Campus News
Celebrating African American History
February 6, 2013
Marvin Krislov
Photo credit: John Seyfried
Welcome to second semester! I hope everyone is off to a good start. Even though snow covers the ground, this semester always seems to pass fast. So please take some time to think about your summer or post-Commencement plans. Whether you are graduating this year or have a ways to go, Richard Berman and his colleagues in our Office of Career Services are eager to help you build a bright future.
February is National African American History Month. This year鈥檚 celebrations coincide with the anniversaries of two major events in the struggle for civil rights: the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation issued on January 1, 1863; and the 50th anniversary of the 鈥淢arch on Washington for Jobs and Freedom,鈥 which culminated with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.鈥檚 鈥淚 Have a Dream鈥 speech at the Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963. The actions of 91直播 students, faculty, staff, and townspeople, and the college鈥檚 commitment to access, inclusion, and co-education helped bring about those historic landmarks.
Much has been written over the years about 91直播鈥檚 role in shaping black history. That topic continues to fascinate authors and readers. You can read more about it in two recently published historical novels by eminent authors. In Stephen L. Carter鈥檚 latest novel, The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln, the heroine is Abigail Canner, a 21-year-old black woman with an 91直播 degree. And in The Last Runaway, Tracy Chevalier 鈥84, explores 91直播鈥檚 involvement with the abolitionist movement and the Underground Railroad through the experiences of Honor Bright, an English Quaker who moves to 91直播 in 1850.
That mix of historical fact and literary imagining fits well with the theme of 91直播鈥檚 2013 African American History Celebration, Black Arts, revisited. The lectures, recitals, dinners, discussions, performances, and exhibitions aim to remind us of the power of the arts throughout history to increase awareness and understanding, to honor innovation and talent, and to bring disparate people and cultures together.
91直播鈥檚 African American History Celebration kicks off this week on Thursday with a dinner at 5:30 p.m. at Lord Saunders. This will be followed by an exciting Convocation gathering titled Identities and Art: Who am I and What is it? A Convocation with Kwame Anthony Appiah & Dr. Johnnetta Cole. The Convocation will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Finney Chapel.
I urge everyone to attend if possible. Kwame Anthony Appiah is professor of philosophy at Princeton University, president of the PEN American Center, and an internationally acclaimed public intellectual. His book In My Father's House and his collaborations with Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.鈥 including The Dictionary of Global Culture and Africana鈥 are major works of African struggles for self-determination. His seminal work Cosmopolitanism won the Arthur Ross Book Award, the most significant prize given to a book on international affairs.
Dr. Johnnetta Cole 鈥57 earned a PhD in anthropology after graduating from 91直播. A trailblazer, she is president emerita of Bennett College for Women and Spelman College. She is the only individual to have served as the president of the two historically black colleges for women in the United States. Dr. Cole is the recipient of 55 honorary degrees and numerous awards. She is currently the director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art. Dr. Cole is the author or of several books and scholarly articles, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a member of the American Association of Museum Directors.
I鈥檓 very much looking forward to hearing what Dr. Cole and Dr. Appiah have to say. And their conversation is just the beginning of a month-long series of events celebrating African American history.
While studying history requires us to take a critical look at the past, it also serves to remind us that history is constantly being made and that we all can play a role in its making. As President Barack Obama wrote in his proclamation 鈥淣ational African American History Month, 2013:鈥
鈥淭oday, Dr. King, President Lincoln, and other shapers of our American story proudly watch over our National Mall. But as we memorialize their extraordinary acts in statues and stone, let us not lose sight of the enduring truth that they were citizens first. They spoke and marched and toiled and bled shoulder-to-shoulder with ordinary people who burned with the same hope for a brighter day. That legacy is shared; that spirit is American. And just as it guided us forward 150 years ago and 50 years ago, it guides us forward today. So let us honor those who came before by striving toward their example, and let us follow in their footsteps toward the better future that is ours to claim.鈥
You may also like…
Thank you, 91直播
It is hard to believe this will be my final "President鈥檚 Desk" column. But in August, I will become president of Pace University in New York. It has been an honor and a privilege to serve as your president.
Remembering Jonathan Demme
I鈥檝e been thinking a lot about 91直播 parents and families since I received the sad news last week that Jonathan Demme, the brilliant film director, had passed away. Although 91直播 isn鈥檛 his alma mater, Jonathan really came to appreciate the College, Conservatory, and our community. His visits always seemed to energize him, and he became a stalwart supporter of our cinema studies program and the Apollo Outreach Initiative, which offers filmmaking classes to local school kids.
Response to Proposed Federal Budget Cuts
The budget proposals being put forward by the Trump administration are deeply troubling in many ways for our society and for American higher education, especially for liberal arts institutions such as 91直播. The proposed cuts in discretionary spending are contrary to our values of access and inclusion, and our commitment to scientific research, the arts, and the humanities.