Association of Black Anthropologists
Founded in 1975, the Association of Black Anthropologists is an American organization that brings together Black anthropologists in an effort to better highlight the history of African Americans, especially in regard to exploitation, oppression, and discrimination. It encourages, in particular, the involvement of Black students, including the recruitment of graduates, and establishes exchanges with African anthropologists. It publishes the journal Transforming Anthropology. The ABA seeks to address theories across academic disciplines that do not accurately represent the experience and oppression of communities of color and to aid and strengthen these theories with the inclusion of an African American historical perspective. It is one of the sections of the American Anthropological Association.
History
The ABA had its origins in the Minority Caucus, which in 1968 became the Caucus of Black Anthropologists after a meeting on a Black curriculum for anthropological studies held in Seattle. At the 1969 meetings of the American Anthropological Association in New Orleans, a symposium was held on "Ethnographic Research in Black Communities in the U.S." The following year, an AAA Committee on Minority Participation was formed under the chairmanship of Gloria Marshall. The Caucus was renamed the Association of Black Anthropologists in 1975 at that year's AAA meetings. During the Civil Rights era, black graduate students began to pressure the academic world and the AAA to create a platform that would recognize, give agency to, and encourage communication among black anthropologists. The ABA joined with the AAA officially in 1987 as a way to attain further resources to meet their objectives in putting black anthropologists on the map. This was done on the agreement that the ABA would be a multidisciplinary sector that focused on all areas of study by anthropologists that dealt with challenging the dominant hegemony of white supremacy, restoration and preservation of African heritage and expansion towards a more equal society, overall.The first president of the Association of Black Anthropologists was Vera Green who served from 1977 to 1979.
Founding story
Prior to the 1960s there was little to no representation of black anthropologists at the doctorate level. Of the thirteen who did receive their doctorate prior to 1980, only a handful continued to teach in academia at the collegiate level and virtually none actively participated at the AAA. The Caucus of Black Anthropologist was founded to fill this void at the AAA conferences by representing Black anthropologists in the field. The individuals involved with the Caucus would become the founding cohort of the Association of Black Anthropologists. The Caucus collectively founded News from the Natives. The publication was intended to engage and connect past, present, and future black students and faculty of anthropology.Editor
- Jerry Wright
Chair of caucus
- Anselme Remy
Committee members
ABA Executive Board
The executive board consists of three elected officers who serve two-year terms: the president, president-elect, and secretary/treasurer; two to three members-at-large appointed by the elected officers; the general editor; the program chair; the student representative; and the nomination committee. The organization is self-defined as an egalitarian and participatory democracy with its members volunteering their time and resources.The current includes:President
The president represents the ABA in the American Anthropological Association and oversees records of the ABA's activities.
- The current president is Bertin Louis.
The president-elect votes on appointed positions. The secretary-treasurer is responsible for drafting the annual budget as well as managing correspondence records and administrative documents created during their term.
Program Chair
The program chair is appointed by the elected officers and serves a two-year term. This position presides over the ABA's scientific programs.
- The current program chairs are and .
- Aisha Beliso-de Jesus,, and are the editors of the ABA's journal .
- and are the editors.
- is in charge of mentoring sessions.
- The current archivist is, who serves a 5-year term and is responsible for chronicling ABA-related documents.
- is the current member-at-large, responsible for voting for appointed positions.
- The positions of membership chair, awards chair, nomination committee, and student representative are currently vacant.
Conferences and events
American Anthropological Association (AAA) annual meetings
The Association of Black Anthropologists participates in the American Anthropological Associations annual meeting. The AAA annual meeting brings together members of the AAA and provides space for sub-associations to hold seminars and discussions around their research The ABA's participation in the AAA annual meetings is best understood through the variety of discussion and presentations offered over the last decade. The ABA uses this space to hold board meetings, discussion on transforming Black presence in Anthropology and mentoring sessions for researchers and Grad students. Sessions held are specific to members of the ABA's research, often there are themes throughout the years which illustrate the ABA's focus, examples of past ABA sessions include:1990-2000
AAA Annual meetings in the 20th Century included varied sponsored ABA sessions on Blackness in the United States and The African Diaspora. Topics addressed State Violence, White power, Black Identity and Performance and varied topics within the subject of the African Diaspora. Sessions sponsored by the ABA during this time included:- "Teaching as Praxis: "Race" and Ideologies of Power" included topics on Racism, Teaching Language and Culture to Oppressed Groups, Teaching Race, Gender and class within a Racist and Anti-Racist framework".
