BLACKNESS (BYOB): AUTHENTICITY, PERFORMATIVITY, AND SELF-DEFINITION IN BLACK CULTURE.

Antiwan Walker, Georgia Gwinnet College

Participants:

Bildungs-Africana: Reading Colorism, Identity, and Adolescence in Black Women’s Autobiographies. Ebony Perro, Clark Atlanta University

In Our Own Words: The Literary Interpretations of Black Womanhood in Poems and Prose. Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

We’s Lives in the Ghetto and the Penthouse: An exploration of the ‘banished’ Representations of blackness in Erasure and A Visitation of Spirits. Marcus Ta’von Haynes, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Stephanie Yvonne Davis, University of North Florida

128. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

PARTNERING WITH THE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE TO INTERPRET CHARLES YOUNG AND OTHER ICONIC FIGURES OF OHIO THE “FREEDOM STATE.”.

Jewel Haskins, National Park Service

Discussants:

Charles Wash, National Afro- American Museum and Cultural Center

Brian George Shellum, Independent Historian

Joy Kinard, National Park Service

Robert Parker, National Park Service

129. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Walter Greason, ICMG

Participants:

Panel session Georgia 2 --aV Room THe aFROFUTURIsT CITy.

Destroy and Rebuild: Displacement in the Suburban Planner’s Imagination. Walter Greason, ICMG

The Comic Book City: The Making, Re-Making, and Un-Making of the American City. Julian Chambliss, Rollins College

The Interactive, Organic Metropolis. John Jennings, University of Buffalo

Commentator:

Walter Greason, ICMG

130. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 3-a-V Room CITIZENS, DENIZENS AND EXILES: DIASPORIC SUBJECTS, RACE AND THE STATE IN JAMAICA, CUBA AND BRITAIN.

Eric D. Duke, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

Consuelo Serra y Herédia in New York City: An Alternate View of the Cuban Immigrant Experience. Takkara Brunson, Morgan State University

These Feminine Hands: Maymie DeMena Aiken and the Task of Jamaican Citizenship. Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

African American Dreams, Cuban Realities: Robert F. Williams’ Exile in Cuba. Devyn Spence Benson, Louisiana State University

David Oluwale and the Crime of Policing Blackness in Postwar Britain. Kennetta Hammond Perry, East Carolina University

Lyn Hughes, A. Philip Randolph Pullman Porter Museum, Paper: The Making of the Pullman National Monument: The Struggle for Authentic Representation of Pullman Porters & African American Cultural History

Commentator:

Minkah Makalani, University of Texas at Austin

131. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Oscar R Williams, SUNY Albany

Participants:

Paper session

Georgia 4-a-V Room RACE AND THE POLITICS OF SPACE.

“Urban Renewal or Negro Removal:” Stories of Atlanta’s Historic Buttermilk Bottom Community. John E. Williams, Georgia State University

Finding Home: Representations of Black Chicago at Mid-Century. Amani Morrison, UC Berkeley

Restrictive Covenants, Biopolitics, and the Great Migration. Lisa Young, Purdue University

Commentator:

Kevin Greene, The University of Southern Mississippi

132. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

PUBLISHING WITHOUT WALLS: EBLACK STUDIES AND A NEW COLLABORATION FOR DIGITAL PUBLISHING (INVITED SESSION SPONSORED BY FIRE!!!).

Ronald W Bailey, University of Illinois

Participants:

Digital Tools and Black Studies: An Overview. Ronald W Bailey, University of Illinois

Georgia 5-a-V Room

Building a Collaboration to Support Digital Publishing: The Case of the University of Illinois. Harriett Green, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Digital Tools and Publishing Opportunities: The Case of Fire!!! The Multimedia Journal in Black Studies. Marilyn Thomas-Houston, University of Florida

Commentator:

Sandra Pheonix, Executive Director, HBCU Library Alliance

133. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Nishani Frazier, Miami (OH) University

Participants:

Paper session

Georgia 6-a-V Room BLACK FEMININITY/SEXUALITY.

Anaconda Feminism: Nicki Minaj, Consumption, and Instagram Reproductions. Aria S. Halliday, Purdue University

Big Mama’s Blues: Willie Mae Thornton, Female Masculinity, and the Lavender Scare of the 1950s. Tyina Steptoe, University of Arizona

From Aunt Jemima to Beyonce: Twitter, Consumer Agency, and the Transformation of the Black Female Image. Patricia Davis, Georgia State University

Sexualized Resistance: Black Women’s Agency through the Erotic and Dance. Sydney-Paige Patterson, New York University

Literature Brave Enough to Fuck with the Grays: Hip-Hop Feminism and Street Lit. Jacinta Renee Saffold, University of Massachusetts

Commentators:

The audience

134. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Georgia 9-a-V Room VISUALIZATIONS OF A BLACK AESTHETICS.

Fenobia Dallas, Saginaw Valley State University

Participants:

“Joyce J. Scott and the Sculptural Grotesque.” Phoebe Wolfskill, Indiana University

Covered in a Movement: Civil rights narrative and Black identity on Ebony covers in 1964. Lynsey Marie Saunders, University of Florida

Empowering People and Shaping Identities: Art Examines a Century (1914-2014) in African American Life and History. Pearlie Mae Johnson, Pan-African Studies University of Louisville

Samuel M. Plato: An Outstanding Architect of the 20th Century. Judith C. Owens-Lalude, j. camille culltural academy

The Ganaways, A Story of Faith, Hope and Love. Brenda D Fredericks, None

Commentator:

Fenobia Dallas, Saginaw Valley State University Friday, September 25, 2015

135. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby)

DIASPORA AND BLACK NATIONALISM: RETENTIONS, PRACTICES, AND (MIS)UNDERSTANDINGS.

Jamae Morris, Georgia State University

Participants:

Complementary and Alternative Medicine Usage among Rural African Americans living in the South. Roman Johnson, Georgia State University

African, Like Me? Gambian Perceptions of African Americans Claiming an “African” or “Pan-African” Identity. Ife Madzimoyo, Georgia State University

Garveyism and the Southern Black Church. Andy Reid, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Jamae Morris, Georgia State University

136. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Leaders:

Workshop session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) FROM THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT TO FERGUSON: A TEACH-IN TO EXPLORE THE WAYS WE BEND OUR PRIVILEGE TO BRING ABOUT CHANGE.

Karsonya (Kaye) Wise Whitehead, Loyola University Maryland

Conra Gist, University of Arkansas

Joseph Flynn, Northern Illinois University

Regina Lewis, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs

137. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby)

THe FIRe THIs TIMe: TEACHING FERGUSON AT THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY.

Crystal Sanders, Pennsylvania State University

Participants:

What’s Going On?: Exploring Historical Ethical Analyses in Contemporary Social Movements. AnneMarie Mingo, Pennsylvania State University

Every Ghetto, Every City: Theorizing Anti-Black Racism and State Violence in the Classroom. Courtney Desiree Morris, Pennsylvania State University

Collaboration and Digital Technology as Pedagogical Practice. Tyler Sperrazza, Penn State University

Commentator:

Paul C Taylor, Pennsylvania State University

138. 9:00 am to 12:50 pm

Facilitated by Kiamsha Youth Empowerment

139. 9:45 am to 11:30 am

Chair:

Special Session

North Atlanta High School yOUTH day.

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 LIVING THINKERS: AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF BLACK WOMEN IN THE IVORY TOWER BY ROXANA WALKER-CANTON, 75 MINUTES.

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

140. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Library Session

PRESERVING THE BEATS: COLLECTING HIP HOP AND HOUSE MUSIC.

Aaisha Haykal, Chicago State University

Discussants:

Timothy Anne Burnside, Smithsonian Institution NMAAHC

Andrea Jackson, Archives Research Center, Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library

Charles Matlock, The Modern Dance Music Research and Archiving Foundation

Chianta Dorsey, Amistad Research Center

Lauren G. Lowery, Modern Dance Music and Archiving Foundation

141. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

Participant:

1

Roundtable session

atlanta 2 ALAIN LOCKE SEMINAR.

Lost in a Kiss? The Sexual Victimization of the Black Male during Jim Crow read through Eldridge Cleaver’s The Book of Lives and Soul on Ice. Tommy Curry, Texas A & M University

Discussants:

Floyd Hayes, Johns Hopkins University

Utz McKnight, University of Alabama

John E. Drabinski, Amherst College

James Haile, Bucknell

Rondee Gaines, Miami University

142. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

atlanta 3 FROM ANNA JULIA COOPER TO DOROTHY PITTMAN HUGHES: MOTHERHOOD AND CHILD CARE ACTIVISM, 1890-1970.

Francoise Hamlin, Brown University

Participants:

From a “Painful, Patient, and Silent” Enslavement to an “Enlightened Motherhood”: Shifting Political Constructions of Black Motherhood During the Nineteenth Century. Crystal Lynn Webster, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Community Agency and the Professionalization of Child Care and Social Work in Boston, 1945-1975. Julie de Chantal, University of Massachusetts Amherst

With Her Fist Raised: Dorothy Pitman Hughes and the Activist’s Life. Laura Lovett, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Commentator:

Francoise Hamlin, Brown University

143. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

atlanta 4 SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND: SOME WOODSON AND ASALH RECORD SOURCES.

Annette Palmer, Morgan State Univerity & Executive Council, ASALH

Participants:

Carter G. Woodson and Nannie Helen Burroughs--Sources Relating to their Efforts to Combat Miseducation. Lasean Robinson Robinson, Morgan State University

Advocacy Beyond the Academy: Carter G. Woodson and the Afro Newspaper. Baiyina W. Muhammad, North Carolina Central University

Woodson: Historian, Collector and Businessman. Debra Newman Ham, Morgan State University Commentator:

Amy Tillerson-Brown, Mary Baldwin College

144. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Roundtable session

AFRICAN AMERICAN INTELLECTUAL HISTORY: THE STATE OF THE FIELD.

5

Chair:

Christopher Cameron, University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Discussants:

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

Mia Bay, Rutgers University

Brandon Byrd, Mississippi State University

Jessica Marie Johnson, Michigan State University

145. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

INTERRACIAL COOPERATION: ONE OF THE DOMINANT RACE RELATIONS PHILOSOPHIES OF THE INTERWAR YEARS.

Cherisse Jones Branch, Arkansas State University

Participants:

“Embodying Interracial Ideals”. Curtis Evans, University of Chicago Divinity School

Conference Room 123

“A Real Insight” Black Women’s Support for Interracial Cooperation. Lauren Kientz Anderson, Luther College

“They Don’t Dance or Sing Like We Do”: Interracialism in Theory and Practice in the Interwar Rural South. Robert Hunt Ferguson, Western Carolina University

Commentator:

Cherisse Jones Branch, Arkansas State University

146. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Roundtable session Conference Room 125 HBCUS, MENTORING, AND THE RESILIENCE NEEDED FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN TO ADVANCE (IN) sTeM.

Chair:

Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, University of South Florida

Discussants:

Vonzell Agosto, University of South Florida

Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, University of South Florida

Traki Taylor-Webb, Bowie State University

Shetay Ashford, University of South Florida

Maniphone Dickerson, University of South Florida

Jessica Alyce Wilson, University of South Florida

147. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Paper session Conference Room 127

BLACK POWER BEYOND THE BORDERS OF THE UNITED STATES.

Chair:

Laura Warren Hill, Bloomfield College

Participants:

“We Need a Mau Mau”: Malcolm X Transnationalism and Legacies. Mickie Mwanzia Koster, University of Texas

Black Power in India: Caste, Dalits, and Party People. Jeanelle Kevina Hope, University of California, Davis

National Sincerity and the Performance of Black Nationalism and Diasporic Citizenship. Lia T. Bascomb, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Laura Warren Hill, Bloomfield College

148. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 129

EXAMINING THE MECHANICS OF PROTEST AND INTERRACIAL COOPERATION.

Wesley G. Phelps, Sam Houston State University

Participants:

Basketball, Books, and Brotherhood: DeWitt Clinton High School as a scholastic model of African American leadership and interracial cooperation 1945-1950. Arthur Banton, Purdue University

Rap: Rapid Application of Politics: Hip Hop in Select Young Adult Novels. Margaret Bernice Smith Bristow, Pearson Education Assessment Company

Rethinking black student protest: Student Protest at North Carolina Central University 1930-1947. Brian Robinson, University of South Carolina

Commentator:

Wesley G. Phelps, Sam Houston State University

149. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 BLACK EDUCATORS, BLACK STUDIES, AND HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES.

Dwight Watson, Texas State University

Participants:

An Inquiry Into Black History And African Studies. Richard Ford, Society of Sanofi and Hatata

Education, Technology and Black Culture. Chy’na Nellon, Helping Engage Art

The Black Music Educators of the Twin Cities. Yolanda Yvette Williams, University of Minnesota

The Unheard Stories of Teacher Integration in the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Area. Leta Hooper, University of MassachusettsAmherst

Understanding Today’s HBCUs through Student Perspectives, Enrollment Trends, and Leadership Models. Lakia M Scott, Baylor University; DeWitt Scott, Chicago State University

Commentators:

The audience

150. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 10 STYLIN’: A CENTURY OF FASHION AND BEAUTY POLITICS IN THE DIASPORA.

Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware

Discussants:

Siobhan Carter-David, Southern Connecticut State University

Tanisha C Ford, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Catherine McKinley, NYU Gallatin

Kadari Taylor-Watson, Purdue University

Tamara Walker, University of Pennsylvania

Brandi Summers, Virginia Commonwealth University

151. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Paper session

Chair:

Georgia 11 RACE, CITIZENSHIP, AND MILITARY SERVICE IN THE 20TH CENTURY.

