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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240519T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240519T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20240305T030820Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240306T015021Z
UID:32849-1716130800-1716136200@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Black Elders: The Meaning of Age in American Slavery and Freedom
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a lecture about the importance of Black elders during the eras of enslavement and emancipation. This program is free to the public\, but registration is required. \nAbout the Book\nWould there have been a Frederick Douglass if it were not for Betsy Bailey\, the grandmother who raised him? Would Harriet Jacobs have written her renowned autobiography\, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl\, if her grandmother\, a free Black woman named Molly Horniblow\, had not enabled Jacobs’ escape from slavery? \nIn Black Elders: The Meaning of Age in American Slavery and Freedom (University of Pennsylvania Press\, 2024)\, Frederick C. Knight explores the experiences of African Americans with aging and in old age during the eras of slavery and emancipation. Though slavery put a premium on young labor\, elders worked as caregivers\, domestics\, cooks\, or midwives and performed other tasks in the margins of Southern and Northern economies. Looking at Black families\, churches\, mutual aid societies\, and homes for the aged\, Knight demonstrates the pivotal role of elders in the history of African American community formation through Reconstruction. \nDrawing on a wide array of printed and archival sources\, including slave narratives\, plantation records\, letters\, diaries\, meeting minutes\, and state and federal archives\, Knight also examines how Blacks and Whites\, men and women\, the young and the old developed competing ideas about age and aging\, differences that shaped social relations in coastal West and West Central Africa\, the Atlantic and domestic slave trades\, colonial and antebellum Southern slave societies\, and emancipation in the North and South. \nBlack Elders offers a unique window into the individual and collective lives of African Americans\, the day-to-day struggles they waged with regards to their experiences of aging\, and how they drew upon these resources to define the meaning of family\, community\, and freedom. Please use this link to purchase the book. \nAbout the Author\nFrederick Knight is professor of history at Morehouse College. He specializes in the history of African Americans and the African Diaspora before 1900. Dr. Knight has held fellowships at the Center for Black Studies at the University of California\, Santa Barbara; the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies at the University of Virginia; the John Nicholas Brown Center for the Study of American Civilization at Brown University; and the University of California\, Riverside\, where he held the P. Sterling Stuckey Postdoctoral Fellowship in African American history. He has also served in various capacities with scholarly organizations including Imagining America\, the American Historical Association\, and the Omohundro Institute. \nProfessor Knight has published numerous book chapters and articles in his field. Prior to this current book\, Black Elders\, he published Working the Diaspora: The Impact of African Labor on the Anglo-American World\, 1650-1850 (NYU Press\, 2010). It traces how Africans\, though carried across the Atlantic against their wills\, drew upon knowledge from their homelands to shape the agricultural and material worlds of New World slave labor camps. \nProfessor Knight received his Ph.D. from the University of California\, Riverside. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/black-elders-the-meaning-of-age-in-american-slavery-and-freedom/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebatonfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/9/2024/02/Black-Elders-70.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240609T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240609T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20240602T010833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240609T005914Z
UID:32888-1717945200-1717950600@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Blackness in Mexico