- The 1991 Annual Meeting by the AAA included ABA sponsored topics on African American Dance, Food in Africa and the African Diaspora. Sessions included:
- * "Diaspora Dilemmas: The Divisive Impact of Racism on African Modes of Upward Mobility in Western Worlds"
- 1995 AAA Annual Meeting sessions sponsored by the ABA included:
- * "The "US Competitive Edge": Immiseration and Fascist Policy"
- * "Communicating Communities: The Politics and Poetics of Identity in the Public Sphere"
- * "Black Is...Black Ain't: Difference, Transnationality and the Signifier of Blackness"
- * "Violence and Institutional Systems of Power"
- The 1999 AAA Annual Meeting included extensive topics on Race, many sponsored and guided by the work of the ABA. Reported to include a dozen sessions around the topics of race and whiteness, such as "Racism and its Discontents: Past, Present and Future in Brazil" and "Performing 'Race' and Ethnicity in the Crisis of the Medical Moment".
2000-2010
ABA involvement in sessions at the AAA Annual Meetings before 2010 is less apparent than recent years and the public records to illustrate involvement is sparse. From 2000 to 2010 ABA sponsored sessions revolved around writing workshops, ABA board and business meetings, mentoring sessions and some special topics of global African issues and Race research in the United States. Session topics included:- "Global Problems, Local Knowledge's: Negotiating Structures of Violence and Disease in Africa"
- "Writing for your Life" and other similar writing workshops.
- "Race, Gender and Engaged Research: Interrogating the Issues a Decade Later" was the only session sponsored by the ABA at the 2008 AAA annual meeting.
2010-2012
ABA Sponsored session at the AAA Annual meeting from 2010-2012 revolved around topics of the African Diaspora, Criminalization/Imprisonment of Black bodies, Race and Gender and impacts of Gentrification and Politics.- The 2011 AAA Annual meeting included ABA sessions that were diverse and varied across topics. Aside from ABA board meetings, mentoring sessions and business meetings, sessions sponsored by the ABA included:
- * "Anthropology and Historically Black Colleges and Universities", addressing the current state of Anthropology at HBCUs, how to build on and expand the discipline within HBCUs and challenges in doing so.
- * "Tracing Performance Aesthetics in Africa, The Caribbean and their Diasporas: The History Making, Public Art, Social Practice and Subjectivity" focused on topics of the Congo, Queer Caribbean Art, Trinidadian Rapso Performance and Visual Arts of the Caribbean.
- * "Theorizing Punishment and the State" included subsections punishment, criminalization of black bodies and mixed race persons and rethinking the incarceration of sexual assault survivors.
- * "Race and Gender Performance: Images and Representations of Black Masculinity and Femininity in Popular Culture and Film" discussed gender representation in popular culture, from masculinity to how race is portrayed in film and television - specifically an Ethnography of the "Real" Housewives of Atlanta.
- * "Inequality:Immigration, Housing and Race" included topics on home ownership among low income communities, Gentrification, Afro-Caribbean experiences and other housing crises around the world.
- The 2012 AAA Annual Meeting included many new discussions sponsored by the ABA, many revolved around the expansion and reach of Anthropology. One session was titled "Imagining Anthropology without Borders". Additional topics included subjects around popular culture, youth performance, music and dance. Other sessions included the topics:
- * "Punishment and the State: Imprisonment, Transgressions, Scapegoats and The Contributions of Anthropology"
- * "Negotiated Blackness: The Politics of Genes, Gender, Beauty and Multi-Racial Identity"
- * "Telling the Truth: Pioneer, Archaeology, and Emancipation projects Then and Now"
2012-2016
ABA sponsored sessions at the AAA Annual Meetings between 2012 and 2016 discussed reoccurring topics of Gender, Black Bodies and the strengthening of Black Communities. The topics vary each year, there are however consistent sessions to discuss ways of transforming Anthropology and preserving the history and legacy of Black Academics and Leaders.- The 2013 AAA Annual Meeting held 16 ABA sponsored sessions. As with previous years, topics varied from housing to gender and transforming Anthropology. Session subjects included:
- * "Black Women's Intellectual and Political Work Chicago Style: Conversations with Cathy Cohen and Barabara Ransby"
- * "Development, Housing and Community in African America" included topics on masculinity, segregation, political activism and politics of Brazil.
- * "Race and Racism in Comparative Perspective: Part II" discussed topics of Nationalism and Racism, challenges in addressing structural racism and other topics of rationalization, domestic and international.
- * "Museums, Cultural Sites and Landmarks of African America" included topics on the African Diaspora, Transculturalization, and preserving African Heritage through preservation efforts and exhibits.
- The 2014 AAA Annual Meeting continued to create discussion around transforming Anthropology and preserving the legacies of African American leaders. Some new topics included:
- * "Sorrow as Artifact: Black Radical Mothering in Times of Terror", topics on challenges of Black family and work life, Grief and Suicide, Necropolitics and Black Motherhood.
- * "Producing Anthropology through Community Engagement" addressed ways to do this through case studies of The University of Minnesota, Historically Black Neighborhoods and Haitian Peasant women, etc.
- * "At the Crossroads of Peril and Progress: HIV in Black Communities" included topics on Sex Tourism in Jamaica, Mental Health, Black Gay and Bisexual men, Queer Reparations, Structural Violence and the Black Church and ways to improve access to testing and resources.
