Season 13

2023-2027 Herbert Street in Mondawmin

Episode 20 | Sheryll Cashin on the Systematic Taking of Resources from Marginalized Communities

How do city and state governments go about creating “ghettos” to sequester their undesirable communities while protecting affluent white spaces? And at whose expense? Sheryll Cashin, J.D., the Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Law, Civil Rights and Social Justice at Georgetown University Law Center, joins host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her latest book, White […]

rock band Living Colour

Episode 19 | Dr. Kimberly Mack & Groundbreaking Black Rock Band Living Colour’s Album “Time’s Up”

In 1988, the world was introduced to the groundbreaking Black rock band, Living Colour, with their debut record, “Vivid,” which dominated the charts and was a commercial hit. Made up of lead vocalist Corey Glover, guitarist Vernon Reid, drummer William Calhoun, and bassist Muzz Skillings, the group then released their sophomoric album, “Time’s Up,” a […]

Episode 18 | Dr. Casarae Abdul-Ghani on Civil Unrest and the Black Arts Movement

What was the cultural production of the Civil Rights Era and beyond during the Black Arts Movement of the ’60’s and ’70’s? Dr. Casarae Lavada Abdul-Ghani, Assistant Professor of English at Temple University joins Dr. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her new book, Start a Riot! Civil Unrest in Black Arts Movement Drama, Fiction, and […]

Episode 17 | Dr. Miriam Thaggert on Black Women and the Railroad

The railroad has long held a place in American mythos as the very representation of “progress,” such as with westward expansion. But in the years following Emancipation, Black women have long utilized the newfound technology to increase their mobility around the country. What were some of the inherent retaliations that Black women faced while riding […]

Episode 16 | Dr. Tara T. Green on the Life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson

Not much has been written on the life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson––until now. For many people she was mainly known as the wife of famed poet and novelist, Paul Laurence Dunbar. But Alice Dunbar-Nelson was a poet, essayist, and activist very much in her own right and power. Prof. Tara T. Green, Chair of African American […]

Episode 15 | Dr. Jordanna Matlon on Black Masculinity and Racial Capitalism

What is the lasting impact of Black masculinity being used as a tool of capitalism and commerce?  Dr. Jordanna Matlon, Assistant Professor at American University, joins host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal to discuss her new book, A Man among Other Men: The Crisis of Black Masculinity in Racial Capitalism, published by Cornell University Press. Dr. […]

Episode 14 | “Requiem for the Enslaved” with Composer Carlos Simon and Rapper Marco Pavé

272 enslaved people were sold by Georgetown University in 1838 to bring in much-needed funds to preserve itself. Recently, the university has strove to make amends for this tremendous act of inhumanity. But composer Carlos Simon, Assistant Professor in the Department of Performing Arts at Georgetown, felt that something should be done to commemorate the […]

Episode 13 | Dr. Julius B. Fleming, Jr. on “Black Patience” and the Struggle for Civil Rights

In the face of ongoing calls to “be patient” during the Civil Rights Era, how did activists and artists use Black theater, and Black performance more broadly, as a form of dissidence to make change? Dr. Julius B. Fleming, Jr., a scholar of Performance Studies and Black Literature and an Assistant Professor of English at […]

Episode 12 | Sophia Chang on “The Baddest Bitch in the Room”

What does it mean to take up space where you weren’t even expected to appear? Not meekly hiding in the corner, but boldly taking space and letting your voice, and your story, be heard and known? Left of Black host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal welcomes Sophia Chang, the first Asian woman in hip hop, as […]

Episode 11 | Dean of Duke Chapel Rev. Dr. Luke A. Powery on Becoming Human

What does it mean to “become human”? Or to humanize one another instead of racializing one another, which has become so entwined with how we perceive and engage with other people in this American society? In this special holiday episode of Left of Black, host Dr. Mark Anthony Neal is joined by the Duke University […]