Symposium celebrates 50 years of African and African-American studies at UB

Published February 8, 2019 This content is archived.

The Department of Transnational Studies in the College of Arts and Sciences will celebrate five decades of African and African-American studies at UB with a 50th Anniversary Symposium on Feb. 12.

The daylong celebration, which will begin at 9 a.m. in 228 Student Union, North Campus, is open to students, faculty, staff, alumni and members of the community. It will kick off a year of commemoration for the program, with additional events scheduled for the fall.

“UB was a pioneer in black studies in the nation,” says Cecil Foster, professor and chair of transnational studies. “So it is a time of celebrating, and a time of examining and evaluating what the program has become. And, equally, looking to what the program can become in the future.”

Mark Anthony Neal, a UB alumnus (PhD ’96) and chair of the Department of African and African American Studies at Duke University, will present the symposium’s keynote address, “If You Don’t Own the [Servers]”: Curating + Aggregating + Doing Black Studies in the Digital Era.” Founding director of the Center for Arts, Digital Culture and Entrepreneurship at Duke, Neal also co-directs the Duke Council on Race and Ethnicity, and is the author of several books.

The day will continue with a discussion of the history of African-American studies at UB, guest speakers and panels comprised of faculty, staff, students and alumni. A reception with this year’s Camille Arnold Scholarship awardees will close the symposium.

For specific event information, visit the UB event calendar or contact the department at tnsdept@buffalo.edu.