[Note: I am publicizing this panel in my personal capacity. This panel or event does not reflect the views of my employer.]
[Note: I am publicizing this panel in my personal capacity. This panel or event does not reflect the views of my employer.]
This group of distinguished historians will be putting today's political context into historical perspective, from the lens of labor and working class history and centering the resistance of working people.
Please consider attending this free virtual event, organized by the Labor and Working Class History Association. Please register to receive the zoom link. [BIT.LY/LAWCHAFEBPANEL]
Crystal Marie Moten. Continually Working: Black Women, Community Intellectualism, and Economic Justice in Postwar Milwaukee. | The American Historical Review | Oxford Academic lnkd.in/gkhmC3J2
CONTINUALLY thankful for thoughtful engagement with my work. Another review of CONTINUALLY WORKING-- now out in the December 2024 issue of the American Historical Review, penned by none other than the great Dr. Ashley Howard.
Working in my current context, sometimes I am afraid of losing my connection to my primary academic field (Black Women's History). Participating in this panel/edited collection has relieved that fear. โค๏ธ I am so appreciative.
We are working on an edited volume, New Directions in African American Women's History. I am working on a paper: Promise and Possibility: Black Women and Public History. The best part, though, was our fellowship after the panel. Life-giving.
While I didn't see as many people as I would have liked this past weekend at the AHA, my roundtable panel, organized by the brilliant, compassionate, and joyful Dr. Tamika Nunley really reinvigorated me.
A black and white quote that says โI do not have a dream job, I do not dream of labor.โ James Baldwin
โI do not have a dream job, I do not dream of labor.โ James Baldwin