46th National Council for Black Studies Virtual Conference Program Book

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A Message From NCBS President Dr. Amilcar Shabazz Welcome to Our 46h Annual Conference! As the end of my term as president of the National Council for Black Studies (NCBS) draws near I want to express what a profound honor it has been to serve in this leadership role for the world’s premier organization of Africana Studies for students, faculty members, retirees and independent scholars. I look forward to continuing my service on the NCBS Board of Directors, serving on its Executive Committee as Immediate Past President, for the next two years. The NCBS is not another group related to my professional life, it is an extension of my family. Thus. I would like to make this letter more of a chat with the fam. First of all, this year’s theme speaks to the family experience that I and many others in the African heritage community know well: Women have been at the center of it all. I was raised by my mother and grandmother. I lost my father last year and will forever love him, but it was the women in my home, school and community life that were my leaders and the foundation that nurtured and guided me. As an undergraduate student at the University of Texas at Austin, Dr. Sandy Darity and Dr. John Warfield were my most important academic mentors and role models, but it was from community leaders, Dorothy Turner and Velma Roberts, that I learned the necessity and lessons of continuous struggle. Over the years of my activism in the NCBS, the role of women in Africana Studies has always impressed me as a story that is not shared and understood well enough. Thus, the theme of this years annual meeting was conceived and together with Vice President Alphonso Simpson and the conference committee we have put together a virtual annual meeting that we hope inspires deeper reflection on the role of women — past, present and future — in our transformative discipline, the transdisciplinary of African/Black Studies. Secondly, let me highlight a few of our sessions so intrinsically related to our theme: “Our Sisters Spoke Up: Women Gender and Sexuality in Africana Studies.” First of all, don’t miss our opening session Black Studies and Black Sexuality Studies: Toward a Shared Generative Discourse and Productive Practice featuring presentations by Valerie Grim of Indiana University, NCBS Past President James Stewart, and Maulana Karenga of California State University-Long Beach. Next there is our plenary session, Our Sisters Speak! Honoring & Building on the Legacy of Dr. Bertha Maxwell Roddey, Co-founder and First President of the National Council for Black Studies. This special roundtable features Leslie Alexander, Past President of the Association for the Study of the Worldwide African Diaspora & NCBS Board Member, of Arizona State University; Georgene Bess Montgomery, NCBS Past President, of Clark Atlanta University; Valerie Grim, NCBS Board Member, of Indiana University; and Shirley N. Weber, NCBS Past President and California Secretary of State. There is also the roundtable Making the Call: Dr. Bertha Maxwell-Roddey, UNC Charlotte, and the Early Formation of NCBS that the biographer of our first president, Sonya Ramsey of the University of North Carolina Charlotte has organized colleagues that will whet our appetites for her forthcoming book. 4

Promoting Academic Excellence and Social Responsibility


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