Kevin Greene, The University of Southern Mississippi

Participants:

Double Victory Discs: African American Contributions to the Americanization of Europe in WWII. Kevin Greene, The University of Southern Mississippi

How service to country has been the cornerstone for black life and presence in America. Robert Isaac Williams, Member ASALH “Black Bodies and Bordertown Cultures: African American GIs, Military Police and State Power in the Trans-Mississippi Southwest during the Second World War”. Dr. Robert Franklin Jefferson, University of New Mexico

In the face of the Dragon. Alan Laird, Gold Coast Railroad Museum African American Experience Exhibit

Commentator:

Latangela Lajuan Crossfield, Clark Atlanta University

152. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Roundtable session Georgia 12 GENDERING THE CARCERAL STATE: AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN, HISTORY, AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE.

Chair:

Kali Gross, The University of Texas - Austin

Discussants:

Cheryl Hicks, University of North Carolina Charlotte

Sowande Mustakeem, Washington University in St. Louis

Talitha LeFlouria, Florida Atlantic University

Christina Greene, University of Wisconsin at Madison

153. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 2 --aV Room THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT: THE STATE OF THE FIELD.

Michael Blum, Jarvis Chrisitan College Discussants:

Hasan Jeffries, Ohio State University

Danielle McGuire, Wayne State University

Emilye Crosby, SUNY Geneseo

Charissa Threat, Spelman College

Brian Purnell, Bowdoin College

154. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Presidential session

3-a-V Room yOU VOTed – sO, nOW WHaT? a PRIMeR On CIVIC enGaGeMenT WITH YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS.

Moderator:

Rashad Richie, CBS, Atlanta Radio Presenters:

Representative Kimberly Alexander, Georgia House of Representatives

Representative Virgil Fludd, Minority Caucus Chair, Georgia House of Representatives

Representative Billy Mitchell, Minority Caucus Vice-Chair, Georgia House of Representatives

Representative Howard Mosby, Georgia House of Representatives

Representative Roger Bruce, Georgia House of Representatives

155. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Roundtable session Georgia 4-a-V Room neW dIReCTIOns In aFRICan aMeRICan URBan HIsTORy.

Chair:

Rhonda Williams, Case Western University Discussants:

Clarence Lang, University of Kansas

Shannon King, The College of Wooster

Shirletta J. Kinchen, University of Louisville

Maurice J Hobson, Georgia State University

Kwame Holmes, University of Colorado-Boulder

156. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Special Session

CONVERSATION AMONG ASALH PRESIDENTS: REFLECTING ON 100 YEARS.

Robert L. Harris, Cornell University (Emeritus)

Commentator:

Robert L. Harris, Cornell University (Emeritus)

Participants:

Janette Hoston-Harris, ASALH Former President

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

Bettye Gardner, Coppin State University & Executive Council, ASALH

James Stewart, Pennsylvania State University (Emeritus) & Executive Council, ASALH

John Fleming, ASALH Former President

William Harris, ASALH Former President

Samuel DuBois Cook, ASALH Former President

157. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Kim Gallon, Purdue University

Participants:

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room NEW SCHOLARSHIP ON THE BLACK PRESS: FROM THe nadIR TO THe neW neGRO.

“Teach Your Daughters”: Black Girlhood and Mrs. N. F. Mossell’s Advice Column in The New York Freeman. Nazera Wright, University of Kentucky

Charles Stewart (aka Col. J. O. Midnight): A Forgotten Voice from the Early 20th Century Black Press. Mitch Kachun, Western

Michigan University

More than Romare’s Mother: Bessye Bearden as New Negro Journalist. Jacqueline C. Jones, Francis Marion University

Commentator:

Kim Gallon, Purdue University

158. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Leaders:

Workshop session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES FROM UNDERGRAD TO FULL PROFESSOR.

Michelle R. Scott, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Lawrence Morehouse, Florida Education Fund

Lee Bynum, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

Ula Taylor, University of California UC Berkeley

159. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) CASE STUDIES -- A PREVIEW OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES’ BLACK HISTORY GUIDE (PART 1 OF 2).

Tina L Ligon, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

Discussants:

Netisha Currie, National Archives

Damani Davis, National Archives

Trichita Chestnut, National Archives and Records Administration

Tina L Ligon, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

160. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) CIVIL RIGHTS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY: DECODING THE PRESENT WITH THE PAST.

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Participants:

“Make D.C. Mean Democracy’s Capital”: Desegregating School Facilities and Playgrounds. Tikia Kenise Hamilton, Princeton University

Sex and Civil Rights: Racism, Homophobia and the Political Efficacious Strategies of the Black Freedom Struggle. Jennifer D. Jones, Department of Gender and Race Studies, University of Alabama

Law, Order and Social Justice’: Black Republicans and the Battle for Alternative Solutions, 1968-1974. Leah Wright Rigueur, Harvard Kennedy School

Commentator:

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

161. 11:45 am to 1:15 pm

Film Festival session Georgia 13 FURIUOS FLOWER III: SEEDING THE FUTURE OF AFIRCAN AMERICAN POETRY BY JOANNE GABBIN AND JUDITH MCCRAY, 58 MINUTES.

Chair:

Michelle Duster, Independent Writer

Althea Tait, SUNY Brockport

Sponsor: California Newsreel

162. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Meeting atlanta 1 aBWH MeeTInG.

163. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 2

STOLEN CHILDHOOD: SLAVE YOUTH IN nIneTeenTH-CenTURy aMeRICa – COnTRIBUTIOn and IMPaCT.

Jacqueline McLeod, Metropolitan State University of Denver

Participants:

About “Stolen Childhood: Slave Youth in Nineteenth-Century America.” Brenda Stevenson, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

About “Stolen Childhood: Slave Youth in Nineteenth-Century America.” Loren Schweninger, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

About “Stolen Childhood: Slave Youth in Nineteenth-Century America.” Diane Mutti Burke, University of Missouri-Kansas City Commentators:

Norrece Jones, Virginia Commonwealth University (Emeritus) Daniel Littlefield, University of South Carolina

164. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Paper session

AFRICAN AMERICANS DURING THE COLD WAR.

atlanta 3

Chair:

Omar J. Salaam, The University of South Florida

Participants:

Shaping the African American Anti-Nuclear Movement: African American Campaigns against Nuclear Weapons and Energy, 19451995. Aubrey Underwood, Clark Atlanta University

The Case Against the Council: Communist-Front or Black Internationalist Organization? Alhaji Conteh, Howard University Commentator:

Omar J. Salaam, The University of South Florida

165. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

4 WHAT IS BLACK CULTURE AND WHO DECIDES: SUBVERSIVE REPRESENTATION AND AESTHETIC DISRUPTION IN BLACK ARTISTIC EXPRESSIONS.

Cerri Annette Banks, Mount Holyoke College

Participants:

Message Confusion: Understanding Linguistic Representation and Vernacular Masking in Paul Laurence Dunbar’s Humor through the Comedy of Key and Peele. Spencer Kuchle, University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Aesthetic Disruption and Ontological Doubt in Kara Walker’s Harper’s Pictorial of the Civil War (Annotated). Lynn Pasquerella, Mount Holyoke College

“‘I was waitin’ fo you at tha doh’: Editing Foxxxxy, Beyond Scared Straight, and Digital Technologies”. Le’Mil Eiland, University of Pittsburgh

Commentator:

Cerri Annette Banks, Mount Holyoke College

166. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Roundtable session atlanta 5 HOW CIVIL RIGHTS VIOLATIONS OCCURRING WITH THE FEDERAL SECTOR LEAD TO ADVERSE HEALTH AND WEALTH CONSEQUENCES THROUGHOUT THE US BLACK POPULATION.

Chair:

Arthuretta H Martin, The Coalition for Change

Discussants:

Tanya Ward Jordan, The Coalition for Change

David j Grogan, The Coalition for Change

Michael McCray, General Counsel-Federally Employed Women Legal Education Fund

Zena Crenshaw-Logal, Power Over Poverty Under Laws of America Restored

167. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Luncheon

Capital Ballroon Center and south CARTER G. WOODSON LUNCHEON.

Leona Barr-Davenport, Atlanta Business League

Representative Roger Bruce, Georgia House of Representatives, Centennial Honorary Committee

Peter Aman, Bain & Company, Centennial Honorary Committee

Speaker:

Lonnie Bunch, National Museum of African American History and Culture Invocation:

Mark Ogunwale Lomax, 1st Afrikan Presbyterian Church

Emcee:

Chesley McNeil, WXIA 11Alive

Remarks:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Entertainment:

Spelman College Jazz Ensemble

Benediction:

Msgr. Edward Branch, AUC Lyke House Catholic Center

Acknowledgments:

Sylvia Cyrus, Executive Director, ASALH

168. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Paper session

RACE, SLAVERY, AND THE DYNAMICS OF SOCIAL CONTROL.

“Systematic Oppression and Social Control: Examining the Constraints of Slavery in the Urban British Atlantic, 1680-1807.” Michael Dickinson, University of Delaware

Freedom on the Frontier: Liberty, Land, and Labor in the Choctaw Nation. Derrick D. McKisick, Texas A&M University - Commerce

One Hundred Years of “The Worst Sort of Lynching”: Black Christ Figures in the American South. Julia M Robinson, UNC Charlotte “Politeness and Obliging Manners”: Race, Gender, and Accommodation in Davenport, 1830-1900. David Brodnax, Trinity Christian College

“Redefining Slavery as a National Institution: Freed Blacks, Roger Taney and Sharp v. Allein, 1830-1840”. Patricia Reid, University of Dayton

169. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Paper session

PRINT MEDIA AND BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLES.

Chair:

Malachi Crawford, University of Houston

Participants:

Black Heroes, White Innocence and Civic Pride: Change and Continuity in Newspaper Narratives of Greensboro’s Sit-Ins, 1960-2010. Isabell Lola Moore, UNCG

Claude Barnett and the Lagos Conference. Ramla Marie Bandele, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis

Louis Austin, the Carolina Times, and the Black Freedom Struggle in North Carolina, 1954-1971. Jerry Gershenhorn, North Carolina Central University

Commentators: Audience

170. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Paper session

Conference Room 127 RACE, GENDER, AND BLACK FEMINISM.

100 Years and Beyond: Historical Truths of the Origination of Black Feminism. Latoya Johnson, University of North Georgia

Black Lesbian Motherhood: Reconstructing Reproductive Justice in Black Feminism. Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

The Middle Ground: Enslaved Black Women and White Mistresses in Antebellum South. Ricardo J Edwards, Tuskegee University

“To Make Us Real for Ourselves”: The Self Documentation of Second Wave Black Feminists. Nitoshia L. Ford, Dominican University Graduate School of Library and Information Science Chair:

Kathleen Bethel, Northwestern University

Commentators: Audience

171. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

Poster session

Conference Room 129 ASALH POSTER PRESENTATION.

Blood for a “New Rising Sun.” Alan Laird, Gold Coast Railroad Museum African American Experience Exhibit Seeking GBM: Mapping Queer Sexualities. Matthew Kinlow, Ohio University

Judge:

Justin Isaac Rogers, University of Mississippi

Tahirah Akbar-Williams, University of Maryland Libraries

Kelly Hilton, Davidson College

172. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Panel session

AFRICAN AMERICAN MALES, SOCIAL IDENTITIES AND SOCIAL PATHOLOGIES: IMPLICATIONS FOR EDUCATION AND SOCIETY.

Chair:

M. Christopher Brown II, American Association of State Colleges and Universities

Participants:

The Brother Code: Manhood and Masculinity among African American Males in College. T. Elon Dancy, University of Oklahoma Revisiting The Brownies’ Book: W.E.B. DuBois and Black Male Youth Representation. James Earl Davis, Temple University

Black Male Student Leaders at Predominantly White Universities: Stories of Power, Persistence and Preservation. Bryan Keith Hotchkins, University of Utah

Cultural Aesthetics and Faculty Improvisation: Designing Pedagogy to Engage African American Boys and Men. Roland Walker Mitchell, Louisiana State University

Commentator:

M. Christopher Brown II, American Association of State Colleges and Universities

173. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Panel session

CIVIL RIGHTS, BLACK POWER, AND AFRICAN AMERICAN EDUCATION.

Georgia 10

Chair:

Dionne Danns, Indiana University

Participants:

More Than Cookies and Crayons: Head Start Programs and African American Freedom Empowerment in Mississippi, 1965-1968. Crystal Sanders, Pennsylvania State University

Barbara Sizemore and the Politics of Black Educational Achievement, 1963-1975. Elizabeth Todd-Breland, University of Illinois Chicago

Courageous Navigation: African American Students at an Elite Private School in the South, 1967-1972. Michelle A. Purdy, Washington University in St. Louis

Commentator:

V. P. Franklin, University of California, Riverside

174. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Georgia 11 THE BLACK SPATIAL IMAGINARY: A CONVERSATION ABOUT BLACK GEOGRAPHIES.

Akil Houston, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

Discussants:

Aretina Hamilton, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

LaToya Eaves, Middle Tennessee State University

Priscilla McCutcheon, University of Connecticut

Sydney Joslin-Knapp, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

175. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

TRANSATLANTIC, TRANSNATIONAL, AND TRANS-GENERATIONAL aPPROaCHes TO sTUdyInG THe aFRICan dIasPORa.

Manoucheka Celeste, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Participants:

Georgia 12

Transatlantic Feminisms: Exploring Black Women’s Studies in the 21st Century. Cheryl R. Rodriguez, University of South Florida Mucamas and Mulatas: Black Brazilian Feminisms, Representations, and Ethnography. Erica Lorraine Williams, Spelman College Traveling Blackness: Race, Gender, and Citizenship. Manoucheka Celeste, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Caribbean Women Writers: An Anthology. Julia Lee, University of Nevada Las Vegas

Commentator:

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

176. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session Georgia 2 --aV Room

BARAKA’S BLUES PEOPLE AT 50: RACE, RHYTHM, AND VIEWS IN THE STUDY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSIC CULTURE TODAY.

