The Tribune TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 20 2024 | VOL. 43 | ISSUE 19
Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University
THETRIBUNE.CA | @THETRIBUNECA
EDITORIAL
SPECIAL
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Black-Palestinian solidarity serves as an example of liberation for all, by all
The Deadly “Start-Up Nation”
Black Theatre Workshop’s ‘Diggers’ is a tribute to essential workers
PG. 8-9
PG. 5
PG. 7
(Mason Bramadat / The Tribune)
Anthropologist and filmmaker Sheila Walker showcases documentary and discusses the plurality PG.4 of Black communities
Professor David Austin’s ‘Black Politics in Dark Times’ talk explores history as a methodology Austin reflected on his 2013 book ‘Fear of a Black Nation’ and its 2023 second edition Eliza Lee News Editor
O
n Feb. 12, a small crowd gathered in the Rare Books Collection in McLennan Library for a talk by David Austin entitled “Black Politics in Dark Times: Revisiting Fear of a Black Nation After Ten Years.” Austin—a McGill alum and
professor in the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada and in the Humanities, Philosophy, and Religion Department at John Abbott College—offered reflections on his 2013 book Fear of a Black Nation: Race, Sex, and Security in Sixties Montreal and on its second edition released in 2023. In the book, Austin discusses the history of Black political organization in the city and its connections to organizing beyond Montreal, as well as state surveillance and policing
Podcasting with BSN’s Soul Talks
Soul Talks dives into Black culture and experiences at McGill Claudia Efemini Contributor
J
ust over a year ago, McGill students Pamela Fankem, U2 Science, and Zoë Anum, U1 Arts, helped launch McGill’s Black Students Network’s (BSN) podcast Soul Talks. By engaging in deep chats on topics like mental
health, relationships, and media, Soul Talks has become a space that centres Black discourse and community. Active members of the McGill committee, both Fankem and Anum joined the BSN in their first years of university. Fankem serves as the Vice-President (VP) Media, while Anum
is the VP Internal. The BSN already had plans to create a podcast and a joint interest from Fankem and Anum— who share a passion for graphic design and Black discourse—brought the idea to fruition. Fankem explained the importance of her collaboration with Anum in an interview with The Tribune. PG.12
of Black political organizers. “This book’s overarching thesis can be summed up in the following way: We live with the deep-seated racial codes that have roots in slavery and colonization, codes that were designed to discipline and punish people of African descent in the Americas—Black subjection to capital for the purpose of economic production,” Austin said, reading from the second edition’s preface. PG. 2
“Defying time and season:” Black McGill scientists through history Black scientists carved space on campus for innovative research and activism
Matthew Molinaro Editor-in-Chief
T
he history of science and technology is still reckoning with the contributions of Black researchers. White supremacy has deployed the sciences, and their ideal of objectivity,
to dehumanize Black people, experiment on them, and legitimize slavery, colonialism, and dispossession. With the fights for medical and environmental justice still urgent and Black scientists excluded from these critical disciplines, there is no better time to explore the deep
history of Black scientists’ struggles and innovations. The Tribune discusses some of the Black scientists whose presence and research have shaped this campus, people who former McGill professor Barbara Althea Jones would have said, “defied time and season.” PG.7