Showing posts with label black studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black studies. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

What is the New Black Studies?



This is a huge question. Black Studies in its origins was about creating historical awareness, redefining and developing what knowledge is, being inspired by as well as inspiring local black communities, and confronting White imperialism head on with undeniable data not politics as it relates to addressing the notions of oppression perpetuated by the capitalist class. One highlight of Brown's Dude, Where's My Black Studies Department, was his discussion on the Malcolm X Consciousness Conference organized by Laney College in Oakland, California. He made reference to it as the new Black Studies (p.113).

It appears that he described it as such because it was a return to the founding tenets of Black Studies which was to insure that there was a community connection. Moreover, Brown discussed how some of the panelists, some who were former Black Panthers suggested that each Black Studies department must have a part of their program that channels students back to their community to do work. Is that what's missing? Will that create the awareness that black students of the Hip Hop and post-Hip Hop generations need in order to be spirited to address the issues that are impacting impoverished African American communities today? Or is it just a fleeting notion, a fleeting notion of the belief that today's black student can find the throwback spirit of struggles that led to the development of the original Black Studies. What if, by chance, they found that spirit of yesteryear, would that be enough to revitalize Black America?

I suggest that what is missing today is the "moral panic" of White America. History has shown that speaking truth to power does not work, nor does "in all deliberate speed." Brown made reference to Cornel West's assertions that young people are sleepwalking intellectually, and that he need to use a powerful oral tradition to wake them up and connect them with the democratic process necessary to change the conditions that plague the black community. West used Hip Hop as a way to connect. Is Hip Hop an answer, or has Hip Hop been co-opted and commercialized to a point that makes it's agency ineffective? Is there something else on the horizon?

When University of Illinois IPOWERED civic engagement scholars from Dr. Patterson's Afro 498 course, participated in a community based discussion on the redevelopment efforts in a North Champaign neighborhood, they immediately responded with fervor and outcry against the proposed plan, and used the verbiage of gentrification to describe what was going to happen if the residents in this historic African American community signed on to the plan as presented. As a result, members from the steering committee came to class to dialogue. The conversation centered around how to develop the space without creating yet another example of Black Americans being displaced for the sake of progress. It was the spirit of those students, graduate and undergraduate, black and white that challenged the city's proposed plan and policies through the historic tenet of community engagement from a Black Studies department within a predominately white institution.

Noted black scholar, Manning Marable, made the point before he passed away that in order for Black Studies to have meaning in the 21st Century, it must be digitized. How do we digitize black studies? who will create the code for syncing the oral traditions to the legacies of the black lived experience? Who will create the code that breaths life into the print traditions that binds so many black scholars? How do we scale up Black Studies in a traditional, print based environment. An environment that dictates what knowledge is and maintains the mechanisms that gate keeps that knowledge with promotion and tenure. How do we merge indigenous knowledge into the equation? How is this measured, who measures it? who determines it's success or failure? These are just a few of the tough questions that need answers if there is to be a New Black Studies in the 21st century.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

How can Black Studies connect with the Hip Hop and post-Hip Hop generations?

Thus far, Brown has really set a tone of disdain for the current state of Black Studies departments and programs. Remember, Brown is from the era that created the perfect storm for Black Studies to exist in the late 1960's and early 70's. However, in a reminiscent way, he talked about how proud he was of a more contemporary moment of protest when a group of black students at Berkley kicked off the black out protest. In that same instance he expressed his contempt for white students who dismissed it as well off black kid demagoguery. I think we have arrived at a point in the reading where Brown consistently reflects on how university administration derailed the advancement of African Americans in the academy, which then cripples efforts to advance African American communities as a whole.

So, where does Black Studies go from here? If Brown makes the argument that Hip Hop and post Hip Hop generations can redefine black studies, it's going to be a hard argument to support. Two words. Promotion and tenure. The promotion and tenure structure of universities and colleges often do not encourage junior faculty to be involved in communities. Publishing and research initiatives often dictate how a junior faculty member is positioned in the academy. Unfortunately, being involved in African American community redevelopment is not rewarded. Why is that? Moreover, given the current climate of university and African American community relations can Hip Hop Studies become the new Black Studies?

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

What does Obama and Dr. King have in common in terms of the common welfare for the less fortunate ?

Black Studies programs have a rich legacy steeped in social movement, movement associated with helping to define an agenda to address issues pertaining to the African American community. Over the past few years African American Studies has begun embarking on a new era of engaging students during the age of Obama, the first African American president. Tonight, we watched a video of then Senator Obama speaking to students in my Black Leadership Development class in 2004. One of the highlights was his beliefs on the responsibility of the well to do to help those that are less well off. In addition to the Obama film, we watched a video on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called "The Other America." Was there a common thread between Barack Obama and Dr. King's beliefs? Remember to follow the format for responding that is articulated in your syllabus.