Birgitta Joelisa Johnson, University of South Carolina

Discussants:

Regina Bradley, Armstrong State University

Aja Burrell Wood, The New School

Alisha Jones, Indiana University

Birgitta Joelisa Johnson, University of South Carolina

Fredara M Hadley, Oberlin University

177. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Noliwe Rooks, Cornell University

Discussants:

Tayari Jones, Rutgers University, at Newark

Pearl Cleage, Alliance Theatre

Riché Richardson, Cornell University

Roundtable session

3-a-V Room SPELMAN WOMEN/BLACK LIVES.

Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper, Spelman College

178. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Roundtable session Georgia 4-a-V Room TRUTH & TRANSITION: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION FOR HISTORIANS AND ARTISTS ON INTERPRETING SLAVERY, RESISTANCE AND FREEDOM THROUGH THE ARTS.

Chair:

Kellie Carter-Jackson, Hunter College

Discussants:

Alexis Peskine, Alexis Peskine Projects

Michael Platt, Michael Platt Studio

Helene Faussart, Les Nubians

Delfeayo Marsalis, DMarsalis Productions

179. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Library Session

5-a-V Room ASALH INFO PROFESSIONALS MEETING.

180. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Film Festival session

HEALING HISTORY: THE DOCUMENTARY - A JOURNEY OF AFRICAN CENTERED EDUCATION In THe Us and BeRMUda.

Melodye Micere Van Putten, Black History Works, Inc.

Commentators:

Theodore and Elsie Erwin, Educators to Africa

Melodye Micere Van Putten, Black History Works, Inc.

181. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

CARTER G. WOODSON AND BLACK THEATRE HISTORY.

Sandra Adell, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Participants:

Twentieth Century Black Theatre: The Early Years. Sandra Adell, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Carter G. Woodson and Educational Theatre. Freda Scott Giles, University of Georgia

Georgia 9-a-V Room

In the Shadow of the Harlem Renaissance: African American Women Artists of Washington, D.C. Kathy A Perkins, Department of Dramatic Art, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Commentator:

Amma Ghartey-Tagoe Kootin, University of Colorado-Boulder

182. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) RaCe, GendeR, aCTIVIsM, and MUsIC.

Dr. Robert Franklin Jefferson, University of New Mexico

Participants:

Black Identity and Narratives of Loss in the Civil Rights Era: “They took the drums away!”. Eric D Wright, Valencia College, Osceola Campus

Jazz: The Unmasked Rhetoric. Joan Cartwright, Women in Jazz South Florida, Inc.

Put It Where the Goats Can Get It: Joe Madison and Activist Talk Radio. David Alvin Canton, Connecticut College

Saving Black Lives Through Rhythm Was His Business: Jimmie Lunceford’s Mission. Ronald Cortez Herd II, The W.E. A.L.L. B.E. Group INC.

Southern-AfroFuturistics: Outkast, Atlanta and Afrofuturism. Maurice J Hobson, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Zebulon Miletsky, Stony Brook University

183. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) CASE STUDIES -- A PREVIEW OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES’ BLACK HISTORY GUIDE (PART 2 OF 2).

Netisha Currie, National Archives

Discussants:

Tina L Ligon, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

Shane B. Walsh, University of Maryland, College Park

Wanda Williams, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)

Netisha Currie, National Archives

184. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Monique Earl-Lewis, Morehouse College

Participants:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) ResIsTanCe.

Revolt, Reparations and the National Association of Black Students (NABS): An Oral History Interview with Gwendolyn M. Patton. Richard D. Benson II, Spelman College

Fantastical Resistance: Screening the Black Body from The Legend of Nigger Charley to Django. Stephane Dunn, Morehouse College

Moses Dickson Dickson’s Knights of Liberty Movement in Light of Recent Scholarship on African Diasporic Cultural Transformation and Resistance. Samuel T. Livingston, Morehouse College

Commentator:

Corrie Claiborne, Morehouse College

185. 1:30 pm to 3:00 pm

VEL PHILLIPS: DREAM BIG DREAMS BY DIRECTOR/PRODUCER ROBeRT TROndsOn, 57 MInUTes.

Chair:

Patrick Jones, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

186. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

THE BLACK INTELLECTUAL TRADITION In THe UnITed sTaTes In THe TWenTIeTH CenTURy.

Larry L. Rowley, University of Michigan

Participants:

Pan-Africanism in the Earlier Twentieth Century. Wilson Moses, Pennsylvania State University

atlanta 1

The Republic of New Afrika, Independence Struggle and International Solidarity During the Black Power Era. Edward Onaci, Ursinus College

Black Conservatism. LaTasha B. Levy, Assistant Professor, University of Virginia

Black Public Intellectuals in the Literary Imagination: A Contemporary History. Marlo David, Purdue University

Commentator:

Cornelius Bynum, Purdue University & Executive Coucil, ASALH

187. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

CHARLES H. WESLEY SEMINAR.

Evelyn Higginbotham, Harvard University & Executive Council, ASALH

Participant:

Overturning Dred Scott: Race and Rights in Antebellum America. Martha S. Jones, University of Michigan

Discussants:

Jeffrey Kerr-Ritchie, Howard University

Leslie M. Harris, Emory University

Patricia Reid, University of Dayton

Steven Hahn, University of Pennsylvania

Thavolia Glymph, Duke University

Tony Frazier, North Carolina Central University

Jessica Millward, University of California, Irvine

188. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

2

Roundtable session

SCHOLARLY PUBLISHING IN THE 21ST CENTURY.

LaShawn Harris, Michigan State University

Discussants:

Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University

Rhonda Williams, Case Western University

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

Talitha LeFlouria, Florida Atlantic University

3

189. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

RECONSIDERING PAN-AFRICANISM IN THE BLACK POWER MOVEMENT.

Yohuru Williams, Fairfield University

Participants:

Black Zion in the Rainforest: African-American Radicals, Guyana, and the Perils of Postcoloniality. Russell Rickford, Cornell University

Africa House Inc.: Black Power and Pan-Africanism in Los Angeles, 1967-1975. Ashley Farmer, Duke University

Pan-Africanism in Print: Black Booksellers and the Business of Literary Black Power. Joshua Clark Davis, University of Baltimore

Commentator:

Yohuru Williams, Fairfield University

190. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Workshop session

AIM: ACTUALIZING AND INTERPRETING THE MISSION (SUSTAINABILITY FOR ASALH’S SECOND CENTURY).

Leaders:

Greer Charlotte Stanford-Randle, ASALH/ Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch at Dayton, OH & Executive Council, ASALH

Omope Carter Daboiku, ASALH/ Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch at Dayton, OH

Mark S. Jackson, ASALH/ Manasota Branch

LaNesha DeBardelaben, Michigan State University

191. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 123 AFRICAN CULTURAL CONNECTIONS THROUGHOUT THE DIASPORA.

Claudia D Nelson, Coppin State University

Participants:

Forget Me Not - Reconciling the (Dis)Connectedness Among and Between African Americans and Africans”. Claudia D Nelson, Coppin State University

Making Connections: J.B. Murray and Africa. Licia Ellen Clifton-James, University of Missouri-Kansas City

The Canary Archipelago Islanders Of Louisiana: The Black Islanos. Elaine Vigne, Independent Scholar

Commentator:

Margaret Bernice Smith Bristow, Pearson Education Assessment Company

192. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 125 THE FORT VALLEY HAM AND EGG SHOW: REVITALIZING THE COMMUNITY THROUGH AGRICULTURE, THE ARTS AND CULTURE.

Dawn J. Herd-Clark, Fort Valley State University

Participants:

The Call for Agrarian Reform: The Origin of the Fort Valley Ham and Egg Show. Kyle Harris, Florida State University

Otis O’Neal: The Father of the Ham Show. Dawn J. Herd-Clark, Fort Valley State University

Folk Music At Its Best: Ham and Eggs With A Side of Music. Cynthia Madison, Fort Valley State University

Margret Toomer: The Mother of the Egg Show. Kymara J. Sneed, Fort Valley State University

Commentators:

Kyle Harris, Florida State University

Dawn J. Herd-Clark, Fort Valley State University

193. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Panel session

Chair:

BLACK WOMEN’S ORGANIZATIONAL QUILTING IN THE DEPRESSION ERA.

Erik McDuffie, University of Illinois

Participants:

“‘You may begin furnishing us with eggs as soon as possible’: Nannie Helen Burroughs and Cooperative Economics in the Great Depression.” Angela Hornsby-Gutting, Missouri State University

“’Mrs. T, they say you belong to the NAACP…and that you are critical:’ Mary Church Terrell’s 1930s Organizational Work”. Alison M. Parker, College at Brockport, State University of New York

“’I had learned all kinds of ways to make things happen:’ Sue Bailey Thurman’s Activism in the Search for Common Ground”. Brandy Thomas Wells, The Ohio State University

Commentator:

Peter Eisenstadt, Howard Thurman Papers

194. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Paper session

MEMORY AND COMMEMORATION OF THE BLACK PAST.

Chair:

Tony B Lowe, University of Georgia

Participants:

Is It Time for a Black National Historic Trust? Daniel R Acker, Public Historian

The Slave Ship Replica Project and the International Decade for People of African Descent. Gene S Tinnie, City of Miami Virginia Key Beach Park Trust

Opportunities Missed, Taken, and Taken Away: Principle, Expedience, and Memorializing in Historic Black Public Address.

Katherine Scott Sturdevant, Pikes Peak Community College; Stephen Collins, Pikes Peak Community College

Commentator:

Tony B Lowe, University of Georgia

195. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 INDEPENDENCE AND BLACK LIBERATION THROUGHOUT THE DIASPORA.

Kelly Hilton, Davidson College

Participants:

Educating for Freedom: William X Schienman, Tom Mboya, and the Struggle for an Independent Kenya. Andrew Juan Rosa, Faulty Pétion of Port-au-Prince . Andrew Wyatt Maginn, Howard University

The Emergence and Impact of Mario Moorhead and His Grassroots Political Party, 1969-1986. Derick Antony Hendricks, Morgan State University

“Freedom Yes, Apartheid No!”: Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. and the American Anti-Apartheid Movement. David Mathew Walton, Michigan State University

Commentator:

Kelly Hilton, Davidson College

196. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Presenters:

Presidential session Georgia 10 MAKING MODERN ATLANTA: A CITY OF RE-INVENTION.

Maurice J Hobson, Georgia State University

Regina Bradley, Armstrong State University

Anita Law Beaty, Activist

Karl Barnes, Atlanta Urban and Regional Planner

Mack Wilbourn, Mack II

US Ambassador Andrew J Young, The Andrew J. Young Foundation

197. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

LEGACIES: LESSONS FROM CARTER G. WOODSON AND THE ASNLH FOR K-12 EDUCATION IN THE 21ST CENTURY.

Ida Jones, Howard University Moorland-Spingarn Research Center

Participants:

Exploring the Curriculum Theorizing of Carter G. Woodson. Anthony L. Brown, University of Texas at Austin

Deracialized Black History: An Examination of K-12 School Curriculum. Keffrelyn D. Brown, University of Texas at Austin

11

The State of African American History: A Woodsonian Approach to Black History K-12 Policy. LaGarrett King, Clemson University Teaching Race and the Color Line in U.S. History: Lessons from Yesterday’s Association for Today’s Schools. Jeffrey Aaron Snyder, Carleton College

Commentator:

Carl Grant, University of Wisconsin

198. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session Georgia 12 EDUCATING AFRICAN AMERICAN CHILDREN TODAY: WHAT DID ASA G. HILLIARD, III SAY.

Patricia Hilliard-Nunn, University of Florida

Discussants:

Kenneth Nunn, University of Florida

T’Shaka Bailey, Georgia State University

Hakim Hilliard-Nunn, The Hilliard Firm

Patricia Hilliard-Nunn, University of Florida

199. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 2 --aV Room BREAKING BOUNDARIES BLACK WOMEN’S RADICAL ACTIVISM AND POLITICS.

Bettye Collier-Thomas, Temple University

Participants:

There is a Science and Art to Making a Successful Revolution: A History of Black Women’s Radicalism in the Third World Women’s Alliance. Assata Kokayi, Northwestern University; Prudence Cumberbatch, Brooklyn College; Zinga Fraser, Brooklyn College

Juanita Jackson Mitchell: Radicalism and Traditionalism in Race Leadership. Prudence Cumberbatch, Brooklyn College A Road Less Travelled Black Congressional Women’s Radical Politics. Zinga Fraser, Brooklyn College Commentator:

Zinga Fraser, Brooklyn College

200. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Presidential session

Georgia 3-a-V Room MINORITY HEALTH AND HEALTHCARE: YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW.

Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, President Emeritus, Morehouse School of Medicine

Participants:

The Long Journey to Health Equity in America. Dr. Louis W. Sullivan, President Emeritus, Morehouse School of Medicine

The Education of African American Health Professionals. Dr. Valerie Montgomery Rice, President and Dean, Morehouse School of Medicine

Cardiovascular Disease in African Americans. Dr. Elizabeth Ofili, Professor of Medicine and Chief, Division of Cardiology

Morehouse School of Medicine

Advances in Cancer Care in Minority Populations. Dr. Otis Brawley, Chief Medical Officer American Cancer Society Development and Functioning of the Brain. Peter MacLeish, Director, The Neuroscience Institute Morehouse School of Medicine Strategies for Health Promotion and the Prevention of Disease. Dr. David Satcher, Director, the Satcher Leadership Institute

Morehouse School of Medicine

U.S. Health System Reform and The Affordable Care Act. William Toby, Director, Health Care Financing Administration

201. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

POLICIES, POLITICS, AND PRIDE IN THE BLACK SPORT CENTURY: NEW PERSPECTIVES IN THE HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN ATHLETICS.

Adrian Burgos, The University of Illinois

Participants:

The Historian of Black College Football: The Legacy of Eric “Ric” Roberts. Derrick White, Dartmouth College Sport and the Making of Modern Black Conservatism. Tyran Kai Steward, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor

Racial Bias: The Black Athlete and the Early War on Drugs. Theresa Runstedtler, American University

202. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

SPARKING THE GENIUS IN ACTION: EXPLORING WOODSON’S LEGACY THROUGH THE BLACK HISTORY BULLETIN.

