2020-2022 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Black Studies
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Return to: Faculty Listings and Program Information
Black Studies
Contact Information
Phone: 401.865.2125
Fax: 401.865.2232
Location: Howley Hall 119
The Faculty
Professors
Anthony D. Affigne, Ph.D. (Political Science/Black Studies)
Eric L. Hirsch, Ph.D. (Sociology/Black Studies)
Tuire M. Valkeakari, Ph.D. (English/Black Studies)
Associate Professors
Comfort Ateh, Ph.D. (Secondary Education/Black Studies)
Patrick H. Breen, Ph.D. (History/Black Studies)
Zophia Edwards, Ph.D., Program Director (Sociology/Black Studies)
Trina Vithayathil, Ph.D. (Global Studies/Black Studies)
Eva Wheeler, Ph.D. (Spanish/Black Studies)
Assistant Professors
Matthew J. Dowling, Ph.D. (History/Black Studies)
Michael L. Hayes, Ph.D. (Social Work/Public and Community Service Studies/Black Studies)
Rahsaan Mahadeo, Ph.D. (Sociology/Black Studies)
Aishah Scott, Ph.D. (Health Sciences/Black Studies)
Ashley Smith-Purviance, Ph.D. (Public and Community Service Studies/Black Studies)
Special Lecturers
Justin Lester, Rev., MDiv, M.A.
Danny Kyei-Poakwa, Ph.D.
Tryon Woods, Ph.D.
The Program
The Black Studies program offers students an interdisciplinary set of analytic and research tools for critical analysis and understanding of various aspects of Black culture and fosters a new appreciation for the contributions made by people of African descent to world cultures and human history.
The Black studies program seeks to provide students with clear, precise, reliable, and accurate knowledge about the African Diasporic communities of Africa, the Americas, the Caribbean, and Europe within the framework of a liberal arts education.
As an academic minor, this interdisciplinary and multicultural course of study takes a look at the African Diasporic communities’ contemporary state, history and traditions, unique culture, collective experience, and antecedent connection with Africa and African history.
To that end, teaching, analysis, and research within the program are directed toward the communities’ world view, core beliefs, structures of relationships, patterns of moral and ethical discourse, political thought and action, experience of and response to racism, cultural motifs, and historical foundations, both within the United States and globally.
This minor can be paired with many different majors, including global studies, economics, and political science. Students from a variety of academic majors will find that proficiency in Black studies can expand career options.
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