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a lecture about the efforts underway in Mexico to recognize African-descendant Mexicans as a distinct cultural group. This program is free to the public\, but registration is required. \nAbout the Book\nThrough historical and ethnographic research\, Blackness in Mexico (University Press of Florida\, 2023)\, delves into the ongoing movement toward recognizing Black Mexicans as a cultural group within a nation that has long viewed the non-Black Mestizo as the archetypal citizen. Anthony Jerry focuses on this process in Mexico’s Costa Chica region in order to explore the relational aspects of citizenship and the place of Black people in how modern citizenship is imagined. \nJerry’s study of the Costa Chica shows the political stakes of the national project for Black recognition; the shared but competing interests of the Mexican government\, activists\, and townspeople; and the ways that the state and NGOs are working to make “Afro-Mexican” an official cultural category. He argues that the demand for recognition by Black communities calls attention to how the Mestizo has become an intuitive point of reference for identifying who qualifies as “other.” Jerry also demonstrates that while official recognition can potentially empower African descendants\, it can simultaneously reproduce the same logics of difference that have brought about their social and political exclusion. \nOne of few books to center Blackness within a discussion of Mexico or to incorporate a focus on Mexico into Black studies\, this book ultimately argues that the official project for recognition is itself a methodology of mestizaje\, an opportunity for the government to continue to use Blackness to define the national subject and to further the Mexican national project. PURCHASE BOOKS HERE. \nAbout the Author\nAnthony Russell Jerry is an assistant professor of Anthropology at the University of California\, Riverside. His research interests are Blackness\, citizenship\, subject-making\, and Black entrepreneurship in the “Americas.” Professor Jerry is the founder and director of the Cultural Media Archive and The Empathy Archive–online platforms designed to promote racial literacy and social and emotional learning through empathy and awareness. He holds a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign\, an MA in applied anthropology from San Diego State University\, and an MBA from the Anderson Graduate School of Management at University of California\, Riverside. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/blackness-in-mexico/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240623T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240623T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20240527T135640Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240903T230509Z
UID:32881-1719154800-1719160200@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:The Rage of Innocence
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a lecture about the day-to-day brutalities endured by Black youth growing up under constant police surveillance and the persistent threat of physical and psychological abuse. This program is free to the public\, but registration is required.\nAbout the Book\nDrawing upon twenty-five years of experience representing young people in Washington\, D.C.’s juvenile courts\, Kristin Henning confronts America’s irrational and manufactured fears of Black youth and makes a compelling case that the nation’s obsession with policing and incarcerating Black America begins with Black children.\n\nUnlike White youth\, who are afforded the freedom to test boundaries and figure out who they are and who they want to be\, Black youth are seen as a threat to White America and denied the privilege of healthy adolescent development. Weaving together powerful narratives and persuasive data\, Henning examines the criminalization of Black adolescent play and sexuality\, the demonization of Black fashion\, hair\, and music\, and the discriminatory impact of police in schools.\n\nThe Rage of Innocence: How America Criminalizes Black Youth (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group\, 2021)\, lays bare the long-term consequences of racism and trauma that Black children experience at the hands of police and their vigilante surrogates and explains how discriminatory and aggressive policing has socialized a generation of Black teenagers to fear and resent the police.\nAbout the Author\nKristin Henning is the Blume Professor of Law and Director of the Juvenile Justice Clinic and Initiative at Georgetown. Professor Henning has been representing children accused of crime for more than 26 years and was the lead attorney for the Juvenile Unit of the D.C. Public Defender Service. She is currently the Director of the Mid-Atlantic Region of the Gault Center.\n\nProfessor Henning worked closely with the McArthur Foundation’s Juvenile Indigent Defense Action Network to develop the Juvenile Training Immersion Program (JTIP)\, a national training curriculum for youth defenders\, and is the co-founder of several initiatives to combat racial inequities in the juvenile and criminal legal systems\, including the Ambassadors for Racial Justice program and a Racial Justice Toolkit for defenders. Professor Henning trains state actors across the country on the impact of racial bias in the courts and the traumatic effects of policing in communities of color.\n\nProfessor Henning writes extensively about race\, adolescence\, and policing\, and her book\, The Rage of Innocence\, was featured on the front page of The New York Times Book Review. She has served on the Board of Directors for the Center for Children’s Law and Policy\, was a Reporter for the ABA’s Juvenile Justice Standards Task Force and is an Advisor to ALI’s Restatement on Children and the Law project. In addition\, she has received many awards including a 2023 Embracing the Legacy Award from the RFK Community Alliance\, a 2022 Women of Distinction Award from the American Association of University Women\, the 2021 Juvenile Leadership Prize from the Juvenile Law Center\, and the Robert E. Shepherd\, Jr. Award for Excellence in Juvenile Defense by the Gault Center. Professor Henning earned her B.A. from Duke University\, her J.D. from Yale Law School\, and her LLM in Advocacy from Georgetown Law.\nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/the-rage-of-innocence/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20240915T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20240915T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20240907T143023Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240907T143023Z