La Vonne Neal, Northern Illinois University

Discussants:

Karsonya (Kaye) Wise Whitehead, Loyola University Maryland

Sarah Lynne Frielink

Conra Gist, University of Arkansas

Joseph Flynn, Northern Illinois University

Alicia Moore, Southwestern University

Rebecca Hunt, Northern Illinois University

203. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

6-a-V

OUR EXPERIENCES AS ANTHOLOGY EDITORS-DOS, DON’T, AND INTERESTING STORIES.

Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware

Discussants:

Michael Ezra, Sonoma State University

Peniel Joseph, Tufts University

Komozi Woodard, Sarah Lawrence College

Jeanne Theoharis, Brooklyn College

Laura Warren Hill, Bloomfield College

204. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

FOREVER SUPER: BLACK MACHO AND THE MYTH OF THE SUPER WOMAN: 35 YEARS LATER.

Stacey Patton, Chronicle for Higher Education

Discussants:

Michele Wallace, Graduate Center of the City University of New York

Beverly Guy-Sheftall, Spelman College

Kali Gross, The University of Texas - Austin

Treva Lindsey, Ohio State University

Brittney Cooper, Rutgers University

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

205. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) BLACK EDUCATION, DESEGREGATION, AND PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

Traki Taylor-Webb, Bowie State University

Participants:

“Catholic Philanthropies and African American Catholic Schools”. Katrina Marie Sanders, The University of Iowa

“Dual Benefits: White Philanthropy, African American Students, and the Desegregation of Elite K-12 Private Schools”. Michelle A. Purdy, Washington University in St. Louis

“We Were from All Over Town”: Maintaining Racial Friendships at Desegregated Chicago Schools. Dionne Danns, Indiana University

Commentator:

Linda Marie Perkins, Claremont Graduate University

206. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) SUSTAINING AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES: LEADERSHIP OF DEPARTMENTS, PROGRaMs, and CenTeRs In THe 21sT CenTURy.

Erin N. Winkler, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Discussants:

Deidre Hill Butler, Union College

William Jelani Cobb, University of Connecticut

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Valerie Grim, Indiana University-Bloomington

207. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) INCLUDING STUDENTS IN ORAL HISTORY PROJECTS: PRESERVING BLACK HISTORY FOR ANOTHER CENTURY.

Harry Okoh, Atlanta Metropolitan State College

Participants:

Southern Narratives of War: Atlanta Branch Veterans’ History Project. Candy Tate, Emory University

Revisiting Oyotunji Village. Kenja R McCray, Atlanta Metropolitan State College

Taking “Black Lives Matter” to CNN: An Oral History of AUC Student Protest Amid the Failure to Indict in the Killing of Mike Brown. Tara Lake, Independent Scholar

Slave Grandchildren Remember. Pamela E. Foster, Afro-American Historical and Genelogical Society; Learotha Williams, Tennessee State University

Commentator:

Frank Johnson, Atlanta Metropolitan State College

208. 3:15 pm to 4:30 pm

Chair:

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 THE BEECH EXPERIEMENT: A SUCCESS STORY OF URBAN REHABILITATION BY KENNETH SCOTT, 44 MINUTES.

Keeanga Yamahtta Taylor, Princeton University

209. 4:00 pm to 4:30 pm

Participants:

Special Session

1 ASALH AWARDS PROGRAM.

Janet Sims-Wood, Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Barbara Spencer Dunn, DeVereux Family

Emcee:

Dorothy F Bailey, PG County Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Gina Paige, African Ancestry & Executive Council, ASALH

Awardee:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

Cheryl Hicks, University of North Carolina Charlotte

210. 4:45 pm to 6:45 pm

Chair:

Plenary session

Capital Ballroom north WHO STOLE THE SOUL?’: BLACK MUSIC AND THE STRUGGLE FOR eMPOWeRMenT In THe TWenTIeTH CenTURy.

Fanon Che Wilkins, Doshisha University

Participants:

‘Holding on to Dollars Til them Eagles Grin’: The Battle for Economic Ownership and Authenticity in Black Early Vaudeville Theater, 1900-1929. Michelle R. Scott, UMBC

‘Thank You for Talking To Me Africa:’ SOLAR Records and the Quest for Pan-African Economic Cooperation. Scot Brown, UCLA

‘Everybody Wants to Sing My Blues, Nobody Wants to Live My Blues’: Deconstructing Narratives of Race, Culture and Power in Black Music Scholarship’. Portia Maultsby, Indiana University

‘Who Stole the Soul?’: Music and Black Empowerment in the 1970s - A Personal Narrative. James Mtume, Grammy Award Winning Musician & Songwriter

211. 4:45 pm to 6:15 pm

Chair:

Cherisse Jones-Branch, Independent Scholar

212. 6:30 pm to 7:30 pm

Chair:

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 OLD SOUTH, 54 MINUTES.

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 THIS LITTLE LIGHT OF MINE: THE LEGACY OF FANNIE LOU HAMER BY ROBIN N. HAMILTON, 26 MINUTES.

Shenette Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi

213. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Workshop session atlanta 1 ARTS INTEGRATION: HISTORICALLY SPEAKING.

Leaders:

Agnolia Beatrice Gay, Jacksonville James Weldon Johnson Branch

Chy’na Nellon, Helping Engage Art

Georgia Hudson, Helping Engage Arts

214. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session

BLACK CHRISTIAN NATIONALISM AND THE BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLE.

Reginald K Ellis, Florida A&M University

Participants:

Martin Delany’s Political Theories on Race, Religion, and Coloniialism. Sylvester Johnson, Northwestern University

Bishop Henry McNeal Turner: A Black Christian Nationalist of the Late 19th and Early 20th Centuries.” David H Jackson, Florida A&M University

Albert B. Cleage Jr. and the Politics of Black Christian Nationalism. Darius J. Young, Florida A&M University

Commentator:

Ameenah Shakir, Florida A&M University

215. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session

CHanGInG THe aRCHeTyPes: aFRICana WOMen ARE HOMEPLACE, LIBERATION, AND THE FUTURE.

Jennifer Williams, Temple University

Participants:

Africana Women are Homeplace: (Re)centering Africana Women as Sites of Liberation. Donela Wright, Temple University

Assata Shakur: Afrikan Diasporic Revolutionary Philosophy and the Continuum of the Black Radical Tradition. Ifetayo Flannery, Temple University

Encoding Liberation: Akirachix and Black Girls Code designing an Africana Future. Jennifer Williams, Temple University

Commentator:

Mikana Scott, Temple University

216. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

3

Panel session

4 READING AND TEACHING THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK.

Nadine V. Nadine V. Wedderburn, SUNY Empire State College

Participants:

SESSION CANCELLED

“Using Material Culture to Teach The Souls of Black Folk “. Whitney Battle-Baptiste, University of Massachusetts – Amherst “Teaching a Close Reading of the Text”. Frances Jones-Sneed, MCLA

“ Teaching The Sorrow Songs in The Souls of Black Folk”. MaryNell Morgan-Brown, SUNY – Empire State College

Commentator:

Nadine V. Nadine V. Wedderburn, SUNY Empire State College

217. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 5

“TRUE, I GOT MORE FANS”: BLACKNESS AND THE SPECTACULAR PERFORMANCE OF AFFINITY.

Grace Gipson, University of California, Berkeley

Participants:

Media, Film, and Protest Theater: On documentary and image making in Black Radical Movements. Kimberly McNair, University of California, Berkeley

Killing for Kicks: Conspicuous Consumption, Gratuitous Violence and Media (Mis) Representations of Sneaker Culture. Christina Bush, UC Berkeley

“It’s A Man Thing, Gina!”: Negotiating Race, Memory and Gender Politics in Martin. Patrick Johnson, Universitiy of California, Berkeley

Cosplaying While Black: Performances of Transcodability in Digital Culture. Grace Gipson, University of California, Berkeley

Commentator:

Regina Bradley, Armstrong State University

218. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session

SCANDALOUS: GENDER, POWER, AND SEXUALITY IN SCANDAL.

Conference Room 123

Le’Trice Donaldson, The University of Memphis

Participants:

Olivia Pope: Breaking the Spell of the “Magic Negro”. Jervette RaShaun Ward, University of Alaska Anchorage

THE REEL AINT REAL: Scandal and black female equality. Armanthia Nicole Duncan, The University of Massachusetts-Amherst I Am the Hell and the High Water: Black Masculinities and Body Politics in Scandal. Derrick Lanois, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Sheena Harris, Tuskegee University

219. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 125

THE CHALLENGE OF TEACHING RACE AND RACISM AT A PREDOMINANTLY WHITE/HISPANIC SERVING INSTITUTION ON THE WEST COAST.

Donna J Nicol, California State University Fullerton

Participants:

Black Names: Race and Perceptions of Course Value. Natalie Graham, California State University, Fullerton

Teaching Blackness from Multiracial Feminism at a PWI/HSI Institution on the West Coast. Donna J Nicol, California State University Fullerton

Commentator:

Fenobia Dallas, Saginaw Valley State University

220. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 127

COLLEGE DAYS SWIFTLY PASS BY: BLACK COLLEGIATE PERFORMERS, PRODUCERS, AND CULTURAL PRODUCTION.

Le’Mil Eiland, University of Pittsburgh

Participants:

“Howard Players versus Paul Robeson: Representing the American Negro Abroad”. Marvin McAllister, University of South CarolinaColumbia

“Have We Woke Up Yet?: Choreographing the Persistence of Intra-Racism (with Compliments to Spike Lee)”. Faedra Carpenter, University of Maryland-College Park

Recovering Narratives: Examining Black Women Theatre Artists at Historically Black Colleges. Khalid Long, University of Maryland-College Park

Strolling on College Campuses: Performing Diaspora Through Gestures in Dance. Le’Mil Eiland, University of Pittsburgh

Commentator:

Faedra Carpenter, University of Maryland-College Park

221. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Participants:

Paper session Georgia 12 RACE, BIOGRAPHY, AND LEGACY.

Good-Will Ambassador with Cookbook. Allison B Horrocks, University of Connecticut

Serving Under Fire: Postmaster Isaiah H. Lofton of Hogansville. Tony B Lowe, University of Georgia

The Contribution of African Americans to Economics: The Case of A.L. Harris and P.A. Wallace. Enrico Beltramini, Notre Dame de Namur University

The Narratives of Samuel J. Battle. Matthew Guariglia, University of Connecticut

Commentator:

Derrick White, Dartmouth College

222. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Leaders:

Friday, September 25, 2015

THE ADVENT OF TTCS - TRUTHTELLING & TRUSTBUILDING COMMISSIONS.

Theophus “Thee” Smith, Emory University Religion Department

Andrew “Andy” Sheldon, SheldonSinrich, Inc.

Blair Rothstein, Register Financial

223. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Panel session

LOCAL NARRATIVES OF POLICING, PUNISHMENT, AND THE POLITICS OF COMMUNITY CONTROL.

Chair:

Toussaint Losier, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Participants:

“Incident at Mosque Number 7”: The Nation of Islam and a Community-Oriented Self-Defense from Police Brutality. Rasul Miller, University of Pennsylvania

“A Jail Without Bars”: Winston Moore, Cook County Jail and the Local Origins of Mass Incarceration. Melanie Newport, Temple University

“Crime Waves”: Land Fraud, Juvenile Delinquency, and the Politics of Community Control in Phoenix, Arizona. Anthony Pratcher II, University of Pennsylvania

Commentator:

Donna Murch, Rutgers-New Brunswuck

224. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Film Festival session

THe e-WORd: a dOCUMenTaRy On THe eBOnICs deBaTe.

Chair:

Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Participant:

The E-Word: A Documentary on the Ebonics Debate. Jonathan I Gayles, Georgia State University

225. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm Workshop session

Leaders:

HOME, HISTORY, ARCHITECTURE, & PRESERVATION OF THE LAST CENTURY.

Richard Dozier, Tuskegee University

Joy Kinard, National Park Service

William Stanley III, Stanley Love-Stanley Architects PC

Brent Leggs, National Trust for Historic Preservation

226. 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm

Participants:

Loretta Parham, AUC Robert Woodruff Library

Cynthia Spence, UNCF/Mellon Foundation

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Michael Julian Bond, Atlanta City Council

Jacquelyn Rouse, Georgia State University

Tanisha Ford, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Francille Wilson, University of Southern California

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Harvard University

Closing Remarks:

Clarissa Myrick-Harris, Morehouse College

Emcee:

Kathleen Phillips-Lewis, Spelman College

227. 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm

Chair:

Reception

AUC Robert Woodruff Library FRIday nIGHT OUT.

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) WE WHO ARE JAPANESE AFRICAN AMERICANISTS: INTELLECTUAL AUTOBIOGRAPHIES OF JAPAN BLACK STUDIES ASSOCIATION (JBSA) MEMBERS.

Gerald Horne, University of Houston

Participants:

It Was Coincidence but Not Coincidence: My Thirty Years of Studying and Teaching African American Literature in Japan. Azusa Nishimoto, Aoyama Gakuin University (Japan)

The Role of International Scholars in African American Studies: Teaching and Studying African American History from a Japanese Perspective. Fumiko Sakashita, Ritsumeikan University (Japan)

“A Journey Toward Blackness”: Reflections on the Presence of the Other Japan, Then and Now. Yuichiro Onishi, University of Minnesota

Commentator:

Gerald Horne, University of Houston

228. 7:45 pm to 10:15 pm

Film Festival session Georgia 13 THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION BY STANLEY NELSON, 90 MINUTES (REGISTERED CONVENTIONEERS ONLY).

