Panel Forum for #AAIHS2020 Conference

The committee for the 2020 AAIHS annual conference recently released the CFP for submissions related to the theme, The Black Radical Tradition. As we explain in the CFP, we are happy to accept individual paper submissions but will give preference to those who submit full panels. In order to help facilitate this process, we want to use this post as a forum to bring scholars together who are interested in similar topics.

If you are interested in forming a panel, please add a comment below with your paper and/or panel idea(s). Be sure to include your email address so that others can easily reach you to follow-up. Also, if you are willing to chair or comment on potential panels you see listed here, please indicate that as well. For those who have already submitted individual papers, feel free to use this forum to form a panel, and we can withdraw the individual paper submission. Thank you for your interest in the AAIHS and our fifth annual conference. We look forward to reading your proposals!

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Comments on “Panel Forum for #AAIHS2020 Conference

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    I would like to submit a paper on non-Christian religious masculinities, particularly in the Nation of Islam. I think it would fit well with any number of topics, but other papers on gender or religion may be particularly good matches.

    joseph dot stuart a(t) utah dot edu

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    I would be delighted to form a panel with other scholars whose research is pushing how we define “radical” today, compared to in various historical moments. I am working on a excavating the life of an African American woman who lived in the mid-to-late-19th century, and who both invoked and refuted racial, gender, religious, geographical expectations, in her quest for civil rights. The more I am able to document about her life, the more perplexing some of her choices seem — at least when I consider them through a 21st-century lens. But as a historian, when I try to center my analysis on her perspective, what seems surprising becomes strategically radical. I’m sure there are other scholars who are pondering the “radical” of their subjects, and I’d love to join in a panel conversation in which we offer our own research subjects as exempla to get at this larger theme. Please reach out to lois /at/ loisleveen /dot/ com if you’re interested.

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    I’m looking for scholars/grad students who are working on anything related to the Jewish and African diasporas and intersections of their struggles against racism. Anything related to how WWII and the holocaust influenced Black Radical thought could fit as well. If anyone would be interested in forming a panel, please contact me at ng424@cornell.edu

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    Good afternoon. I am personally looking for anyone who wants to create a panel loosely organized around the theme of African-American Claims to Citizenship and U.S. Empire. My own paper would be about Jim Crow and Empire, linking the 1898 Wilmington Massacre to Debates of Imperial Expansion. If there are potential connections that can be made, do not hesitate to email me at politejr@email.sc.edu

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      I suggest an explaination re: were the term ‘Jim Crow’ originated from, and how this seemingly simple name / term transformed into profound, far reaching description. Place this in its historical context.

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    Hi all, I’m working on an intellectual biography of Dr. Samuel DuBois Cook and I hoping to find anyone else working on Black Liberal thought in the aftermath of WWII. If you’re interested in a panel on Black Liberalism, anti-communism, and/or institution-building, please contact me at david.romine@duke.edu

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    Hi all, I am a recent law school graduate who is interested in convening a panel on reparations/reparatory justice for the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, slavery, and their legacies from a national and/or international perspective. I recently completed a thesis on the topic for a Master of Laws program.

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    Hi all, I am a recent law school graduate who is interested in convening a panel on reparations/reparatory justice for the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, slavery, and their legacies from a national and/or international perspective. I recently completed a thesis on the topic for a Master of Laws program.
    Please contact me at kvm2118@columbia.edu

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    Hello scholars and junior scholars!

    I am putting together a panel for those whose research is about the agency and radicalization of Black females during the Black Power Movement.

    Thank you!

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    Greetings!

    My panel of three women are in need of a chair person. Please contact me if you would like to be a part of our panel. Below is our Abstract:

    “Black women who embrace the Strong Black Woman Archetype (SBWA) ideal, interpersonal relationships, in particular the family dynamic, is often a superficial and strained notion. Strong Black Women learn to minimize their feelings, wants, and desires to accommodate the needs of others. The ability to express genuine fear, hurt, and inadequacies is lacking. This cultural edict demands of Black women tireless support of others to the detriment of self (Holmes, White, Mills, & Mickel, 2011). Embracing this is often to the detriment and overall health of Black Women in our society. Frequently, pressure to conform to this ideal is based on familial structure, such as being raised by a single parent.

    The SBWA was manifested during the Black Nationalist Women’s Movement (Blain, 2018), and the Civil Rights and Black Power Movements, as evidenced by women in leadership for the global struggle of freedom, and of the Black Panther Panther Party who were editors of the Black Panther newspaper, and Director of of Communications (Brown, 1992; Rhodes, 2007). These women challenged the notion of women’s liberation and misogyny, which was in contrast to the assimilation of women who were obedient to the leaders of the Nation of Islam at the height of its dominance.

    The Strong Black Woman Archetype is an invisible figure or absent from Robinson’s, James’s, and Wright’s conversations about the the making of the Black radical tradition, and must now be include in the 21st century Black radical movement. ”

    Thank you!

    Dr. Carol Garza
    carolgarza@me.com

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