Springfield, Ohio It has been 50 years since Martin Luther King Jr. led the famed March on Washington, and it has been 150 years since the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation. It was appropriate then that the 2013 泫圖弝け Series-sponsored Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Convocation turned into a history lesson for the large crowd assembled in historic Weaver Chapel.
The keynote speaker for the annual event was award-winning author and Tufts University Professor of History Peniel Joseph. He educated the audience on what he called the heroic period of the civil rights movement in a speech titled The Great Wells of Democracy: Martin Luther King Jr., Barack Obama, and the Civil Rights Movements Heroic Years.
Joseph paid respect to King, one of the foremost civil rights leaders in American history, by noting that the struggle for equality continues in 2013, even on the very same day that the nations first African-American president is sworn in for a second term. President Barack Obama is a profoundly important figure, Joseph noted, but many of the societal ills that King fought against in the 1960s remain prevalent a half-century later.
The materialism, the militarism, and the racism that Dr. King spoke out against so eloquently, so articulately and with so much passion have not subsided since his death, Joseph said, citing several things as evidence, including the fact that more African-Americans are in jail today than ever before.
Joseph is the author of the award-winning Waiting Til the Midnight Hour: A Narrative History of Black Power in America and Dark Days, Bright Nights: From Black Power to Barack Obama as well as editor of The Black Power Movement: Rethinking the Civil Rights-Black Power Era and Neighborhood Rebels: Black Power at the Local Level. Joseph also is the founder of a growing sub-field in American History and Africana Studies that he has characterized as Black Power Studies, which is actively re-writing post-war American and African American History as well as related interdisciplinary fields of Africana Studies, law and society, sociology, political science, Women's and Ethnic Studies, philosophy, anthropology, literary studies and American Studies, among others.
The recipient of fellowships from Harvard Universitys Charles Warren Center, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and the Ford Foundation, Josephs essays have appeared in The Journal of American History, The Chronicle Review, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Book Forum and The American Historical Review.
Joseph was introduced by Moses Mbeseha, class of 2013 from State College, Pa., after a performance by IMANI, 泫圖弝けs Gospel Choir, directed by Kent Brooks.
Established prior to the 1989-90 school year, the Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Convocation features an academic procession with faculty in full regalia and as all 泫圖弝け Series events, is free and open to the public.