Chair:

Robyn Spencer, Lehman College

229. 10:00 pm to 11:55 pm

Special Session savannah 2 & 3 POETRY SLAM.

saTURday, sePTeMBeR 26, 2015

230. 8:00 am to 2:00 pm Registration

Georgia Registration Office COnVenTIOn ReGIsTRaTIOn.

231. 8:00 am to 9:40 am

Chair:

Film Festival session

THE UNTOLD STORY OF EMMETT TILL, 70 MINUTES.

Telisha Bailey, University of Mississippi

Sponsor:

March on Washington Film Festival

Georgia 13

232. 8:00 am to 5:00 pm exhibitors Georgia 7, 8 and Pre-function Area (Exhibits) EXHIBITORS.

Participants:

Art Publishing and Distribution by Charles Bibbs

Association Book Exhibit

Auburn Avenue Research Library on African-American Culture & History

Everyone’s Place

Farmers Insurance

Foundation International Heritage International Fashions

Journal of African American History

Library Company of Philadelphia

McFarland Publishing

Middle Tennnessee State University

National Museum of American History

233. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Shannon King, The College of Wooster

Participants:

National Park Service-Southeast Regional Office Penguin Random House retiredslaves.com

Robin Lofton Scholars Choice

University of Arkansas Press

University of Georgia Press

University of Illinois Press

University of North Carolina Press

University Press Florida

Waldencorart Inc.

YBI African Apparel

Zee Crafts

Panel session

atlanta 2 POLITICS OF BLACK CRIME AND PROTEST.

“White Women Forced to Live in Negro Dives”: Black Men and “White Slavery” in New York City’s Interracial Sex Trade. Douglas Flowe, Washington University in St. Louis

Boiled Boyfriends and Scalded Spouses: Love, Pain, and Devious Behaviors in Twentieth Century Black America. Lauren Henley, University of Texas at Austin

The Next Stage in the Struggle: Civil Rights Activists as Political Staffers. Marsha Barrett, Mississippi State University

“Burn This Bitch Down”: Louis Head, Ferguson, and the Criminal Politics of Black Grief. Corinne Wohlford, Fontbonne University

Commentator:

Shannon King, The College of Wooster

234. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Panel session

atlanta 3 FROM THE COSBY SHOW TO BLACK-ISH AND EMPIRE: BLACK FAMILY REPRESENTATION VS REALITY.

Chair:

Tammy Henderson, UMBC

Participants:

Black Middle Class Flight and its Effects on the Urban Black Community. Kenneth Childs, University of Maryland Baltimore County

The Migrant Family: An Afrocentric Perspective. Amir Ali, University of Maryland Baltimore County; Tammy Henderson, UMBC

The Effects of Police Brutality on the Health of the Black Family. Ronald Stubblefield, New York University Law School

Commentator:

Tammy Henderson, UMBC

235. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session atlanta 4 RETHINKING BLACK HISTORY: NIKE, BLACK MASCULINITY AND SNEAKER CULTURE IDENTITY.

Billy Boyd Smith, Purdue University

Discussants:

Aria S. Halliday, Purdue University

Ivan Jackson, Purdue University

Kadari Taylor-Watson, Purdue University

Billy Boyd Smith, Purdue University

236. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Panel session

atlanta 5 SPIRITED AND SPIRITUAL: BLACK WOMEN’S POLITICAL ORGANIZING IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.

Chair:

John Higginson, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Participants:

Spiritual Not Superstitious: Black Women and Geechee Grassroots Organizing in Liberty County, Georgia, 1943-1950. Felicia Jamison, University of Massachusetts Amherst

A Radical Vision for Human Rights: Loretta Ross, Transnational Feminism, and Reproductive Justice. Destiney Lynn Linker, University of Massachusetts Amherst

A Matter of Choice: African American Women’s Reproductive Autonomy in the Early Twentieth Century. Joie Campbell, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Commentator:

Jeanne Theoharis, Brooklyn College

237. 8:30 am to 11:45 am

Participants:

Meeting

Capital Ballroom north ASALH BRANCH WORKSHOP.

Janet Sims-Wood, Bethel Dukes Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Barbara Spencer Dunn, DeVereux Family

Sylvia Y. Cyrus, Executive Director, ASALH

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Greer Charlotte Stanford-Randle, ASALH/ Paul Laurence Dunbar Branch at Dayton, OH & Executive Council, ASALH

Zende Larmar Clark, Executive Council, ASALH National Secretary

Dorothy F Bailey, PG County Branch of ASALH & Executive Council, ASALH

Johnnieque Blackmon Love, University of Maryland Libraries

Monroe Little, Executive Council, ASALH

238. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Panel session Conference Room 123 THE REVOLUTIONARIES SHAPING THE REVOLUTION: HIP HOP AS A MEDIUM FOR BLACK WOMEN’S LIBERATION.

Chair:

Rosa Clemente, UMass Amherst

Participants:

Black Motherhood through the eyes of a Revolutionary. Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

Don’t Drink the Pickle Juice: An Examination into the Feminism of Nicki Minaj. Marcus Ta’von Haynes, Clark Atlanta University

Homegirls: Helping, Healing, and Holding Each Other Down. Victoria Colston-Brooks, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Courtney Terry, Clark Atlanta University

239. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Participants:

Paper session

Conference Room 125 edUCaTIOn, aCHIeVeMenT, and COMMUnITy aCTIVIsM.

Arts Integration, Education and Community Orginizing. Chy’na Nellon, Helping Engage Art; Agnolia Beatrice Gay, Jacksonville

James Weldon Johnson Branch

Better to Have than to Have Not: Black History Knowledge, Career Aspirations and Academic Performance. Valerie N. Adams-Bass, University of California, Davis; Collette Chapman-Hilliard, College of Staten Island, City University of New York (CUNY)

Sustained Inequality: African-American Education in a “Post-Racial” Nation. Daniel R Davis, Kennedy-King College

Teaching Black Lives Matter: Using African American History to Empower Future Leaders. Amani Marshall, Georgia State University

For-profit Education and the Black Community. Wylie Jason Tidwell, Walden University

240. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session Conference Room 127 BLACK MASCULINITY AND SEXUAL IDENTITY.

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

Participants:

Black Social Fathers. Serie McDougal, San Francisco State University

Not Power and Not Domination: Making Masculinities in the Mississippi Movement. Francis Gourrier, University of WisconsinMadison

Return of the Mack! Black Male Empowerment in 1970s Blaxploitation Cinema. Joshua Kondwani Wright, University of Maryland Eastern Shore

241. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 129 BLACK WOMEN AND INCARCERATION.

Ella J Davis, Wayne County Community College

Participants:

Assault on Black Bodies: Women and Forced Sterilization in California Prisons. Arcadia LeVias, University at Albany

Black Women’s Narrative of Incarceration and Freedom. Natosha Briscoe, Clark Atlanta University

Samuel F. Yette Warned Us about Mass Abortion and Incarceration. Pamela E. Foster, Afro-American Historical and Genelogical Society

Commentator:

Ethan Staten Roy, North Carolina Central University

242. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 CIVIL RIGHTS AND BLACK INSTITUTIONAL LIFE, PRE-20TH CENTURY.

Frances Jones-Sneed, MCLA

Participants:

African Lodge #1: Prince Hall Freemasonry and African Liberation in America. JEFFERY MENZISE, Morgan State University

An Integrated View: Leadership Development, Institutional Analysis, and the Prince Hall Masonic Tradition. Michael Washington, Union Institute & University

Making Black Lives Matter at the Nadir: Black Institutional Culture in Early Twentieth Century Atlanta. Shirley Thompson, The University of Texas at Austin

Commentator:

Frances Jones-Sneed, MCLA

243. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

CONNECTING CENTURIES OF BLACK LIFE, HISTORY, AND CULTURE AT THE LIBRARY COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA.

Erica Armstrong Dunbar, University of Delaware

Participants:

Georgia 10

Carter G. Woodson and African American Education in the Long Nineteenth Century. Kabria Baumgartner, College of Wooster

Criminalizing Black Life in Colonial and Early Republic Literature. Emahunn Raheem Ali Campbell, Washington and Lee Unviersity

Bearing Witness: The Portraits of Early African American Ministers. Aston Gonzalez, Salisbury University

Thrills: On the Affective Lifeworld of the 19th Century Sex Trade. Emily Owens, Visiting Scholar, American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Commentator:

Erica Armstrong Dunbar, University of Delaware

244. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 11 LIFE, LIBERTY, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS: EXPLORING THE MYTH OF RACIAL EQUALITY IN THE UNITED STATES.

Carolyn Calloway Thomas, Indiana University

Participants:

Divide and Conquer: The Emergence of the Color Line in the 20th Century. Erica Cooper, Roanoke College

Death at the Hands of Persons Known: Justifying Hate and the 1992 Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill. Sharoni Little, University of Southern California

The Politics of Representation: Contesting Race, Voting Rights, and Privilege. Naomi Warren, University of Southern California

Commentator:

Carolyn Calloway Thomas, Indiana University

245. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

PATTERNS OF BLACK AGENCY IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY ATLANTIC.

William Alexander, Norfolk State University

Participants:

Freedom Seekers in 19th-Century Virginia. Cassandra Newby-Alexander, Norfolk State University

Georgia 12

Canga li”: African American Ideas about the Reopening the African Slave Trade. Kay Wright Lewis, Norfolk State University

Francophone Black Consciousness between the Haitian Revolution and Négritude: Vastey, Linstant, and Firmin. William Alexander, Norfolk State University

Commentator:

Cathy Jackson, Norfolk State University

246. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Film Festival session

Georgia 2 --aV Room RAZ BABAA AARON IBN PORI PITTS: PORTRAITS OF A REVOLUTIONARY ARTIST.

Nubia Kai, University of Maryland-Baltimore

247. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 3-a-V Room

THE NEGRO IN SPORTS: PROMISES, LIMITATIONS, AND UNSETTLED DEBATES, 1900—1970.

Dexter Blackman, Loyola Marymount University

Participants:

“African American Interscholastic and Intercollegiate Sport and the Problem of Professionalization, 1900—1930,”. J. Anthony Guillory, UMass Amherst

“The Most Misunderstood Person in American Sport History: Adolph Rupp and the Complicated Politics of Integration.” Jamal Ratchford, Colorado College

“The Negro Athlete and Victory”: Athletics and Athletes as Advancement Strategies in Black America, 1890s-1930s. Dexter Blackman, Loyola Marymount University

Commentators:

J. Anthony Guillory, UMass Amherst

Jamal Ratchford, Colorado College

248. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 4-a-V Room WHO IS BLACK?: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CONVERSATION WITH PUERTO RICANS ABOUT BLACKNESS.

Omar Eaton-Martinez, Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History

Discussants:

Jason Nichols, University of Maryland, College Park

Mayra Santos, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras

Zaira Rivera Casellas, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras

Mirerza Gonzalez Velez, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras

249. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 5-a-V Room TRANSNATIONAL RACIAL STRUGGLES IN SOUTH AFRICA AND NORTH AMERICA.

Tracy Hucks, Davidson College

Discussants:

Daniel W. Aldridge, III, Davidson College

Kelly Hilton, Davidson College

Laurian Bowles, Davidson College

Flanagan Brenda, Davidson Copllege

Alice Wiemers, Davidson College

Caroline Fache, Davidson College

250. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 6-a-V Room THE VISUAL CULTURE OF THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

Nikki Brown, University of New Orleans

Participants:

“The history that’s buried and forgot”: Images of Birmingham and Civil Rights Movement Consensus Narratives. Julie Buckner Armstrong, University of South Florida

“Discovering Hunger in America” The Politics of Race and Hunger in Photography, 1965-75”. Laurie Green, University of Texas, Austin “‘Based on a True Story:’ Remembering Civil Rights”. Bryan Jack, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

The New Orleans School Crisis from Black and White Photographers. Nikki Brown, University of New Orleans

Commentator:

Nikki Brown, University of New Orleans

251. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room UNCOVERING NEW ORLEANIANS’ AFRICAN DIASPORIC CULTURE: EXPLORATIONS OF MARDI GRAS INDIAN CULTURE.

Tiyi Morris, Ohio State University

Participants:

Mardi Gras Indian Queens: The Backbone, Not the Background, of a Unique Tradition. Lenise Alexandra Sunnenberg

Mardi Gras Indian Suits: Finding Empowerment Through Black History and Art. Ashley Theodore, Ohio State University

Mardi Gras Indians: A Story That Runs Deeper. Rian Hamadnalla Awad, Ohio State University

Mardi Gras Indians: Exploring the Intersection of History, Community, and Culture in a Unique Tradition. Torah M Silvera, Ohio State University

Mardi Gras Indians: Hurricane Katrina Could Not Stop Them. Angela Whipple, The Ohio State University

Commentator:

Tiyi Morris, Ohio State University

252. 8:30 am to 9:50 am Roundtable session

Chair:

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) USING THE ‘N-WORD’ TODAY: WHERE ARE WE, AND WHERE SHOULD WE BE HEADING?

Ronald Chennault, DePaul University

Discussants:

Kristal Moore Clemons, Florida A&M University

Charlton Copeland, University of Miami

Rodney Hopson, George Mason University

James Peterson, Lehigh University

253. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) THE LONG STRUGGLE FOR BLACK LIVES: SHADES OF FEMALE ACTIVISM 1960-2015.

Linda Diane Tomlinson, Fayetteville State University

Participants:

“’How We Gon’ Make A Black Nation Rise?’ Theorizing ‘African-Centered Mothering’ in New Afrika”. Asantewa Sunni-Ali, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign

“Transformative Politicized Activist Leadership in Atlanta, Georgia, 1964-1974: Dorothy Bolden, Ella Mae Brayboy and Pearlie Dove”. Christy Garrison-Harrison, Clark Atlanta University

“‘Education Didn’t Mean a Degree, It Means How We Serve Our Race and All Humanity’: Women’s Cultural Nationalist Activism and the Campus-Community Connection, 1967-1981”. Kenja R McCray, Atlanta Metropolitan State College

“’Nothing without a Woman or a Girl:’ Women in the Nation of Islam, 1960-1975.” Nafeesa Haniyah Muhammad, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

254. 8:30 am to 9:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby)

UNDERSTANDING SLAVERY AND EMANCIPATION IN THE DEEP SOUTH, 1830S-1865.