UID:32938-1726412400-1726417800@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:The Nation That Never Was
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a lecture about the enduring myth of the so-called American story. This program is free to the public\, but registration is required. \nAbout the Book\nThere’s a common story we tell about America: that our fundamental values as a country were stated in the Declaration of Independence\, fought for in the Revolution\, and made law in the Constitution. In The Nation that Never Was (The University of Chicago Press\, 2022)\, Kermit Roosevelt III\, Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Pennsylvania Carey School of Law\, argues that\, with the country increasingly divided\, this story isn’t working for us anymore—what’s more\, it’s not even true. Roosevelt presents an eye-opening reinterpretation of the American story\, in which our fundamental values\, particularly equality\, are not part of the vision of the Founders and suggests that there is a different and more useful way to understand our history. \nAbout the Author\nKermit Roosevelt is the David Berger Professor for the Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. He is the author of numerous law review articles and several books. Before joining the Penn faculty\, he clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter. In 2021\, he was selected by President Biden to serve on the Presidential Commission on Supreme Court Reform. He is also the author of two novels\, Allegiance and In the Shadow of the Law. Professor Roosevelt is a graduate of Harvard University and Yale Law School. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/the-nation-that-never-was/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241013T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241013T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20240907T145750Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240907T145750Z
UID:32947-1728831600-1728837000@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:What's Your Street Race? Why We Must Add a Street Race Question in Federal Standards and Beyond for Advancing Equity in Black Diasporic Communities
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a lecture about the perception of race in U.S. society and how we must rethink it. This program is free to the public\, but registration is required. \nAbout the Program\nThis presentation will focus on the urgency of employing intersectionality as a transformational and ethical vision for data infrastructure that can illuminate inequities within heterogenous Black diasporic communities. Dr. López will discuss policy-relevant research on outcomes in health\, education\, employment\, housing\, poverty\, wealth\, etc. that shows that race is a social status that has a visual\, ocular and corporeal component and ethnicity as a cultural background. An intersectional understanding recognizes that race and ethnicity are simultaneous\, yet they are analytically distinct positions in society that require separate questions because they are not concordant. Imagine if intersectionality as praxis and inquiry became a normative ethical principle for revising Office of Management and Budget (OMB) federal guidelines on race and ethnicity and a street race question was added to all institutional data collection?  How can we engage in what Crenshaw calls “mapping the margins” and what Collins calls intersectional “flexible solidarity\,” when it comes to data collection\, that makes the invisible visible within Black Diasporic communities and beyond? \nAbout the Speaker\nDr. Nancy López is professor of sociology at the University of New Mexico. She co-founded and directs the Institute for the Study of “Race” and Social Justice. Her scholarship\, teaching and service are guided by the insights of intersectionality–the importance of examining the simultaneity of race\, gender\, class\, ethnicity and other systems of inequalities across a variety of social outcomes\, including education\, health\, employment\, and housing for developing contextualized solutions that advance social justice. Dr. López is author of Hopeful Girls\, Troubled Boys: Race & Gender Disparity in Urban Education (2003); co-editor of\, Creating Alternative Discourses in the Education of Latinas & Latinos (2003)\, Mapping “Race”: Critical Approaches to Health Disparities Research (2013); and QuantCrit: An Antiracist Approach to Education Equity (2023). Her current research\, “Intersectionality as Inquiry and Praxis: Race-Gender-Class-Ethnicity for Student Success in STEM\,” is funded by the National Science Foundation’s Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSI) program. Professor López is a Black Latina\, New York City-born daughter of Dominican immigrants with a second-grade education rich in cultural wealth. She is the first woman of color tenured in Sociology and the first woman of the African Diaspora tenured in the College of Arts and Sciences (2008) and promoted to full professor (2018) at UNM. