"New Development in Africana Studies"
“New Developments in Africana Studies” was the first event presented by the AAAS Program in collaboration with the Modern Languages Department. The flyer you see here was a preliminary flyer created by Dr. Keita’s son and was later renamed “Trends in Africana Studies” before the event took place. Dr. Babacar M’Baye, a professor of Pan-African Studies and English Department at Kent university, was also an Ursinus alum who remained close with retired French professor Dr. Novack. Mrs. Patton from Multicultural Services graciously allowed the event to be held in Unity House on November 29, 2012. Unity House has since been demolished to create space for the Ursinus Commons and is now known as the Institute for Inclusion and Equity in the lower lever of the Wismer Center.
AAAS Program
AAAS Program, Ursinus College
November 29. 2012
Multicultural Services, Modern Languages Department
Still Image: Flyer
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The first AAAS speaker at Ursinus college was alum Babacar M'Baye: a professor of Pan-African Studies and English Department and Kent University
Cafe Nia
Recruitment and retention of students of color at Ursinus College
From the 2004 Ruby yearbook, Cafe Nia was an event held to celebrate and remember ancestors and black history. Cafe Nia is an event where primarily students of color at Ursinus College come together for a meal and host speakers and performances. Campus events like Cafe Nia help in building and sharing community on campus, aiding in retention of the students.
Ursinus College
Ruby Yearbook
Ursinus College
2004
Ursinus College
English
" Funk Evolution : The Journey from Dianne Brieze Thompson to Badd Kitti"
Dianne Brieze Thompson also known as Badd Kitti was the final speaker in the Riding the Wave, Creating the Vibe series on November 11, 2019 in the Bear’s Den. Thompson’s, known for her soulful, conscious vibe, is a pioneer of Philadelphia’s emerging Funk scene. Thompson provided played a few examples of Funk that inspired her and her art before inviting audience members to participate in creating a small song. As a keyboardist, vocalist, composer, producer, educator and creator of the podcast The Funk Excursion, Thompson’s contributions to Funk seem endless. This event was made possible through the efforts of the AAAS program, Music and History department.
AAAS Program
AAAS Program
November 11, 2019
Music Department, History Department
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" The Journey from Funk Evolution Dianne Brieze Thompson to Badd Kitti" was the final event in the Riding the Wave, Creating the Vibe Series at Ursinus College
“The Wave of the Future: New Directions in Digital Production and Music Scholarship”
In collaboration with the History and Music department, the AAAS program helped create the Riding the Wave, Creating the Vibe Series. This three-event series is connected to MUS/HIST-203 The Expense of Musical Appropriation and the Dividends of Collaboration which studies the local musical cultures in Africa, The Caribbean, and the United states and questions the appropriation, adaptation and commercialization of this music around the globe. “The Wave of the Future: New Directions in Digital Production and Music Scholarship” invited three seniors, Tori Kroha, Jackie Ramsay and Codi Yhap, to share their research in Wismer’s Faculty Staff Dining room October 21, 2019. All of the guest panelist majored in music while also majoring in Business, Politics and Biology respectively.
AAAS Program
AAAS Program
October 21, 2019
History Department, Music Department, Arts and Lecture Committee, Office of Academic Affairs, The Pennsylvania Consortium for Liberal Arts
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The senior panelist, Tori Kroha, Jackie Ramsey and Codi Yhap are guest panelist for the Riding the Wave, Creating the Vibe Series at Ursinus College.
"Bridging The Gap" Grizzly Article, 1988
Recruitment and retention of students of color at Ursinus College
This Ursinus Grizzly newspaper article from September 23, 1988 coincides with the release of the first official Ursinus College Bridge Program report describing and assessing the Bridge Program. The article goes on to explain what the program is and why it is significant, pointing out that “ethnic and cultural diversity has not been a hallmark of the college,” and calling the Bridge Program “one of the most innovative endeavors Ursinus has taken.” It details the courses taken by the “Bridgers” and some of the field trips and side programs as well. These included introduction to the college community, practice in the Word Processing Lab and video-taping lab, trips to the Batch Institute for Ethnic Studies in Center City, and to Eagleville Hospital for Personality Disorders (as the main course taught was introductory Psychology). The article finishes on a positive note, mentioning the contentedness of the students who participated and plans from the administration to expand funding for the following year.