Miller William Boyd III, University of Mississippi

Participants:

Reassessing the Invisible Institution: Enslaved People’s Spiritual Lives in the Antebellum Southern Hill Country of Mississippi. Justin Isaac Rogers, University of Mississippi “Shall I Continue to Feed Them?”: The Origins of Federal Contraband Policy in the Arkansas Delta, 1862-1863. Roy Wisecarver, Texas A&M University

Experiences of Self-Emancipated African Americans in Mississippi Contraband Camps, 1862-1865. Kristin Bouldin, university of Mississippi

Commentator:

Shennette Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi

255. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session atlanta 2 BLACK POLITICS IN THE POST-CIVIL RIGHTS METROPOLIS: LEFT, RIGHT, AND CENTER.

Brett Gadsden, Emory University

Participants:

From Protest to Entrepreneurism: Leon H. Sullivan, Opportunities Industrialization Centers Inc., and Black Economic Empowerment in the United States. Jessica Ann Levy, Johns Hopkins University

“What Do I Do When Capital Goes on Strike?”: Kenneth Cockrel, DARE, and the Dilemmas of Black Governance in Detroit. Austin McCoy, University of Michigan

Elephants on Sweet Auburn: Atlanta’s Black Republicans at the Dawn of Post-Civil Rights Era. Danielle Lee Wiggins, Emory University

Commentator:

Francoise Hamlin, Brown University

256. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Library Session atlanta 3 aFRICan aMeRICan WOMen In THe aCadeMy: THRee GeneRaTIOns, THREE PERSPECTIVES, AND WHAT BRINGS AND HOLDS US TOGETHER?

Chair:

Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Discussants:

Johnnieque Blackmon Love, University of Maryland Libraries

Tahirah Akbar-Williams, University of Maryland Libraries

Asma Neblett, University of Maryland

Karen Jefferson, Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library

257. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Panel session

Chair:

atlanta 4 HIDING IN PLAIN SIGHT: AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN AND THE RECLAMATION OF “SPACE.”

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

Participants:

Ona Judge: The President’s Runaway Slave Woman. Erica Armstrong Dunbar, University of Delaware

“Half in Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Nellie Y. McKay.” Shanna Green Benjamin, Grinnell College

“African American Women in the Shadow of Outer Space: Black Women and the making of NASA”. Duchess Harris, Macalester College; Margot Lee Shetterly, The Human Computer Project Inc

Commentator:

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

258. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE: SEARCHING FOR BLACK WOMEN’S REDEMPTION IN CONTEMPORARY CULTURE AND FICTION.

Sika Dagbovie-Mullins, Florida Atlantic University

Participants:

Unsung Ways of Knowing in Contemporary Neo-Slave Narratives. Regis Marlene Mann, Florida Atlantic University

Comedic Transgressions: Black Women Performing Slavery in the Twenty-First Century. Sika Dagbovie-Mullins, Florida Atlantic University

Sister Saviors: Black Women as Support Networks for Incarcerated Black Males. Nghana Lewis, Tulane University

Commentator:

Pero Dagbovie, Michigan State University

259. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

5

Paper session

Conference Room 123 RACE AND PSYCHOLOGICAL/MEDICAL SCIENCE.

Deborah Moorhead, Nicholls State University

Participants:

African American Environmental Nostalgia: Collective Social-Ecological Memories. Douglas Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; Robin Jarrett, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Politicizing Medical Education: Race/Gender and the Redefinition of Medical Professionalization, 1968-1973. Ameenah Shakir, Florida A&M University

The Strange History and Career of Drapetomania: The Mania that Caused Negro Slaves to Runaway, 1851-1865. Dann J. Broyld “Healthcare Diplomacy: ELAM and the African-American Experience”. Kwasi Densu, Florida A & M University

“They had a lounge we had a locker room”: Black Women Hospital Workers in Charleston. Jewell Debnam, Michigan State University

Commentator:

Claudia D Nelson, Coppin State University

260. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 125 RACE AND SEXUALITY IN FICTIONAL NARRATIVES.

Latangela Lajuan Crossfield, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

Beyond Westeros: Fantasizing Blackness in the Fantasy Genre. Dexter Gabriel, SUNY-Stony Brook Life Upon These Shores: Robert Hayden’s “Middle Passage” and Samuel R. Delany’s Atlantis: Model 1924. Lavelle Porter, New York City College of Technology, CUNY

The Inability to Uncage the Myth: An Analysis of James Baldwin’s Black Female Characters. Tiffani J Smith, Claremont Graduate University

Commentator: Tiffani J Smith, Claremont Graduate University

261. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 127 BLACK MASCULINITY: PERFORMANCE, HEALTH, AND COLORISM.

Jonathan I Gayles, Georgia State University

Participants:

Black Men and Gender Minstrelsy. Brittany Sessions, Georgia State University

The Intersection of Black Masculine Identity and Mental Health. Jasmine Thomas, Georgia State University

He’s Dark, Dark: Exploring Colorism among Black Males. Edlin Veras, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Jonathan I Gayles, Georgia State University

262. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session Conference Room 129

“BLACK WOMEN HISTORIANS IN TEXAS AND THEIR CROSS-GENERATIONAL MEMORIES, FROM THE 1980S TO THE PRESENT”.

Karen Kossie-Chernyshev, Texas Southern University

Discussants:

Bernadette Pruitt, Sam Houston State University

Yvonne Davis Frear, San Jacinto College

Antrece Baggett, Houston Community College-Southeast

Shennette Garrett-Scott, University of Mississippi

263. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Conference Room 131 CLAIMING GEOGRAPHIES OF FREEDOM: SLAVERY AND RESISTANCE IN THE ANTEBELLUM SOUTH AND SOUTHWEST.

Catherine Clinton, University of Texas at San Antonio

Participants:

‘Go, You Are Free’”: Slavery, Emancipation, and the Gendering of Native American Slaveholding in Antebellum Oklahoma and Texas. Nakia D Parker, University of Texas at Austin

“Moved and Seduced by the Instigation of the Devil”: Enslaved Women and Infanticide in the 19th Century American South. Signe Peterson Fourmy, University of Texas at Austin

Commentator:

Sasha Turner, Quinnipiac University

264. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Panel session

Georgia 10 PRESERVING AND PRESENTING OUR HISTORY WITH TRADITIONAL AND DIGITAL MEDIA PLATFORMS.

Chair:

TaKeia Anthony, Edward Waters College, Jacksonville, Florida

Participants:

Preparing and Presenting Oral Histories. Angela Williamson, ASALH JWJ Branch, Clay County Historic Preservation Board, Southern New Hampshire University

Storytelling: Linking the Past to the Present. Sameila Adams, ASALH James Weldon Johnson Branch

Artistic Expressions in Cultural History. Laurence Walden, Jazz Art Decor

Commentators:

Abraham J. Williamson, Harvard Law School

Ricci DeForest, W.E.R.D. Radio, Madame C.J. Walker Museum Atlanta, Georgia

265. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Panel session

W. e. B. dU BOIs: Man and THeORIsT. Chair:

Rava Shelyn Chapman, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

Georgia 11

High Hope and Fixed Purpose: Frederick Douglass and the Talented Tenth on the American Plantation. La’Neice Littleton, Clark Atlanta University

Harlem Voices: Colorism and Multiple Consciouness in New Negro Fiction. Ebony Perro, Clark Atlanta University

Hypocrisy in the Life of W. E. B. Du Bois: Reconstructing Selective Memory. Bonnyeclaire Smith-Stewart, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Courtney Terry, Clark Atlanta University

266. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Ronald Chennault, DePaul University

Participants:

Panel session

Georgia 12 OBaMa, RaCe, and RHeTORIC.

Rhetoric vs. Reality: A Discourse Analysis of President Obama’s Views on Teachers Versus His Teacher Reform Initiatives. Karen Johnson, University of Utah Obama, Post-Racialism and the New American Dilemma. Zebulon Miletsky, Stony Brook University

Are African American Students the Only Ones Who Make Excuses? Obama’s Commencement Addresses at Morehouse and Barnard.

Ronald Chennault, DePaul University

Commentator:

Derrick Alridge, University of Virginia

267. 10:00 am to 11:30 am

Chair:

Film Festival session

Georgia 13 ORDINARY PEOPLE, EXTRAORDINARY DEEDS, 60 MINUTES.

Crystal Sanders, Pennsylvania State University

Panelists:

Mary Liuzzo Lillieboe, Yvette Johnson, Sarah Collins Rudolph Sponsor:

March on Washington Film Festival

268. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Roundtable session

Georgia 2 --aV Room SOS--CALLING ALL BLACK PEOPLE-BLACK ARTS MOVEMENT ARTISTS, aCTIVIsTs and IMPaCT.

James Smethurst, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Discussants:

Candy Tate, Emory University

John Bracey, University of Massachusetts - Amherst Sonia Sanchez, Temple University--Emeritus Jim Alexander, Artist

269. 10:00 am to 11:50 am Presidential session

Georgia 3-a-V Room CIVIL RIGHTS AND CIVIL WRONGS: THE SHAPING OF BLACK LIFE, HISTORY AND CULTURE IN AMERICA THROUGH THE EYES OF THREE GENERATIONS.

Chair:

Christi Griffin, The Ethics Project Participants:

Civil Rights and Civil Wrongs: The Shaping of Black Life, History and Culture in America through the Eyes of Three Generations. US Ambassador Andrew J Young, The Andrew J. Young Foundation

Civil Rights and Civil Wrongs: The Shaping of Black Life, History and Culture in America through the Eyes of Three Generations. Dr. Bernard Lafayette, The Southern Christian Leadership Conference Civil Rights and Civil Wrongs: The Shaping of Black Life, History and Culture in America through the Eyes of Three Generations.

Christi Griffin, The Ethics Project Commentator:

Redditt Hudson, The Ethics Project, Co-Founder, National Coalition of Law Enforcement Officers for Justice (NCLEOJ) Panelists:

Mary Liuzzo Lillieboe, Yvette Johnson, Sarah Collins Rudolph Sponsor: March on Washington Film Festival

270. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Panel session Georgia 4-a-V Room

INTERNATIONALIZING THE BLACK EXPERIENCE:CULTURE, POLITICS, AND HISTORY. THIS SESSION DEDICATED TO THE UNITED NATIONS INTERNATIONAL DECADE FOR PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT 2015-2024. THEMES: RECOGNITION, JUSTICE, AND DEVELOPMENT.

Chair:

Tiffany Ruby Patterson, Vanderbilt University

Participants:

Making the Invisible Visible: Portraying the Global African Diaspora.” Sheila Walker, United Nations

“Hang your conscience on a peg’: The African National Congress and NAACP’s Efforts to Delegitimize the World Bank’s Loans to Apartheid South Africa, 1948-1953. Carol Anderson, Emory University

The Other Americans: Black Women Ex-Patroits in Europe. Tracy D Sharpley-Whiting, Vanderbilt University

World History in Blackface: Impact of Black People on World History. Tiffany Ruby Patterson, Vanderbilt University

Commentator:

Darlene Clark Hine, Northwestern University

271. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

SPORTS HISTORY AS CIVIL RIGHTS HISTORY.

Aram Goudsouzian, Universiry of Memphis

Discussants:

John Matthew Smith, Georgia Tech

Eric Allen Hall, Georgia Southern University

Pellom McDaniels III, Emory University

Louis Moore, Grand Valley State University

Theresa Runstedtler, American University

272. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 6-a-V Room

BUILDING THE BLACK METROPOLIS: AFRICAN AMERICAN ENTREPRENEURSHIP IN CHICAGO.

Robert Weems, Wichita State University

Participants:

King of Selling: The Rise and Fall of S.B. Fuller. Clovis Semmes, University of Missouri-Kansas City

The Politics of the Drive-Thru Window: Chicago’s Black McDonald’s Operators and the Demands of Community. Marcia Chatelain, Georgetown University

Jim Crow Organized Crime: Black Chicago’s Underground Economy in the Twentieth Century. Will Cooley, Walsh University

Positive Realism: Thomas Burrell and the Development of Chicago as a Center for Black-Owned Advertising Agencies. Jason P. Chambers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Commentator:

Robert Weems, Wichita State University

273. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room

SLAVERY AND SEXUALITY: NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE HISTORY OF SLAVERY.

Deborah Gray White, Rutgers University, New Brunswick

Participants:

“Clothing Carnal Knowledge: Designing, Masking and Revealing Sexuality in the Slave Female’s Costume”. Brenda Stevenson, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

“Enchained Masculinity: African American Men of the Slave South”. Leslie M. Harris, Emory University

“Liberty’s Pains and Pleasures: Enslaved Women’s Sexuality, Resistance, and Freedom in the Revolutionary Era”. Barbara Krauthamer, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Commentator:

Daina Ramey Berry, University of Texas-Austin

274. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby)

NOVEL APPROACHES TO TEACHING THE MODERN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.

Ava Purkiss, University of Virginia

Participants:

‘A Share of all Remembering’: Teaching the Civil Rights Movement in the Round. Deborah E. McDowell, University of Virginia Mapping Local Struggle: Digital, Fictional and Archival Geographies in the Classroom. Laura E. Helton, Penn State University Education for Liberation: Two Models of Freedom School Praxis. Nicole Burrowes, Brown University

Commentator:

LaTasha B. Levy, University of Virginia

275. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby)

BLACK WOMEN’S HISTORICAL SOURCES: NEW PERSPECTIVES, NEW DIRECTIONS.

