Historian
Anne Bailey will speak on ‘Historical Memory and the Debate over Reparations’
Feb. 24
Slavery was widespread in South County where Narragansett Indians and Africans gave their forced labor to create the wealth of South County's best known family names. Starting March 5, the Charlestown Historical Society will launch an educational series on slavery in South County. CLICK HERE for details. Image credit: RI State Archives, "A Heritage discovered: Blacks in Rhode Island" (1976). |
Noted historian and
author Anne C. Bailey will deliver a keynote address on “Historical Memory and
the Debate over Reparations” as part of the University of Rhode Island’s
recognition of Black History Month.
Bailey is a professor of history at SUNY
Binghamton. Her most recent book, The Weeping Time: Memory and the
Largest Slave Auction in American History (Cambridge University
Press), chronicles the slave auction which occurred in 1859 Savannah, Georgia.
In addition to
conducting exhaustive research on the Butler family, which
owned the plantation where more than 400 men, women and children were sold into
slavery, Bailey conducted interviews with the living descendants of slaves sold
on the auction block, showing how the memories of slavery have shaped people’s
lives today.
This is a work of restoration, culling a crucial
narrative from the silences of the past. But most crucially, this is a
restoration of the humanity to those enslaved black people who were so commonly
denied it.”
Her talk will examine
historical memory and the ongoing legacy of slavery, including whether we can
say the systemic and institutional racism that is a part of our nation’s
history is truly in the past or if it also extends to other groups within the
United States.
Bailey is also the
author of African Voices of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Beyond the
Silence and the Shame, (Beacon Press) and You Can Make A Difference:
The Story of Martin Luther King Jr.(Bantam/Doubleday/Dell).
In addition to
teaching and writing, Bailey has spoken around the country. She recently
participated in The New York Times 1619 Project, and in
2013 she was invited to speak at the United Nations in commemoration of the 150th anniversary
of the Emancipation Proclamation.
The keynote will be
presented in the Hardge Forum, Multicultural Student Services Center, 74 Lower
College Road, Kingston on Monday, Feb. 24 at 4 p.m.