Season 13

a brick building painted black with a circular hanging sign for Uncle Bobbie's Coffee and Tea

Episode 30 | Season 13 Finale with Dr. Marc Lamont Hill

Social commentator, activist, journalist, professor, and longtime friend Dr. Marc Lamont Hill joins host Prof. Mark Anthony Neal for the Season Finale of Left of Black’s thirteenth season. Dr. Hill chops it up with Dr. Neal on subjects ranging from Black masculinity to where Black Studies is happening outside of the university––all while recounting some […]

two smiling African American college students in cap and gown

Episode 29 | E. Patrick Johnson on the Future of Black Studies in the University

Long-time guest, Dr. E. Patrick Johnson, joins host Prof. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss the current and future face of Black Studies. Dr. Johnson serves as Dean of the School of Communication and is the Annenberg University Professor of Performance Studies and African American Studies at Northwestern University. He is a scholar of many intersections […]

flying saucer in a gray sky

Episode 28 | Dr. Stephen C. Finley on Farrakhan’s Mother Wheel in the Nation of Islam

Back in 1985, Nation of Islam’s leader, Louis Farrakhan, claimed to have a vision of entering into a mother wheel akin to appearance as what many would call a UFO. His assertion follows a tradition in the religious group of Black bodies transcending this earthly plane as another means of seeing Black people outside of […]

seven African American congressmen in the 1870's

Episode 27 | Thulani Davis on Networks of Freedom During Reconstruction

Newly freed formerly enslaved people were eager to build networks of learning, commerce, and politics during Reconstruction immediately following the American Civil War. Dr. Thulani Davis, a professor and a Nellie Y. McKay Fellow in the Afro-American Studies Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, joined host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her latest book, […]

Episode 26 | Exploring Black Operas with Naomi André

Black opera and its performers and composers have been on the rise in popularity for the past few years. But Black opera has been a long-tradition in the art form. Dr. Naomi André, the David G. Frey Distinguished Professor of Music at UNC-Chapel Hill, speaks on the rising number of operatic works that tell Black […]

Episode 25 | Mark Anthony Neal on Black Ephemera and the Crisis of the Musical Archive

We live in the unprecedented information age of immediate access to all types of content, most especially music. But does the instant access to these works also mean that there is a superficial understanding of the legacy of Black artists and American music as a whole? The crisis of the musical archive is that “…we […]

Discussing The University Plantation System with Bianca C. Williams & Armond Towns

Episode 24 | Dr. Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting on the Importance of Libraries

For academics and scholars, the library is the source and life’s blood to do the important work of research. What does it mean when state legislatures try to dictate what libraries can offer to the public at large? Celebrated scholar Dr. Tracy Denean Sharpley-Whiting, currently the Vice Provost of Arts and Libraries at Vanderbilt University, […]

Episode 23 | Rinaldo Walcott on Black Studies and the Long Emancipation

Is there a difference between emancipation and freedom ? And if there is a difference, have African Americans actually achieved freedom yet? Dr. Rinaldo Walcott, Chair of the Department of Africana and American Studies at the University of Buffalo, sat with host Prof. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss the concept of the long emancipation and […]

Rofhiwa Bookstore, a small two-story brick building

Episode 22 | “Small Talk at Rofhiwa” with Author Chantal James

19-year old Ham had to flee New Orleans in the wake of the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, leaving behind Miss Pearl, his foster mother. Now, he makes the trek back to his home to find out if Miss Pearl survived carrying the only thing he could take with him––a pendant she gave him that contain […]

Episode 21 |  Dr. Christina Greene on The Incredible Story of Joan Little

In 1974, the nation was gripped with the story of Joan Little, a young Black woman who, in self-defense, killed the prison guard at a Beaufort County Jail, In Washington, North Carolina when he sexually assaulted her while she was in custody. It raised questions of how safe a Black woman could be with police […]