The Grizzly Staff
Ursinusiana Archives of Myrin Library
Ursinus College
September 23, 1988
Jean M. Kiss, Michelle L. Grande, Richard P. Richter, Karen Singhofen, Lora L. Hart, Peggy Hermann, Veronica Algeo, Robert Carmignani, Chuck Smith, and Lorraine R. Zimmer
Ursinus College holds the right to this resource
English
text
"Bridging the Gap" Grizzly article, 1988
Ursinus College campus, 1988
“Writing Identity in Multiple Worlds”
Lori Tharps was a guest Speaker for the Rev. Charles Rice Speaker Series. Her lecture “Writing Identity in Multiple Worlds” was hosted in The Bears Den on October 25, 2017. During the talk, journalist, novelist, and memoir writer, Lori Tharps spoke on her personal experience with identity and representation. Tharps also addressed her own cultural studies research and writing throughout the event. Partnering with the Institute for Inclusion and Equity, the Anthropology/ Sociology Department Arts & Lectures Committee, and the Creative Writing Fund, this event was part of second in the Reverend Charles Rice Speaker Series.
AAAS Program
AAAS Program
October 25, 2017
Institute for Inclusion and Equity, Anthropology/ Sociology Department, Arts & Lectures Committee, The Creative Writing Fund
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AAAS host Lori Tharps as the second speaker of the Rev. Charles Rice Speaker Series
"Circuits of Blood and Stone: On Enslaved Test Subject and the History of Gynecology"
In 2017, The African American and Africana Studies guest Lecture Series was renamed the Rev. Charles Rice Speaker Series. Dr. Nicole Ivy’s lecture, “Circuits of Blood and Stone: On Enslaved Test Subjects and the History of Gynecology” was the first speaker of the newly renamed series and was held in Berman 006 on October 6, 2017. During the event Dr. Ivy addressed the role of enslaved women in nineteenth-century slave clinics in Montgomery, Alabama. While the legacies of these women are often forgotten, history reveres Dr. James Marion Sims as the “father of modern Gynecology” as tested tools and techniques on nonconsenting patients. Dr. Ivy invites us to remember how the enslaved dead impact contemporary spaces of U.S. capital circulation. This event was hosted by the AAAS program in collaboration with Institute for Inclusion and Equity and the Anthropology/ Sociology department.
AAAS Program
AAAS Program
October 6, 2017
Institute for Inclusion and Equity and Anthropology/ Sociology Department
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Dr. Nicole Ivy is the first speaker of the newly renamed Rev. Charles Rice Speaker Series hosted by the AAAS Program at Ursinus College.
" What is Africa to me?"
On April 22, 2013, Ursinus students, faculty and friends came together to discuss one question: “what is Africa to me?”. Light refreshments were served as the dialogue invited those in attendance to join featured guest Will Godfrey ’13, Liora Mor ’13 Royale Randolph, Yousif Yahya ’14 and Codey Young ’14 in conversation. Students were instrumental in the creation of this event as this was prior to the arrival of Drs Edward Onaci and Patricia Lott. This event was open to anyone at the college and held in the Bear’s Den.
Dr. Nzadi Keita
Dr. Nzadi Keita
April 22, 2013
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The AAAS program at Ursinus College hosts an open discussion on the topic "What is Africa to me?"
"Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice" Film Flyer
“Ida B. Wells: A Passion for Justice” was a film screening one presented by the African American Africana Studies on March 13, 2012 in Pfahler Auditorium. This was a transitional time for the program as the most recent coordinator of the program, Dr. Walter Greason, recently left and the Dr. Nzadi Keita assumed the role. The film focused on Ida B. Well, a female investigative journalist who documented and exposed the horrors of lynching in the south in the 1890s and was one of the founders of the NAACP. Following the film, a discussion of Wells extensive activism including women’s rights and suffrage was held. This was one of the firsts events held by the program.
Dr. Nzadi Keita
Ursinus College
March 13, 2012
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Ida B. Wells film screening presented by the AAAS program at Ursinus College.
Dr. Edward Onaci
Professor in History Department and in the AAAS program.
A picture of Dr. Edward Onaci (History professor and AAAS professor).
Ursinus College
Ursinus College Website
Ursinus College
12/07/2019
Ursinus College holds all rights to this picture.
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