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UID:Indybay-18587392
SEQUENCE:18634093
CREATED:20090410T091900Z
DESCRIPTION:-------------------\nThe Department of Ethnic Studies and its series 
 1968-1969: On Epistemic and Social Struggles Series, the Department of 
 African American Studies and CRISES Present:\n\n\nROBERT ALLEN'S BLACK 
 AWAKENING IN CAPITALIST AMERICA 40 YEARS LATER: ITS SIGNIFICANCE AND 
 RELEVANCE FOR TODAY'S STRUGGLES\n\n\nDATE: FRIDAY APRIL 10, 2009\nPlace: 
 Tilden Room (5th floor MLK building) UC 
 Berkeley\n830am-530pm\n\n\n8:30AM-10:30AM-\nPANEL 1: "Black Awakening's" 
 Awakening of Liberation Struggles"\n\n Moderator/Discussant Carlos Muñoz 
 (UC-Berkeley)\n\nDavid Montejano. (UC-Berkeley)\n  "Robert Allen's Black 
 Awakening and Early Chicano Scholarship"\n\nAndrew Barlow (UC-Berkeley)\n  
 "Social Justice and state crisis: Lessons for the future from the 
 1960s\nBlack Liberation movement."\n\nKwame Nimako (NINSEE- Institute for 
 the Study of Dutch Slavery and its\nLegacies and University of Amsterdam, 
 The Netherlands)\n  "Nkrumah, African Awakening, and Neo-colonialism: How 
 Black America\nawakened Nkrumah and Nkrumah awakened Black 
 America."\n\nRonald Williams II" (UC-Berkeley)\n  "Black (Re) Awakening in 
 Post-Race America: Race, Class and the Internal\nColony 
 Model"\n\n\n\n10:45AM: 12:45PM- PANEL 2: The Internal (Neo) Colonial 
 Approach\n\n Moderator/Discussant: Michael Omi (UC-Berkeley)\n\nCharles 
 Pinderhughes (Boston College)\n  "How Black Awakening in Capitalist America 
 Laid the Foundation for New\nInternal Colonialism Theory."\n\nMichael 
 Calderon-Zaks (Ithaca College) Center for the Study of Culture,\nRace, and 
 Ethnicity (CSCRE)\n  "'Domestic Colonialism:' The Overlooked Significance 
 of Robert Allen's\nContributions, 1969-1975."\n\nRoberto D. Hernández 
 (UC-Berkeley)\n  "On the Analytic Import of Black Awakening Across 
 Colonial/Racial\nDifference"\n\nChris Reid (UC-Berkeley)\n "Malcolm X and 
 Robert Allen on Domestic (Neo-)Colonialism and\nRevolutionary Nationalism, 
 and Black Awakenings as a seminal bridge\nbetween the 'organic' and 
 'traditional' intellectual traditions 
 of\nactivist-scholarship."\n\n\nLunch: 12:45PM to 
 2:00PM\n\n\n2:00PM-4:00PM-\nPanel 3: Black Awakening 40 Years Later: Its 
 Relevance for Today\n\n Moderator/Discussant Charles Henry 
 (UC-Berkeley)\n\nThomas A. Dutton (Miami University-Ohio)\n "Colony 
 Over-the-Rhine: Gentrification and Econocide."\n\nRobert Chrisman (The 
 Black Scholar Journal)\n "The Black Middle Class, 40 years after BLACK 
 AWAKENING IN CAPITALIST\nAMERICA."\n\nJared Ball (Morgan University)\n 
 "Anti-Colonial Media in the 21st Century"\n\nLia Bascomb (UC-Berkeley)\n 
 "Eyes Wide Open: A Case Study Reflecting on Black 
 Awakening."\n\n\n\n4:15PM-5:30PM- ROBERT ALLEN 40 YEARS LATER\n\nKeynote 
 Presenter: Nelson Maldonado-Torres (UC Berkeley)\n\nKEYNOTE SPEAKER: Robert 
 Allen (UC Berkeley)\n\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/04/10/18587392.php
SUMMARY:ROBERT ALLEN'S BLACK AWAKENING IN CAPITALIST AMERICA 40 YRS LATER: ITS SIGNIFICANCE TODAY
LOCATION:DATE: FRIDAY APRIL 10, 2009\nPlace: Tilden Room (5th floor MLK building) UC 
 Berkeley\nNear corner of Telegraph and Bancroft\n830am-530pm
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/04/10/18587392.php
DTSTART:20090410T153000Z
DTEND:20090411T013000Z
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