
Fred Hord
Professor and Chair of Black Studies
2 East South Street
Galesburg, IL 61401-4999
309-341-7224
E-mail: fhord@knox.edu
Black Studies provides a foundation for understanding black experiences in the United States, as well as an appreciation for the rich traditions of Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean.
The Black Studies program has forged connections with other academic areas as well, such as Women's Studies, Latin American Studies, Educational Studies, Integrated International Studies and American Studies.
Knox students also benefit from the increasing visibility of the Black Studies program. There are close ties to the Illinois Committee for Black Concerns in Higher Education, the Association for Black Culture Centers (ABCC) and with the National Council for Black Studies.
Curriculum
Black Studies at Knox College offers more than 30 courses, with a strong emphasis on content in Black history and culture. Introductory courses examine the areas of Black Studies and African studies, as well as the histories of slavery in the Americas. Electives may be chosen from 27 courses, and may also include independent study work and/or an internship.
Two culminating courses familiarize students with theoretical models and research methodologies in Black Studies, resulting in a term-long independent research project.
The minor in Black Studies consists of five courses and an independent research project or internship.
Resources
Black Studies occupies a spacious suite of offices, classrooms, seminar rooms, library and reception areas. The program benefits from the extensive holdings of Seymour Library, with more than a quarter of a million books, more than 700 periodicals, rare book collections and on-line databases. The abolitionist section in the archives is a valuable and unique resource.
In addition, the ABLE Center for Black Culture, operated by the student group, Allied Blacks for Liberty and Equality (ABLE House shown right), maintains a cultural center with an extensive library of print and video materials, cultural artifacts relating to the African and African- American experiences, and meeting rooms for special events and study sessions.
Knox College's holdings of Black Studies materials and excellent inter-library loan program provide ready access to research resources. Since Black Studies research has been widespread for less than a half century, the resources you discover—and the conclusions you draw—may be previously unexamined and provide a source of help for future studies in the field.
On-Campus Programs
Knox has hosted many noteworthy black authors, speakers and performing groups, including U.S. Congressman John Lewis, Nobel Prize-winning author Wole Soyinka, poets Rita Dove and Gwendolyn Brooks, blues artists Koko Taylor and Joe Jackson, the Najwa Dance Company, Haki Madhubuti, Martin Luther King, III, Itabari Njeri, KRS-1, the Ethnic Heritage Ensemble. Scholars who have visited the campus including Delores Aldridge, Maulana Karenga, and Beveryl Guy-Sheftall.
There are a number of co-curricular opportunities geared for students interested in Black Studies. These include:
Knox College is one of the top liberal arts colleges in the nation for Fulbright Scholar grants awarded to faculty during 2009-2010. Karen Kampwirth is studying feminism and politics at the University of Buenos Aires, and Jeremy Day O'Connell is conducting musicology and linguistics research at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
Severed heads, a ghost in the well -- the Knox College Japanese Club marks Halloween by building a "Kimodameshi," which led visitors through scenes drawn from traditional Japanese ghost stories.
Too much government action, not too little, lengthened the Great Depression, according to author and columnist Amity Shlaes, in an October 15 lecture at Knox College.
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