Sharita Jacobs Thompson, Independent Scholar

Participants:

“They were a Danger to Themselves”: Black Women, Involuntary Commitment and the Michigan Mental Hygiene System during the Early 20th Century. Shelby Pumphrey, Michigan State University

“I Don’t Have Time for the Folly of Racism”: Merze Tate and the Pioneering of Black Women Students at Predominately White Universities in the Midwest. LaNesha DeBardelaben, Michigan State University

Worthy Daughters of the Soil: Benevolence and the American West Indian Ladies Aid Society, 1915-1936. Janelle Edwards, Michigan State University

Commentator:

Shannon King, The College of Wooster

276. 10:00 am to 11:50 am

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) sTePPInG OUTsIde OF nORMaTIVe naRRaTIVes: MUSIC, PATRIOTISM, ANARCHISM, AND VISUAL ARTS.

Lia T. Bascomb, Georgia State University

Participants:

Feelin’ Myself: Narrative Experiences of Female Hip Hop Artists. Jessie Feigert, Georgia State University

Give Me Liberty: Dark Horse Comic, Martha Washington-An Afrofuturistic Reimagined Black American Icon. Grace Gipson, University of California, Berkeley

Grown Folks Don’t Need Government: A Case for African Anarchism in Black Liberation Efforts. John Horhn, Georgia State University

Soul: From Music to the Visual Arts. Danielle Rosenthal, Georgia State University

Commentator:

Lia T. Bascomb, Georgia State University

277. 11:45 am to 1:45 pm Film Festival session

Chair:

Georgia 13 NESHOBA: THE PRICE OF FREEDOM BY MICKI DICKOFF & TONY PAGANO, 86 MINUTES.

Nan Woodruff, Pennsylvania State University

278. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

MOVEMENT LEGACIES: BLACK POWER SPEAKS TO THE 21ST CENTURY.

Chair:

Edward Onaci, Ursinus College

Participants:

The Changing Same: Urban Communities and Rebellion Aftermath. Ashley M. Howard, Loyola University New Orleans “No Strings Attached?”: The Legacy of Black Power’s Church-Based Funding. Kerry Pimblott, University of Wyoming Funding the “Revolution”: Black Power. White Church Money and the Financial Architects of Black Radicalism 1966 – 1976. Richard D. Benson II, Spelman College

Commentator:

Stephanie Seawell, Illinois Labor History Society

279. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

3 EDUCATIONAL JUSTICE, PROTEST SONGS, AND MASS INCARCERATION: A SURVEY AND CRITIQUE OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN STRUGGLE FOR JUSTICE.

Chair:

Ronald Jemal Stephens, Purdue University

Participants:

Unlocking the Golden Door of Freedom: Booker T. Washington as a Pioneer of Educational Justice. Keturah Nix, Purdue University African American Artists in the Global Fight for Justice:Black Music and the Framing of Protest Songs during the Anti-Apartheid Struggle. Jonathan Richard Freeman, Purdue University

Prison nation: Lies, corporate ties, and the pursuit of pursuit of Profit: Re-Imaging the Privatization of Prisons and the 21st Century Mass Incarceration Crisis. Na’eemah Webb, Purdue University

Commentator:

Ronald Jemal Stephens, Purdue University

280. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

4 RACIAL DISCRIMINATION IN TEXAS’S CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM.

Chair:

Maco L. Faniel, Rutgers University

Participants:

The Execution of Adrian Johnson: Social Reaction to the Racial Discrimination of “Old Sparky.” Elizabeth Neucere, Sam Houston State University

The War on Drugs in Houston: Lee Brown’s Crackdown on Crack. Michael “Gradie” Norman, Sam Houston State University Use of Force Reforms in the Texas Department of Corrections. Corey Ryan, Sam Houston State University

Commentator:

Jeffery Littlejohn, Sam Houston State University

281. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Panel session atlanta 5 UNCOVERING FORGOTTEN BRIDGES: COUNTERCULTURE, COMMUNITY BUILDING and MIGRaTIOn In THe 20TH CenTURy.

Chair:

Glenn Chambers, Michigan State University

Participants:

From White Panthers to Rainbow Peoples: Counterculture, Black Power and Coalition building in Southeast Michigan. Ryan Huey, Michigan State University

Crossing Racial Lines Through Print Media: The Black Panther Party and the August 29th Movement. Eddie Bonilla, Michigan State University

Where Have All The Jobs Gone: Push back to Igbo Migration in British Southern Cameroon. James Blackwell, Michigan State University

Commentator:

Glenn Chambers, Michigan State University

282. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

283. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Participants:

LeVar Burton, Actor

Luncheon

Capital Ballroom north ABWH LUNCHEON.

Luncheon

Capital Ballroon Center and south JOHN BLASSINGAME LUNCHEON.

Donata Russell Ross, CEO, Concessions International (Atlanta, GA) and Centennial Honorary Committee Member

Speaker:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH Invocation and Grace:

Rev. Frank Brown, Concerned Black Clergy of Metropolitan Atlanta, Inc Benediction:

Rev. Lawrence Edward Carter, Morehouse College Emcee:

Tiffany Cochran-Edwards, The Cochran Firm

Entertainment:

Wesley International School Choir

Announcement of Partnership between ASALH and the Black Classics Press to Republish Associated Publishers Works.

284. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Emory S Campbell, Past Director of Penn Center

Participants:

Paper session

Conference Room 123 Pan aFRICanIsM.

A Sterling Legacy: The Impact of Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois on African Politics and History. Uraina N Pack, Independent Scholar Dreaming of Algiers in Babylon: Black Radicalism and the Fight for a Unified African Continent. Paraska Lorraine Tolan, University of Pennsylvania

Carving Out A New Life: Design Motifs of the Surinam Maroon Arts. David Michael Jamison, Miami University -- MIddletown Quicksand: The Slow Demise of Black Social Science, Kelly Harris, Chicago State University

Commentator:

Emory S Campbell, Past Director, Penn Community Center

285. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Paper session

Conference Room 131 HISTORIOGRAPHY, ORAL HISTORY, AND RACIAL HERITAGE.

Linda Diane Tomlinson, Fayetteville State University

Participants:

Charles Chesnutt: North Carolina Writer Fathers Smith College’s First Black Students, Parts 1 & 2. Pamela E. Foster, Afro-American Historical and Genelogical Society

Preserving the Legacy: An Oral History of The Dr. Carter G. Woodson Museum. Sean Dickerson, University of South Florida; Vonzell Agosto, University of South Florida

Principles of Malinke Historiography. Nubia Kai, University of Maryland-Baltimore

The Southern Literary Renaissance of Lillian B. Horace. kYmberly Mieshia Dionne Keeton, Lincoln University - Missouri

Commentator:

Linda Diane Tomlinson, Fayetteville State University

286. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Panel session

WHAT’S LEFT IN THE BLACK FREEDOM STRUGGLE?

Chair:

Dayo Gore, University of California San Diego

Participants:

The Drifters’ Guide to “The American Negro”: Revolutionary Formations at the Crossroads of Great Migrations. W. Chris Johnson, University of Memphis

Harlem, Havana and Hanoi: Robert Des Verney and Black radical political culture in the 1960s. Robyn Spencer, Lehman College A Tendency Towards Naked Power: C. L. R. James and the Limits of National Self-Determination in the Black Freedom Movement.

Minkah Makalani, University of Texas at Austin

Commentator:

Dayo Gore, University of California San Diego

287. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm Film Festival session

WEDNESDAYS IN MISSISSIPPI: WOMEN’S MINISTRY OF PResenCe dURInG FReedOM sUMMeR 1964.

Chair:

Tiyi Morris, Ohio State University

Commentators:

Tiyi Morris, Ohio State University

Marlene McCurtis, Wednesdays in Mississippi Film Project

Debbie Harwell, University of Houston

to

Chair:

SESSION CANCELLED

RACIAL SEMANTICS, WHITE ANGST AND THE FEAR OF BLACKNESS IN OBAMA’S POST RACIAL AMERICA.

Aretina Hamilton, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

Discussants:

Akil Houston, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

LaToya Eaves, Middle Tennessee State University

Bayyinah S. Jeffries, Department of African American Studies, Ohio University

Priscilla McCutcheon, University of Connecticut

Stephany Rose, University of Colorado Colorado Springs

Sydney Joslin-Knapp, Ohio University, Department of African American Studies

290. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 6-a-V Room

HEALTH AND WELLNESS ADVOCACY: A NEW PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT PATHWAY FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES (INVITED SESSION SPONSORED BY FIRE!!!).

Ronald W Bailey, University of Illinois

Participants:

#BlackGirlsRun: Promoting Positive Health and Wellness Outcomes Using Social Media. Felicia Harris, University of HoustonDowntown

Racial Discrimination and Mental Health: Exploring Variations in the Family Context. Sharde McNeil Smith, Department of African American Studies, University of Illinois

Black Women and their Health: An Agenda for Research. Jamae Morris, Georgia State University

Obstacles and Options to Faith-based HIV Service Delivery to Low-Income Inner City Residents: Perspectives of Black Clergy with Commuter Congregations. Sarita Davis, Georgia State University

Commentators:

Akinyele Umoja, Georgia State Universeity

Safiya Omari, Associate Vice President for Research, Jackson State University,

291. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Georgia 9-a-V Room AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO PROMOTING CULTURAL HERITAGE AT HBCU: EXPLORING THE NEXUS BETWEEN THE LIBRARY, ACADEMY AND PUBLIC HISTORY.

Cedric Davis, Alabama State University

Participants:

The National Center for the Study of Civil Rights and African American Culture: A Hub for Public Outreach and Programming. Dorothy Walker, Alabama State University

The University Archives: A Symbiotic Relationship with the Library, National Center, and the History and Political Science Department. Howard Overton Robinson, Alabama State University

The Academy: The History and Political Science Department and its relativity to the National Center. Dorothy Autrey, Alabama State University

Establishing a Cultural Learning Place as a Library Model for Preserving Cultural Heritage and Public History at Alabama State University. Janice Franklin, Alabama State University

Commentator:

Mitzi Townes, Alabama State University

292. 12:00 pm to 1:45 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) CIVIL RIGHTS AND BEYOND: THE BATTLE FOR SOCIAL, LEGAL, AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE IN THE DEEP SOUTH, 1940S-1970S.

Telisha D Bailey, University of Mississippi

Participants:

“They Had the Brains but They Didn’t Have the Expertise”: African American Women’s Health Care Providers at the Taborian Hospital, 1940s-1950s Katrina Sims. Katrina R Sims, University of Mississippi

White, Black, and Blue: The Battle over Black Police, Professionalization, and Police Brutality in Birmingham, Alabama, 1963-1967. Bryan Kessler, university of Mississippi

Commentator:

Daphne Chamberlain, Tougaloo College

293. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

EXPLORING THE POLITICAL AND INTELLECTUAL IMAGINATION OF W. E. B. DU BOIS.

Stephanie Shaw, Ohio State University

Participants:

2

“The Problem of Haiti as it Stands Today:” W. E. B. Du Bois on the U.S. Occupation of Haiti, 1915-1934. Brandon Byrd, Mississippi State University

“I Am Ashamed of My Own Lack of Foresight”: W. E. B. Du Bois and the Troubled Legacy of World War I. Chad Williams, Brandeis University

Out of Touch or Visionary?: W. E. B. Du Bois, Self-Segregation and the NAACP. Shawn Leigh Alexander, WEB Dubois An American Intellectual and Activist

Commentator:

Stephanie Shaw, Ohio State University

294. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Panel session atlanta 3

UNRAVELING THE CHAINS: BLACK WOMANHOOD and THe BOUndaRIes OF GendeR and FReedOM.

Chair:

Manisha Sinha, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Participants:

“‘As much as I love freedom, I do not like to look upon it:’ Buying Freedom in Harriet Jacobs’ Narrative.” Julia Wallace Bernier, University of Massachusetts Amherst

“‘The Fair Daughters of Africa:’ Abolitionism, Black Feminism, and the Politics of Respectability”. Nneka Dennie, University of Massachusetts Amherst

“’Her voice is charming, her manner refined:’ Black Womanhood, Respectability, and Frances Ellen Watkins’ Anti-Slavery Lectures”.

Johanna Maria Ortner, UMass Amherst

Commentator:

Manisha Sinha, University of Massachusetts Amherst

295. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Panel session atlanta 4 CONNECTING BLACK POWER IN THE AFRICAN DIASPORA.

Chair:

Quito Swan, Howard University

Participants:

Civil Rights and Black Power Movement in New Orleans, Louisiana. Greg Bosworth, Southern University and A&M College

‘We Have Done Black Things Today...Will You?’ New Concept Development Center and the Chicago Black Power Education Project.” Worth Kamili Hayes, Tuskegee University

Marshall “Eddie” Conway, Black Power In Baltimore, and Political Prisoners in American Memory. John Randolph Tilghman, Tuskegee University

Black Power and Pan-Africanism in Trinidad Revisited. Godrey Vincent, Tuskegee University

Commentator:

Quito Swan, Howard University

296. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session atlanta 5 BLACK STUDIES AND BLACK POLITICS IN CHICAGO.

Jeffrey Helgeson, Texas State University

Discussants:

Martha Biondi, Northwestern University & Executive Council, ASALH

Keeanga Yamahtta Taylor, Princeton University

Lionel Kimble, Chicago State University & Executive Council, ASALH

Marcia Chatelain, Georgetown University

297. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

STOKELY CARMICHAEL: HIS LIFE AND LEGACY.

Aram Goudsouzian, Universiry of Memphis

Discussants:

Ashley Farmer, Duke University

W. Chris Johnson, University of Memphis

Yohuru Williams, Fairfield University

Peniel Joseph, Tufts University

Charles E. Cobb, Independent Scholar

298. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Leaders:

Frances Jones-Sneed, MCLA

Workshop session

TEACHING THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK.

MaryNell Morgan-Brown, SUNY – Empire State College

Whitney Battle-Baptiste, University of Massachusetts – Amherst

Nadine V. Nadine V. Wedderburn, SUNY Empire State College

299. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Capital Ballroom north

Conference Room 123

Paper session

Conference Room 125 RACE AND THE DYNAMICS OF MALE/FEMALE RELATIONSHIPS.

