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Valerie Kinloch Named President of Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte

By: Editor

Alumna Valerie Kinloch has been chosen to serve as the fifteenth president of Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, North Carolina. She will take office on August 1.

Historically Black Johnson C. Smith University enrolls just over 1,100 undergraduate students and a few dozen graduate students, according to the most recent data available from the U.S. Department of Education. Officially, African Americans make up 72 percent of the student body but another 24 percent are listed as โ€œrace/ethnicity unknown.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a dream come true to be invited to lead one of the finest historically Black colleges and universities in America โ€“ and at the same time come home,โ€ Dr. Kinloch said. โ€œMy years at JCSU were some of the best of my life. This university set me on course to grow beyond anything I could imagine, so it is incredibly gratifying to return and give back to the institution that helped make me who I am.โ€

In 2017, Dr. Kinloch was named the Renรฉe and Richard Goldman Dean of the University of Pittsburgh School of Education. Previously, she held positions as associate dean and professor at Ohio State University and was a faculty member at Teachers College of Columbia University in New York City and at the University of Houston-Downtown. She is the author of Harlem on Our Minds: Place, Race, and the Literacies of Urban Youth (Teachers College Press, 2009).

A native of Charleston, South Carolina, Dr. Kinloch holds a bachelorโ€™s degree in English from Johnson C. Smith University. She earned a masterโ€™s degree in English and African American literature and a Ph.D. in English and composition studies with a cognate in urban studies from Wayne State University in Detroit.

Socialist Nostalgia, Cuban State Power

Is it ever possible to reconcile clashing visions of national memory?

The post Socialist Nostalgia, Cuban State Power appeared first on Public Books.

School of Pharmacy at the University of Pittsburgh to Honor Its First Black Woman Graduate

By: Editor

Ella Nora Phillips was born in Stringtown, West Virginia, in 1893. She had planned to become a teacher but decided to marry Charles Phillips who was a chauffeur in Pittsburgh. The couple had a daughter who died from whooping cough. Then Phillips Myers applied to the School of Pharmacy at the University of Pittsburgh. But she was rejected. She persisted and eventually was admitted in 1914. In the classroom, White males had the first rows of seats, and they were followed, in descending order, by White females, then Jews, then Blacks. She graduated in 1916 and became the first Black woman to practice pharmacy in Pennsylvania.

Myers established a drugstore in Pittsburgh before marrying fellow Pitt pharmacy graduate William Stewart in 1920. She changed her name to Ella P. Stewart. After moving to Ohio, she became the first Black pharmacist and employee to work at Youngstown City Hospital. Later, she and her husband then opened Toledoโ€™s first Black-owned and operated drugstore.

Now the University of Pittsburgh is recognizing Stewart by naming a conference room in her honor. A portrait of Stewart commissioned by the university will hang on a wall of the conference room.

Stewart died in 1987. Her papers and memorabilia are held in archives at the University of Toledo and Bowling Green State University. An elementary school in Toledo was named in her honor.

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University of Pittsburgh to Offer a Ph.D. Program in Africana Studies

By: Editor

The University of Pittsburghโ€™s graduate program in Africana Studies has announced that it will enroll its first cohort of students in its Ph.D. program this coming fall. The new Ph.D. program will offer students the choice of three different concentrations:

Race & Equity: Drawing from various methodological and theoretical approaches, this research theme articulates an understanding of race as a social construct with material, intellectual, cultural, political, and bioethical implications. It aims to create and develop the tools to achieve social justice and equity throughout Africa and its diaspora.

Migration & Community Transformation: This research theme analyzes the causes and implications of the movements of people of African origin throughout time and space.

Culture & Creative Production: Researchers in this concentration will seek to illuminate the intersections between socio-economic, political, intellectual, and psychological transformation and Black cultural productions in music, literature, performing, and visual arts, as well as film & media.

Robin Brooks, the programโ€™s inaugural director, is an associate professor of Africana studies. โ€œWe see that change happening nationally, where these programs are now being institutionalized as departments and recognized as departments at different institutions. We think that the impact of 2020: the collision with a pandemic, George Floyd, all of those things, are working together for the good concerning the overall field of Africana studies.โ€

Dr. Brooks added that โ€œthere are continually advancements in the field and different approaches, because weโ€™re not in a silo. Weโ€™re in a moving, rolling developing world. And so, as the world transforms, so does the field, of course. At the center of our attention is always people of African descent and the lived experiences of people of African descent across the world.โ€

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