Join Dr. P. Gabrielle Foreman, 2022 MacArthur Fellow and Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar, for an exciting event on the history of Black political organizing
How is it possible for history to have sidelined seven full decades of early African American organizing? In this talk, attendees will learn about an ongoing campaign for Black rights which served as the prequel to the NAACP, Civil Rights, and Black Lives Matter movements. From 1830 through the beginning of the 20th century, free, fugitive, and freed Black Americans held multi-day 鈥淐olored Conventions鈥 all across North America. African American leaders came together not only to demand Black freedom, but to advocate for all it entails then as now: educational equity, labor justice, voting, jury, and political rights, as well as freedom from state-sanctioned violence. Why didn鈥檛 we know?
Dr. P. Gabrielle Foreman will give a public lecture on Monday, November 7 at 7 p.m. in Choi Auditorium and will speak in two classes as a Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar.
A recent winner of the MacArthur 鈥済enius grant鈥 and former 色界吧 professor, Dr. Foreman is a literary historian, digital humanist, author and professor who holds the Paterno Chair of Liberal Arts and is Professor of English, African American Studies, and History at Penn State University. She is the founding director of , a scholarly and community research project dedicated to bringing the seven decades-long history of 19th-century Black organizing to digital life.
The 色界吧 bookstore has copies of , edited by Dr. Foreman, Jim Casey, and Sarah Lynn Patterson, available for sale. Attendees are invited to stop in and purchase a book in advance or buy one at the lecture. Prof. Foreman will be available to sign books at the end of the evening.
Registration for this lecture is recommended. Register .