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/whats-your-street-race-why-we-must-add-a-street-race-question-in-federal-standards-and-beyond-for-advancing-equity-in-black-diasporic-communities/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20241124T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20241124T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20241031T145052Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241031T145052Z
UID:32956-1732460400-1732465800@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Die Standing: From Black Panther Revolutionary to Global Diversity Consultant
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host Elmer Dixon as he talks about his journey from co-founder of the first Black Panther Party chapter outside California to diversity consultant. \nAbout the Book\nThis powerful memoir\, with a foreword by former Black Panther Party Chairman Bobby Seale\, sets the record straight about the altruistic mission of the Black Panther Party. Historically\, members of the Panthers have been maligned in media\, movies\, and minds as angry\, gun-toting\, misogynistic thugs. During his tenure\, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover declared the Black Panther Party “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country.” \nTo the contrary\, the Panthers started a free breakfast program for children\, distributed free groceries to families\, opened schools\, founded health clinics\, and provided patrols to protect people from police abuse. Today\, their 10-point plan serves as a blueprint for social justice movements in the United States and abroad. \nIn Die Standing (Two Sisters Writing and Publishing\, 2023)\, Dixon describes how heavily armed Panthers confronted police to protect Black drivers. He also takes the reader into suspenseful scenes inside the Panthers’ homes and offices. \nThe book shows how\, after 16 years in the Party\, Dixon began working as an EEO officer and training manager for a large organization for which he developed and implemented trainings. He also monitored accusations of sexual harassment and racial discrimination. \nDie Standing offers Elmer Dixon’s inspiring story and action-oriented teachings to help propel social justice movements forward by creating a world in which Black and Brown people are safe to live\, learn\, and prosper. \nAbout the Speaker\nElmer Dixon is a Diversity\, Equity\, Inclusion\, and Belonging (DEIB) consultant. His expertise in the field is rooted in his identity as a revolutionary committed to working for equality and justice. \nInspired by the Black Liberation Movement of the 1960s\, Elmer was 17 years old when he and his older brother\, Aaron\, co-founded the Seattle chapter of the Black Panther Party in 1968—the first chapter outside of California. \nAfter guiding the chapter to local prominence by providing essential services to Black and Brown people in his multicultural community\, Elmer served as director of the Al Davis Girls and Boys Club in Tacoma\, Washington’s predominantly Black Hilltop community. He then became Training Manager and EEO officer for the Seattle Parks Department\, creating and implementing anti-sexual harassment policies\, recruiting women to non-traditional jobs\, and investigating sexual harassment complaints. Dixon’s success in that position led then-Mayor Charles Royer to appoint him to his cabinet as director of the city’s Citizens Service Bureau. \nElmer’s EEO work impressed the founders of Executive Diversity Services (EDS)\, who recruited him to a new career providing high-level DEIB training to national and international businesses. In 2010\, Elmer became the organization’s president. \nElmer has been a guest lecturer at JAMK University of Applied Sciences in Finland for the last 13 years\, and teacher at Espeme University in Lille and Nice\, France. He is the current president of SIETAR USA\, and routinely presents at SIETAR Europa. His recent TEDx Talk is “Stories from the Revolution’s Front Lines.” \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/die-standing-from-black-panther-revolutionary-to-global-diversity-consultant/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250112T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250112T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20241228T163154Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241228T163154Z
UID:32987-1736694000-1736699400@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:A New Year\, A New Beginning