Tera Eva Agyepong, DePaul University

Participants:

AARMS: The African American Relationships and Marriage Strengthening Curriculum for African American Relationships Courses and Programs. Patricia Dixon, Georgia State University

Conservative Gender Roles in Black Communities. Kelli Boyd, Cal State Fullerton

For the Love of Black Men. Chyna Yvonne Davis, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Tera Eva Agyepong, DePaul University

300. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

BLACK URBAN COMMUNITIES AND RACIAL IDENTITY.

Amilcar Shabazz, University of Massachusetts

Participants:

Conference Room 127

Cisco Kid Has Something to Say: WAR’s Cosmopolitan Response to Ghetto Life. Travis K. Lacy, University of Nevada, Reno Crafting the “New American Minority,” Nixon, Black Progress, & America’s War on Poverty, 1969-1972. Danielle St. Julien, Binghamton University

Forged by Fire: Detroit’s Riots & Rebellions and How Chaos Created a Community. Jamon Jordan, ASALH-Detroit, Vice President; Founder & CEO of Black Scroll History & Tours

‘Suburban Renewaled’: Revising the Great Migration Narrative. Chad Montrie, University of Massachusetts Lowell

Commentator:

Amilcar Shabazz, University of Massachusetts

301. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

PRECARITY AND THE BLACK MIDDLE CLASS IN THE POST-RACE ERA.

Simone Drake, Ohio State University

Discussants:

Simone Drake, Ohio State University

Devin Fergus, Ohio State University

Adia Harvey Wingfield, Georgia State University

L’Heureux Lewis-McCoy, The City College of New York

Dwan Simmons, Kennesaw State University

Andrea Gillespie, Emory University

302. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Paper session

131 BLACK WOMEN’S ACTIVISM.

Kevin Greene, The University of Southern Mississippi

Participants:

“Now is the Time to Plan for your Future”: Sarah Spencer Washington and the Black Freedom Struggle in New Jersey, 1913-1953. Hettie V Williams, Monmouth University

Daughters of Ida B. Wells-Barnett: African American Womens’ Activism during the Civil Rights Movement in Chicago. William Horatio Adams, University of Kansas

I Am Woman: examining the activism of Bennett College women from 1958-1961. Jasmin Howard, Ohio State University

Moms Mabley and the Civil Rights Movement. Sarah Wolk, UC Riverside

Commentator:

Shirley Thompson, The University of Texas at Austin

303. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session Georgia 10 AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY AND BLACK STUIDES OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES.

V. P. Franklin, University of California, Riverside

Discussants:

Gerald Horne, University of Houston

Sheila Walker, United Nations

Jean Augustine, Commissioner, Province of Canada

V. P. Franklin, University of California, Riverside

304. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm Workshop session

11 DR. FELIX ARMFIELD SERIES FOR EMERGING SCHOLARS: SESSION II : THE ACT OF BEING AN ACADEMIC: HOW CAN I HELP YOU?

Leaders:

Ula Taylor, University of California UC Berkeley

Jessica Marie Johnson, Michigan State University

Melanye Price, Rutgers University

Jessica Millward, University of California, Irvine

305. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Michelle R. Scott, UMBC

Participants:

ABILITY, LEADERSHIP, AND REMEMBRANCE STORIES: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PATHS IN BLACK HISTORY.

Black Women in the West: Agency and Authority. Raquel Grinage, UMBC

Able, Black, Female: Representations of Sojourner Truth in Theories of Embodiment. Camille Bethune-Brown, UMBC/ American University

Remembering Randolph: Race and the Fight Against World War II Segregation in Civil Service. Jennifer Montooth, UMBC

Southern Sisterhood: Race, Gender, and Power in the Baptist Church. Jordan Weddington, UMBC

Commentator:

Michelle R. Scott, UMBC

306. 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm Film Festival session

Chair:

Georgia 13 BADDDDD SONIA SANCHEZ BY ATTIE, GOLDWATER & GORDON, 90 MINUTES.

Sonya Sanchez, Temple University (Emeritus)

Sponsor: California Newsreel

307. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Library Session

Georgia 2 --aV Room AFRICANA INFORMATION PROFESSIONALS COLLABORATING, NETWORKING AND SUPPORTING ASALH BRANCHES.

Johnnieque Blackmon Love, University of Maryland Libraries

Discussants:

Sharon E. Robinson, Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American Culture and History/Central Library

Vivian Fisher, Enoch Pratt Free Library

Akilah Nosakhere, New Mexico State University Library

Doretha Williams, George Washington University

308. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Presidential session

Georgia 3-a-V Room AFRICAN AMERICANS AND GLOBAL WEALTH IN THE 21ST CENTURY.

James Stewart, Pennsylvania State University (Emeritus)

Participants:

Building Family Wealth. Donata Russell Ross, CEO, Concessions International (Atlanta, GA)

New Challenges and Opportunities in the Global Economy. Thomas “Danny” Boston, Georgia Tech University

Growing Changes in Capital for Businesses and Global Relationships in the African Diaspora. John Hope Bryant, CEO, Operation Hope (Atlanta, GA)

Dr. Ronald Johnson, Clark Atlanta University

309. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

STRENGTHS AND VULNERABILITIES IN BLACK WOMEN’S MENTAL HEALTH: TRANSFORMATIONS BETWEEN VICTIMIZATION AND VOICE.

Stephanie Evans, Clark Atlanta University

Participants:

The Reality of TV: The Influence of Media Images on Black Women’s Mental Health. Nsenga Burton, Clark Atlanta University Selfies, Subtweets, & Suicide: Social Media as a Mediator and Agitator of Mental Health for Black Women. Joy Bradford, Clark Atlanta University

Transgenerational Journey: Child Sex Trafficking and the Plight of the Black Girl and Mother. Sharnell Myles, youthSpark, Inc.

From the Margins: Sacred Space as a Means of Empowerment for Women and Girls. Kanika Bell-Thomas, Clark Atlanta University

Commentator:

Nsenga Burton, Clark Atlanta University

310. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

session

SACRED AND PROFANE: THE FUNK/SPIRIT, PENTECOSTAL MUSIC, AND THE NASTY GROOVE.

Randal Maurice Jelks, University of Kansas

Participants:

“‘Runnin’ From the Devil’: The Ohio Players and Sonic Representations of the Devil and Hell.”. Scot Brown, UCLA

“Reverend Utah Smith: Faith, Funk, and Pentecostal Music Practices.” Anndretta Lyle, UCLA

“Are You Funkified?: The Choreopoetics of Sly and the Family Stone”. Tony Bolden, University of Kansas

311. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Participants:

Panel session

THE OLD HISTORY OF THE NEW JIM CROW: RaCe and a CenTURy OF Mass InCaRCeRaTIOn.

What ‘Humane’ Meant to Reconstruction-Era Prison Reformers: Defining a Moral Incarceration Regime after the Civil War Prison Atrocities? Elaine Franz Parsons, Duquesne University

“Subjected to still greater punishment”: Testimonial Incapacity as a Collateral Consequence of Criminal Conviction in the 19th Century South. Pippa Holloway, Middle Tennessee State University

The New Jim Crow: The Latest Manifestation Of An Old Strategy Using Narcotics To Racialize. Maco L. Faniel, Rutgers University Protesting Medicine Behind Bars: Prisoners’ and Patients’ Activism in the 1970s. Anne E. Parsons, University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Chair:

Elizabeth Hinton, Harvard University

Commentator:

Heather Ann Thompson, University of Michigan

312. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

DR. CARTER G. WOODSON AND DR. MARY MCLEOD BETHUNE: A DYNAMIC DUO FOR THEIR PEOPLE.

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

Participants:

Georgia 9-a-V Room

The Carter Woodson-Mary McLeod Bethune Duo: His Assistance to Her. Elaine M. Smith, Independent Scholar

Re-examining the Global Impact of Carter Woodson and Mary McLeod Bethune through National Historic Sites. Joy Kinard, National Park Service

Mary McLeod Bethune and Carter G. Woodson: Quid Pro Quo? Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University & Executive Council, ASALH

313. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 1 (Level 2 Lobby) IN KEEPING WITH WOODSON: WORKING ACROSS DISCIPLINES IN AFRICANA STUDIES AT LEHIGH UNIVERSITY.

James Peterson, Lehigh University

Discussants:

Susan Kart, Lehigh University

Darius Williams, Lehigh University

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

314. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Panel session

Savannah 2 (Level 2 Lobby) FROM SLAVERY TO FREEDOM: BLACK WOMEN IN THE AMERICAS.

Noelle Trent, University of Maryland College

Participants:

Black Women in Sixteenth Century La Española (1502-1606). Lissette Acosta Corniel, CUNY Dominican Studies Institute

“Save My Mother Gentlemen, If You Kill Me”: Genocidal Violence towards African American Women During the Civil War. Kay

Wright Lewis, Norfolk State University

Black Women and The Bureau’s Transportation Program in the Nation’s Capital. Sharita Jacobs Thompson, Independent Scholar

Commentator:

Ana Lucia Araujo, Howard University

315. 2:00 pm to 3:50 pm

Chair:

Roundtable session

Savannah 3 (Level 2 Lobby) PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE: THE JOURNEY OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM AT CLAYTON STATE UNIVERSITY.

LaJuan Simpson-Wilkey, Clayton State University

Discussants:

Eric Bridges, Clayton State University

Cynthia McKinney, Clayton State University

Shannon Cochran, Clayton State University

Tamika Blount, Clayton State University

316. 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm

Plenary session

Capital Ballroom north GIVE LIGHT AND PEOPLE WILL FIND THE WAY: THE FUTURE OF THE FIELD OF BLACK WOMEN’S STUDIES.

Chair:

Natanya Duncan, Lehigh University

Discussants:

Farah Griffin, Columbia University

Faye V. Harrison, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Jessica Marie Johnson, Michigan State University

Tiffany Gill, University of Delaware

Tiffany Ruby Patterson, Vanderbilt University

Alondra Nelson, Columbia University

317. 4:15 pm to 6:45 pm

Chair:

Film Festival session Georgia 13 MUMIA: LONG DISTANCE REVOLUTIONARY BY STEPHEN VITTORIA, 120 MINUTES.

Kenja McCray, Atlanta Metropolitan State College

317.1 6:00 pm to 8:00 pm ASWH

318. 7:00 pm to 8:55 pm

Chair:

JESSIE OWENS BY STANLEY NELSON, 85 MINUTES.

Pellon McDaniels III, Emory University

319. 7:30 pm to 10:00 pm

Participants:

Moses Massenburg, Clark Atlanta University

Akinyele Umoja, Georgia State Universeity

Banquet Capital Ballroon Center and south ASALH AWARDS GALA.

Sheila Flemming-Hunter, Clark Atlanta University and Chair, National Centennial Committee.

Charles Bibbs, ASALH Artist-In-Residence

Martin Mitchell, Mitchell Harpos Syphoe

Speaker:

Daryl Michael Scott, Howard University & Centennial President, ASALH

Dorothy Bailey, ASALH Awards Committee Co-Chair

Gina Paige, ASALH Awards Committee Co-Chair

Amina King, Introduction of Speaker

Sylvia Cyrus, ASALH Executive Director

Janet Sims-Wood, ASALH Vice President for Membership

Susan L Taylor, National CARES Mentoring Movement, Co-Chair, Centennial National Honorary Committee

Invocation & Grace:

Bishop John Hurst Adams, ASALH Centennial Committee

Benediction:

Rev. William Flippin, Greater Piney Grove Baptist Church

Emcee:

Blayne Alexander, WXIA/11Alive

Entertainment:

Positive Arts Movement.

Award Recipients:

Dr. David Levering-Lewis, New York University, Carter G. Woodson Scholars Medallion Recipient

The Honorable John Lewis, GA 5th Congressional District, John Hope Franklin Centennial Lifetime Achievement Award

SUNday, September 27, 2015

sUnday, sePTeMBeR 27, 2015

320. 8:00 am to 9:30 am

Participant:

Capital Ballroom south ASALH ECUMENICAL BREAKFAST.

Henrietta Antonin, Atlanta Life Insurance Company (Retired) Invocation and Grace:

Bishop Carolyn Tyler Guidry, Elected and Consecrated Bishop African Methodist Episcopal Church Benediction:

Rev. Ayana Madzimoyo, Shrine of the Black Madonna of the Pan African Orthodox Christian Church Emcee:

Alexis Scott, Former Publisher, Atlanta Daily World

Keynote Speaker:

Rev. C.T. Vivian, C.T. Vivian Leadership Institute

Entertainment:

Wheat Street Baptist Church, Inspirational Sounds of Praise

321. 10:00 am to 2:30 pm Tour

February 20, 2016

Authors Event: 10 a.m. - 12:30 pm • Luncheon: 12:30p.m.

On behalf of the 1.6 million members of the American Federation of Teachers, we salute the Association for the Study of African American Life and History for its century of proclaiming the centrality of African Americans in the making of American history.

As ASALH celebrates its centennial, the AFT joins with you in reaffirming the belief of ASALH founder Carter G. Woodson that historical truth will crush falsehoods and open the way to racial equality, opportunity and democracy for all.

Across America, the AFT is working with parents, community leaders and allies like ASALH to reclaim the promise of public education to help all children succeed. We are united in our shared commitment to reclaiming the promise of an America that values equity in its policies and equality in its practices—a nation that embraces the history and the contributions of all its people.

Randi Weingarten

Lorretta Johnson

Mary Cathryn Ricker

The American Federation of Teachers is a union of 1.6 million professionals that champions fairness; democracy; economic opportunity; and high-quality public education, healthcare and public services for our students, their families and our communities. We are committed to advancing these principles through community engagement, organizing, collective bargaining and political activism, and especially through the work our members do.

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