Students at the University of Missouri protest the university's handling of racist incidents, November 9, 2015.
(AP Photo / Jeff Roberson, File)
Ten emerging storytellers shine the light of truth upon the lived experiences of black college students.
This release was also just published here.
New York, NY—May 18, 2018—The Nation, America’s leading source of independent journalism, progressive politics, and culture, today announced the launch of Black on Campus (#BlackOnCampus),
an extension of our long-standing commitment to the education,
training, and support of student and emerging journalists. Produced in
partnership with the Anna Julia Cooper Center of Wake Forest University, Black on Campus
is a national program for 10 storytellers—chosen from a pool of more
than 100 applicants—in two- or four- year colleges, universities, or
graduate schools, working under the direction of Nation contributing editor Melissa Harris-Perry (@MHarrisPerry), founding director of the AJC Center and Maya Angelou Presidential Chair at Wake Forest University, and Dr. Sherri Williams (@SherriWrites), assistant professor of race, media, and communication at American University.
Black on Campus
allows participants to develop professional skills as they document the
experiences of black college students and report on issues of national
consequence. For the next several weeks, The Nation will bring you reporting from the talented young writers of the Black on Campus cohort as they follow in the examples of Ida B. Wells and Anna Julia Cooper—righting
wrongs by shining the light of truth upon them to reframe our
understanding of the political, cultural, and personal implications of
race, in pursuit of a better nation.
In her introduction to the series, Harris-Perry discusses “What It’s Like to Be Black on Campus Now.”
“Suddenly our experiences no longer seem isolated,” she explains.
“They’re linked in a larger movement against institutional racism.” The
inaugural essay by UVA Junior Alexis Gravely (@_AlexisWasHere) begins where the academic year began—with racial violence: “At the University of Virginia, Black Students Are Still Recovering From August 11.”
Since January, student writers have met monthly with the Black on Campus journalism squad and traveled to Washington, DC, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina. On June 1st, they will attend The Nation’s annual Student Journalism Conference at The New School in New York City.
For booking requests or further information, please see contact information above.
About The Nation:
Founded by abolitionists in 1865, The Nation
has chronicled the breadth and depth of political and cultural life
from the debut of the telegraph to the rise of Twitter, serving as a
critical, independent, and progressive voice in American journalism.
About The AJC Center:
The
Anna Julia Cooper Center is an interdisciplinary center at Wake Forest
University with a mission of advancing justice through intersectional
scholarship.
The
AJC Center supports, generates, and communicates innovative research at
the intersections of gender, race, and place, sustaining relationships
between partners on campus and throughout the nation in order to ask new
questions, reframe critical issues, and pursue equitable outcomes.
The
AJC Center supports a postdoctoral fellowship and undergraduate
research; convenes faculty, researchers, and community through seminars
and roundtable discussions; and hosts local and national events and
residencies. The AJC Center is the administrator of the Collaborative to
Advance Equity Through Research.
The
Center is named for scholar, educator, and author Anna Julia Cooper,
whose pioneering scholarship and activism laid the foundation for black
American feminism and insisted on the importance of Southern voices in
American politics.
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