DESCRIPTION:The Baton Foundation will host a virtual expressive arts workshop to help individuals ground themselves as we begin a new year — and a new chapter in American history. \nAbout the Workshop\nWith the holiday season behind us and a new year upon us\, this virtual expressive arts workshop will help participants explore ways to best maintain their physical\, emotional\, and spiritual equilibrium as we prepare to usher in a new historical and social era. \nDespite the challenges we might face and regardless of the turmoil around us\, it is important to draw upon ancestral legacies and focus on our innate strengths — and to ground oneself in the knowledge that all is well. Dr. Wendy Phillips (pictured above) will employ guided expressive arts techniques that will aid each participant in her or his journey to self-expression. \nPlease wear comfortable clothes and have at your disposal plain/colored paper\, chalk\, crayons\, colored pencils\, play dough or paints — whatever materials you would like to work with. You will be able to participate with your camera off or on and there is never any pressure on anyone to actively engage with the group. At the end of the session\, the group will reflect on what has been expressed\, discovered\, and experienced. \nShould you have questions about the workshop\, you may call Dr. Phillips at 404-798-1061 (after 1p.m. ET). \nAbout Expressive Arts\nThe Expressive Arts combine a variety of practices including writing\, music\, visual arts\, drama\, and dance to support self-expression\, personal growth and healing. In each session\, and as one participates\, s/he explores a variety of materials and activities. The expressive arts have been defined as supporting a process of self-discovery and self-expression\, as a way to connect with one’s creative self\, and also as a way to find tranquility and or achieve emotional release. \nAbout the Instructor\nWendy Phillips\, Ph.D.\, LMFT\, REAT\, REACE is a Registered Expressive Arts Therapist\, A Registered Expressive arts Consultant Educator\, and a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist who is based in Seattle\, Washington. She also teaches in the Psychology and Creativity Studies Programs at Saybrook University. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/a-new-year-a-new-beginning/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Workshop
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250209T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250209T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20250121T150617Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250121T150617Z
UID:33003-1739113200-1739118600@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality
DESCRIPTION:About the Book\nRacial Innocence will challenge what you thought about racism and bias and demonstrate that it is possible for a historically marginalized group to experience discrimination and also be discriminatory. Racism is deeply complex\, and law professor and comparative race relations expert Tanya Katerí Hernández exposes “the Latino racial innocence cloak” that often veils Latino complicity in racism. As Latinos are the second-largest ethnic group in the US\, this revelation is critical to dismantling systemic racism. Basing her work on interviews\, discrimination case files\, and civil rights law\, Hernández reveals Latino anti-Black bias in the workplace\, the housing market\, schools\, places of recreation\, the criminal justice system\, and Latino families. By focusing on racism perpetrated by communities outside those of White non-Latino people\, Racial Innocence brings to light the many Afro-Latino and African American victims of anti-Blackness at the hands of other people of color. Through exploring the interwoven fabric of discrimination and examining the cause of these issues\, we can begin to move toward a more egalitarian society. \nAbout the Speaker\nTanya Katerí Hernández is the Archibald R. Murray Professor of Law at Fordham University School of Law\, where she teaches Anti-Discrimination Law\, Comparative Employment Discrimination\, Critical Race Theory\, Writing/Righting Race in the Public Sphere\, The Science of Implicit Bias and the Law: New Pathways to Social Justice\, and Trusts & Wills. She received her A.B. from Brown University\, and her J.D. from Yale Law School\, where she served as Note Topics Editor of The Yale Law Journal. \nProfessor Hernández is an internationally recognized comparative race law expert and Fulbright Scholar who has visited at the Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense\, in Paris and the University of the West Indies Law School\, in Trinidad. She has previously served as a Law and Public Policy Affairs Fellow at Princeton University\, a Faculty Fellow at the Institute for Research on Women at Rutgers University; a Faculty Fellow at the Fred T. Korematsu Center for Law and Equality\, and as a Scholar in Residence at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture. Professor Hernández is a Fellow of the American Bar Foundation\, the American Law Institute\, and the Academia Puertorriqueña de Jurisprudencia y Legislación. Hispanic Business Magazine selected her as one of its annual 100 Most Influential Hispanics and NYC Comptroller Brad Lander awarded her a Commendation for “extraordinary contributions to anti-racism.” Professor Hernández serves on the editorial boards of the Revista Brasileira de Direito e Justiça/Brazilian Journal of Law and Justice\, and the Latino Studies Journal published by Palgrave-Macmillian Press. \nProfessor Hernández’s scholarly interest is in the study of comparative race relations and anti-discrimination law\, and her work in that area has been published in numerous university law reviews like Cornell\, Harvard\, N.Y.U.