Saturday, December 31, 2011

Second Volume of the Writings of Henry McNeal Turner Due January 2012

Dr. Andre E. Johnson is pleased to announce the publication of "An African American Pastor Before and During the American Civil War: The Literary Archive of Henry McNeal Turner, Vol 2; The Chaplain Writings" (Edwin Mellen Press, 2012). This is the second of a proposed 12 volume series that aims at collecting the  letters, speeches, sermons and essays of Turner.  Volume 2 consists of 38 writings while Turner served as a Chaplain during the American Civil War from 1863-1865.

Praise for the Volumes:

Dr. Andre E. Johnson’s scholarship on the life, work, and writings of The Henry McNeal Turner recovers an incredibly important aspect of African American history.  It is always an important occasion when a scholar goes beyond the study of well known historical figures to re-introduce a leader who lived beyond the limits of current life memories, and whose efforts paved the way for current benefits. The volumes that will follow, document Turner’s contributions to history through his copious writings. Dr Johnson, a rhetorician, theologian, professor and pastor, is uniquely suited to edit volumes that will enhance our understanding of Turner’s work and the political, theological, and legal issues of the antebellum and reconstruction period.-Barbara A. Holmes, Professor of Ethics and African American Studies, Memphis Theological Seminary

In this collection of writings and speeches Dr. Andre E. Johnson opens up an aspect of American history that has been unavailable to scholars and general readers, the history of African Americans during the last half of the 19th-century and early 20th-century revealed through the mind of a southern black man.  Johnson characterizes Henry McNeal Turner as a public intellectual of his time given the range of topics he addresses and the vast quantity of his published and unpublished writing.  We see American history from an uncommon angle, from the point of view of a black man striving to find freedom and equality for all people of color in a society that condoned racism and racist practices.-Sandra Sarkela, Associate Professor of Communications, University of Memphis

Thank you ever so much for the new scholarship on a mainstay personality of the nineteenth century. McNeal Turner was an unusual and intellectually stalwart human being.This kind of research will be of use not only to historians but to literary critics and so many others not to mention  people interested in his theology, his race insights even the ideas these volumes will lend to anyone wanting to do a psychoanalytic analysis of his work. Thank you ever so much for this.
-prramsey@starpower.net

To purchase the first volume now, click here

CALL FOR Submissions: NCA 2012-Orlando, Florida



Program Planner:

Andre E. Johnson, PhD

Memphis Theological Seminary

168 E. Parkway

Memphis, Tennessee 38104

ajohnson@memphisseminary.edu

(901) 334-5817

DEADLINE: Wednesday, March 28, 2012 at 11:59 Pacific Time

The African American Communication and Culture Division (AACCD) invites your competitive papers and paper session for the NCA 98th Annual Convention in Orlando, Florida on November 15-18, 2012. The theme for the 98th Annual Convention is “Celebrate COMMunity.”

Appropriate for a convention theme that seeks to “affirm the ideas that unify the communication discipline, as well as celebrate the diverse community of scholars, educators, and practitioners that constitutes the National Communication Association,” the AACCD feels particularly at “home” because much of what we teach, study, and research revolves around building, sustaining and empowering “community” across diverse audiences. Therefore, AACCD encourages you to submit competitive papers addressing issues that significantly contribute to our convention call but also ones that further the understanding of communication practices, processes, methods, discourse, and strategies involving and/or affect descendants of the African Diaspora.

SUBMISSION INFORMATION

You must submit all papers and panel sessions electronically to NCA Submission Central linked at www.natcom.org/convention. In order to avoid unnecessary problems with submission and review, please carefully read the following guidelines:

SUBMITTING A COMPETITIVE PAPER

We will only consider fully completed papers. Each paper should include:

• A title

• An abstract (no more than 250 words)

• Maximum length of paper is 25, double-spaced pages, excluding references, tables, charts, and  appendices.

• No information identifying the author(s) may appear in the body of your abstract or your paper.

SUBMITTING A PAPER SESSION

Submitted paper sessions should include:

• A title for the session

• A list of presenters, their institutional addresses, and their email addresses

• The names of the chair and respondent, their institutional addresses, and their email addresses

• Titles and abstracts (350 words maximum) for EACH presentation or paper

• A session abstract (75 words maximum)

• A session abstract (250 words maximum)



If you wish to submit a Panel Discussion that deals with issues related to African American Communication or descendents of the African Diaspora, you are encouraged to submit those proposals directly to the Black Caucus. Please specify any audiovisual needs at the time of submission.

Monday, November 28, 2011

Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia

Part 1
This is the first part of "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK.



Part 2
Second part of a documentary called "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK. This part remembers the struggles that our people went through just to be able to go to University in the US. It also starts telling the story of our elders who came to the UK especially from the Caribbean in the 50s and 60s and their children's experience in the education system.



Part 3
Third part of a documentary called "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK. This section looks at how Black children in Britain in the sixties and seventies were pushed into certain kinds of blue-collar jobs. It also looks at the rise of African American in the radical late sixties America.



Part 4
Fourth part of a documentary called "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK. This section looks at some of the influence of those who came into Higher Education in the US in the post-Civil Rights era. In the UK, we are way,
way behind. We actually experience a brain drain, with so many of our academics and intellectuals heading abroad.



Part 5
Fifth part of a documentary called "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK. This section discusses the influence of music and urban culture on perceptions of education among our young people on both sides of the pond.



Part 6
Sixth and last part of a documentary called "Ebony Towers: The New Black Intelligentsia" by David Olusoga comparing the state of Black Academia in the US and with us here in the UK. This last part continues on the anti-intellectual mentality that plagues our young people and also makes the call for academics and intelllectuals to do their bit to address the socio-economic depravation within many of our communities.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Kimberly Moffitt, American Studies, Receives Book Award


Kimberly Moffitt’s book, Blackberries and Redbones: Critical Articulations of Black Hair and Body Politics in Africana Communities, has received the outstanding book award from the National Communication Association’s African American Communication and Culture Division.
Moffitt, an assistant professor of American studies, co-edited the volume with Regina Spellers. The book examines the way that hair and bodies shape perception of African Americans through a variety of interdisciplinary lenses, including poems, creative writing and scholarly essays.
More information about the book can be found here.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Welcome to the Blog

I want to welcome all to the new African American Communication and Culture Division and Black Caucus Blog. Here you can find stuff relating to African American communication and culture as well as updates of new and cutting edge scholarship, book reviews, announcements of lectures, and other important scholarship germane to the "Black" experience. We hope that you would follow this blog and we hope that you would enjoy it as well!