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Virginia Humanities HBCU Scholars Fellow Talk | Beyond Black Radicalism: How America's Great Migration to New York City Shaped Electoral Politics

Virginia Humanities HBCU Scholars Fellow Talk | Beyond Black Radicalism: How America's Great Migration to New York City Shaped Electoral Politics

Join us at the Library for “Beyond Black Radicalism,” a free talk by historian Janira Teague, a Virginia Humanities HBCU Scholars Fellow. More than two-thirds of Black residents in early 20th-century New York City were either African American southerners who came north during the early years of America’s Great Migration or Caribbean colonists—mostly emigrants from Jamaica or Barbados—who composed the first significant voluntary wave of Black immigration to post-emancipation America. This group embraced new opportunities and created new trends. Many of the newcomers were Virginia natives, hoping to take advantage of new opportunities in the urban north. This talk places America’s Great Migration in global context and examines the movement’s impact on electoral politics. 

Teague, an assistant professor of history at Morehouse College in Atlanta and formerly at Norfolk State University, is a scholar of 19th- and 20th-century African American history. The Virginia Historically Black Colleges and Universities Scholars Fellowship is a program of Virginia Humanities.

For more information, contact Catherine Fitzgerald Wyatt at 804.692.3999 or catherine.fitzgeraldwyatt@lva.virginia.gov.
This is a free event. Registration is required. Limited free parking is available in the deck underneath the Library building.

Calendar:
LVA Events
Date:
Tuesday, June 13, 2023
Time:
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Time Zone:
Eastern Time - US & Canada (change)
Location:
Conference Room A, Conference Room B, Conference Room C
Audience:
  Genealogy  
  History  
Categories:
Registration has closed.

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