\, U.C. Berkeley\, Yale and in news outlets like The New York Times\, among other publications–including her books Racial Subordination in Latin America: The Role of the State\, Customary Law and the New Civil Rights Response (including Spanish and Portuguese translation editions)\, Brill Research Perspectives in Comparative Law: Racial Discrimination\, and Multiracials and Civil Rights: Mixed-Race Stories of Discrimination. Her most recent book from Beacon Press is Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and The Struggle for Equality\, and its Spanish translation edition\, Inocencia Racial: Desenmascarando la antinegritud de los latinos y la lucha por la igualdad. Currently under contract with Beacon Press\, is her next book (Under) Counting Blackness Across the Globe: The Civil Rights Crisis of Census Racial Erasure. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/racial-innocence-unmasking-latino-anti-black-bias-and-the-struggle-for-equality/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250309T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250309T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20250210T002641Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250210T002641Z
UID:33016-1741532400-1741537800@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad
DESCRIPTION:About the Book\nRiding Jane Crow tells the overlooked story of Black women on American trains\, from before the Civil War to more contemporary times. How did Black intellectual women such as Ida B. Wells fight racial segregation through lawsuits\, before the (in)famous Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court decision of 1896? Who were the Black women who worked as Pullman maids\, along with the more well-known Pullman porters? How does the experience of Black women on the American railroad provide a more accurate measure of American ingenuity and progress? These questions and others will be answered during this virtual talk. \nAbout the Author\nMiriam Thaggert is a professor of English at the University at Buffalo. She teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on African American literature\, history\, and culture. Her previous book was on the Harlem Renaissance\, Images of Black Modernism: Verbal and Visual Strategies of the Harlem Renaissance. She has also written on films such as Imitation of Life\, Twelve Years a Slave\, and Mahogany. She is currently working on the Buffalo-area African American poet Lucille Clifton and Percival Everett’s novel\, The Trees. She grew up in southwest Louisiana and obtained her Ph.D. in English from the University of California\, Berkeley. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/riding-jane-crow-african-american-women-on-the-american-railroad/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://thebatonfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/9/2025/02/Riding-Jane-Crow-70.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250413T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250413T163000
DTSTAMP:20260430T202123
CREATED:20250214T142540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250214T142540Z
UID:33026-1744556400-1744561800@thebatonfoundation.org
SUMMARY:An Unholy Traffic: Slave Trading in the Civil War South
DESCRIPTION:About the Book\nBetween Fort Sumter and Appomattox\, Confederates bought and sold thousands of Black men\, women\, and children through a persisting trade in enslaved people. They did so for numerous reasons\, including to adapt to the conflict\, to invest in their desired slaveholding future\, and to fend off the onset of emancipation. These transactions had profound impacts on the enslaved–their lives and families\, and the ways in which they pursued freedom during the war. The surviving traffic in humanity thus shaped the experience of the Civil War and its aftermath for all inhabitants of the wartime South. \nAbout the Speaker\nRobert Colby is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Mississippi. His first book\, An Unholy Traffic: Slave Trading in the Civil War South\, was published in 2024 by Oxford University Press. His research has won awards from the Society of American Historians and the Society of Civil War Historians and has been published in the Journal of the Civil War Era\, Journal of the Early Republic\, and Slavery & Abolition. \nRegister Here for Zoom Lecture
URL:https://thebatonfoundation.org/event/an-unholy-traffic-slave-trading-in-the-civil-war-south/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Lecture
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