UPCOMING EVENT: “The Skin You’re In” Screening

Join us for a virtual screening of The Skin You’re In documentary on Wednesday, April 28, from 6:30-7:45pm EDT. This webinar will include a discussion with Thomas LaVeist, Executive Producer and Dean of Tulane University’s School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine. This event is free and open to all BU students, faculty, and staff. Black Americans live sicker […]

The Black Scholar – CFP on Black Archival Practice

The Black Scholar Journal: Call for papers on Black Archival Practice – Deadline May 1, 2021! Archivists and other archives workers are not attuned to how Black life is lived. As a result of this disregard for the lived experiences of Black people, the discourses of everyday Black memory work are neither legible nor affirmed […]

2021 Summer 1 Course: AA 234: Slavery and the Creation of Race

This Summer 1 course taught by Professor Hope Joyce Scott focuses on engaging in an in depth study of how chattel slavery was created for New World capitalism, and in turn led to racialization in America. This course meets on Mondays and Wednesdays from 9:00 am-12:30 pm during the Summer 1 session from May 24th-June […]

BU Giving Day 2021 is This Wednesday, April 7th!

April 7th is BU giving day! Boston University’s African American Studies Program is proud to be at the center of conversations about tolerance, justice, cultural change and indeed diversity. Our goal is to allow students practical training in such issues along with the theoretical tools necessary for either more advanced study or a more direct […]

Invisible No More: Asian American responses to Atlanta

This Friday March 26 at 6pm, join Prof. Choi, Hee An (School of Theology), Prof. Yoonsook Ha (School of Social Work), Prof. Hyeouk Chris Hahm (School of Social Work), Prof. Takeo Rivera (College of Arts & Sciences), and Prof. Kính T. Vũ (College of Fine Arts) for a response to the March 16 killings in Atlanta and […]

51.1, Black Privacy

  Black Privacy collects reflections on, provocations around, demands for, acute analyses of, and uncertain futures for Black privacy in the face of anti-Black violence, surveillance, and hypervisibility. This special issue interrogates the history of Black privacy in its impossible antebellum and Jim Crow forms, its present urgency in the face of spectacular visibility, and the […]

March 9th EVENT: The Black Left Feminism of Claudia Jones

Join us Tuesday, March 9, 2020, as Dr. Carole Boyce Davies,  Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters in the College of Arts and Sciences and Professor of Africana Studies and English at Cornell University, assesses the activism, writing, and legacy of Claudia Jones (1915–1964). Claudia Jones was a pioneering Afro-Caribbean radical intellectual, dedicated communist, […]

How The Internet Is Demystifying Africana Religions

Margarita Guillory examines the function of religion in the everyday lives of African Americans, through practices tracing back to religious and cultural systems from Africa. Photo by: Cydney Scott BU researcher and assistant professor in the African American Studies Program, Margarita Guillory, is featured in a recent article on The Brink where she discusses “the emergence of […]

African American Studies Expands Course Offerings In Response to Rising Student Demand

  Professor Louis Chude- Sokei explaining course demand and program expansion. Photo by: Cydney Scott BU Today featured AFAM course expansion in a newly released article. The program’s long term goals include expanding the graduate curriculum and becoming an official undergraduate major. “This spring the program offers the new course Resistance, Revolution and Slavery taught […]