Latest News and Comment from Education

Saturday, February 15, 2020

CATCH UP WITH NEWBLACKMAN (IN EXILE)

NewBlackMan (in Exile)


CATCH UP WITH NEWBLACKMAN (IN EXILE)

'Ghost' DNA In West Africans Complicates Story Of Human Origins

'Modern genomes from Nigeria and Sierra Leone show signals that scientists call "ghost" DNA — from an unknown human ancestor. That means that prehistoric humans likely procreated with an unknown group.' -- Morning Edition

FEB 13

#BackChannel: ‘Hair Love,’ Remembering Kobe Bryant & Michael Vick’s Road To Redemption

In this edition of #BackChannel , State of Things contributors Natalie Bullock Brown and Mark Anthony Neal join host Frank Stasio to discuss the Academy Award winning animated short Hair Love , the legacy of Kobe Bryant , and later are joined by award winning filmmaker Stanley Nelson, whose latest project is Vick from ESPN 30 for 30 series.

FEB 12

Earl Sweatshirt x MOCA: in Conversation with Cheryl I. Harris

'In/between us: a conversation on art, music, and life with Thebe Kgositsile (Earl Sweatshirt) and Cheryl I. Harris at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles.'
Rappers are ‘Products Made to Crumble’: A Review of Rap on Trial: Race, Lyrics and Guilt in America

by Tyler Bunzey |@t_bunzey | NewBlackMan (in Exile) Hip-hop has changed quite a bit since its early years as a small cultural movement in the South Bronx. Almost half a century old, hip-hop is now a massive international cultural force with multiple subgenres , a force that informs the layout of the recording industry, fashion, marketing, the American vernacular, and, hell, even U.S. diplomatic

FEB 11

Actor-Comedian Tommy Davidson Dives Into His New Memoir, 'Living In Color: What's Funny About Me'

'In his new memoir, Tommy Davidson shares his unique perspective on making it in Hollywood, being an integral part of TV history with the pioneering sketch show, In Living Color , and on living a life that has never been black and white. Told with humor and hard-won honesty by a singular voice whose family and friendships help him navigate a life of personal and professional highs and lows, Livin
Class Incarceration: A New Understanding of Prison and the American Population

'Sociologist Adaner Usmani advances a new explanation for mass incarceration in America - not as an elite-driven tool of racialized social control, but as a wide-scale punitive response to the growing crime and violence of an unequal society with no social democratic push for redistributive policies. Usmani wrote the article "The Economic Origins of Mass Incarceration" with John Clegg for Catalys
Jessie Reyez On The Power Of Sad Songs

'The 28-year-old Colombian-Canadian singer Jessie Reyez makes emotional music that has connected deeply with fans. She recently received her first Grammy nomination for best urban contemporary album for her EP, Being Human in Public .' -- Weekend Edition Saturday
How Black Women Were 'Skimmed' By Infant Formula Marketing

'Here & Now 's Tonya Mosley speaks with Andrea Freeman — whose book Skimmed: Breastfeeding, Race, and Injustice looks at how formula was marketed to black women in the late 20th century.'
Writer Danez Smith Discuses New Collection 'Homie'

Photo by Hieu Minh Nguyen. Danez Smith joins All Of It to discuss their work and latest book, Homie: Poems .

FEB 10

Blair Underwood on 'A Soldier's Play'

'Actor Blair Underwood returns to Broadway in A Soldier’s Play , a revival of Charles Fuller 's Pulitzer Prize winning drama.' -- Black Enterprise
The Incredulity of Jacolby Satterwhite

'In the midst of career-marking solo exhibitions at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn and the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia, artist Jacolby Satterwhite contemplates some of the most fundamental questions around the relationship between an artist and the works they create. Referencing both a long running fascination with Renaissance painter Caravaggio's "The Incredulity of Saint Thomas" and h
Where Did All The Black Farmers Go?

'The United States was built on the agricultural strength and skill of Black slaves who knew how to farm. But even after slavery ended, Black people who worked as farmers have continued to face systematic barriers — and still do today.' -- AJ+
Black Images, Black Histories: Richard J. Powell on The Obama Portraits

'The From Slavery to Freedom Lab presented a two-day conference to explore iconic images and popular constructions of blackness in culture. Richard J. Powell co-wrote the book, The Obama Portraits , published by Princeton University Press, along with authors Táina Caragol , Dorothy Moss , and Kim Sajet . Powell is the John Spencer Bassett Professor of Art & Art History at Duke University.'-- Duke

FEB 08

Tricia Rose's 'Black Noise' at 25 – Annual Meeting of the American Studies Association 2019

'In 1994, Tricia Rose published the award-winning Black Noise: Rap Music and Black Culture in Contemporary America . Notable for its pioneering and critical engagement with the complex cultural traditions, structural relations, and political interventions embedded in the production and consumption of rap music, Black Noise remains a foundational text for the study of hip-hop and has defined what
The Overlooked Activist Power Of Marlena Shaw

'As part of NPR's "One-Hit Wonders/Second-Best Songs," Vanderbilt professor Emily Lordi recommends "Woman of the Ghetto" by Marlena Shaw . She's known mostly for her 1969 hit, "California Soul".'-- Morning Edition


Honoring A Legend & A Life: Walter "Buck" Leonard & The Negro Baseball Leagues

'"If there hadn't been a Walter "Buck" Leonard (1907-1997)... what wouldn't - have happened?" ...the integration of Black players into professional sports teams, an advancement of awareness of the need for social change. Dr. Mark 


NewBlackMan (in Exile)