- The 2015 AAA Annual Meeting held even more ABA sponsored sessions than before, at 22 sessions. The topics ranged from state violence to maternal relationships. Continuing conversations around Black bodies, Racialization and the African Diaspora. Other session topics included:
- * "Market Perceptions: Negotiating Visibilities of Space, Identity and Racial-ness". discussing topics of Black speech, Queer theory, Nollywood and Gender, to name a few.
- * "Black Bodies, Active Agents: Foodways in the Everyday Lives of Black People" included topics on Social Justice and Inclusivity at Memphis Farmers Markets, Changing and Unequal Foodscapes, Urban Family Foodways and Food Deserts.
- * "Race, Power and Educational Justice in Diverse Learning Contexts" discussed topics on Power and Student Discipline, Racial tensions, #Blacklivesmatter and African American Youth.
2016-present
Recent ABA sponsored sessions have centered around topics of the re-emergence of racism and whiteness in the United States, representations of Black bodies and Black culture in media, Black Women's health, Gender and Queerness and State Violence. Discussions from 2016 to the present are central to popular culture and racialized politics of the 21st century.- The 2016 AAA Annual Meeting included ABA sponsored sessions focused on the politics and embodiment of Blackness, Gendered Blackness and Black Bodies, as well as Whiteness and White Supremacy. Sessions held included, but not limited to:
- * "The Bio-politics of Gendered 'Blackness': Transnational Perspectives on Women, Race and Health", topics on Life and Death, Fertility Control and Reproduction and other topics of Black Women's health.
- * "Anthropology of White Supremacy" discussed topics of Religions, policing of Black bodies and Racist logic.
- * "The Art of Identity: Constructing Blackness in Music, Film, TV and the Internet" included topics on mainstream African Diasporic Art, the Black Church and Queerness and Black Women in Indie Film, to name a few.
- The 2017 AAA Annual Meeting continued conversations, sponsored by the ABA, around Racism and Anti-Racism, Whiteness, Media representations of Blackness and many facets of the politics of Blackness in the United States. Sessions sponsored by the ABA included:
- * "Identity politics versus naive wokerism? Revisiting race, class and gender in the era of Trump and Brexit", included topics such as the Gini Coefficient, Migration after Brexit and Trump's 'White working class support'.
- * "Centering Prisons: Re-framing Analysis of the State, Relations of Power and Resistance", discussed topics on Whiteness in State Prisons, Addiction and Sobriety in Prisons and the results of a criminal record.
- * "There's Level to This: Protest, Disruption, Resistance" included topics on African Diasporic Religions, Social Justice and Activism, Racialized Violence and Human Rights.
- * "The Whitelash is Real: The New Politics of Exclusion"
Awards and scholarships
The Association of Black Anthropologists funds awards and scholarships for exceptional anthropologists, researchers and scholars who contribute to the community through their work, specifically seeking to fund scholars who emphasize diversity in their work and conduct research in communities of color.http://aba.americananthro.org/aba-legacy-scholar-award/ ABA Legacy Scholar Award
This award was established in 2008 to honor research, scholarship, and service to anthropologists for their work for communities of African descent. This award is associated with Sankofa, the word in Akan which means "looking backward to move forward". this symbol represents an appreciation and knowledge of the past- in order to pay tribute to those before us. This award recognizes black anthropologists in the past who created opportunities for current black anthropologists and others. Winners have been| Yolanda Moses | Leith Mullings | Anselme Remy |
| A Lynn Bolles | Arthur K Spears | Faye V. Harrison |
| Ira E. Harrison | George C. Bond | Johnnetta Cole |
| Audrey Smedley |
The candidates can be nominated by the ABA Legacy scholar committee, or by colleagues.
http://aba.americananthro.org/johnetta-b-cole-student-travel-award/ Johnnetta B. Cole Student Travel Award
Named after Johnnetta B. Cole, who along with many other achievements, was the first female African-American president of Spelman College in 1987. As a professor at Washington State University, she cofounded one of the first black studies programs in the United States.This award is in place to supplement travel expenses to ABA annual meetings to further student of African descent. applicants must be current ABA members, and enrolled din Ph.D. or Masters programs.
http://aba.americananthro.org/the-gwaltney-scholarship-fund/ The Gwaltney Scholarship Fund
This award was created in honor of John L. Gwaltney, who through his research had a strong emphasis on black life in industrial cities. Gwaltney was a writer and anthropologist, whose research was centered around African-American culture. He was a student of Margaret Mead, and although he lost his eyesight as a child, is well known for his book; Drylongso: Self Portrait of Black America.This award is given to member os the ABA, to those in any field of anthropology who have not been assistant professor for more than two years, in order to help scholars further their research.
Along with the monetary award, the winner will be published din Transforming Anthropology.
http://aba.americananthro.org/the-vera-green-publication-award-2011/ The [Vera Green Publication Award]
This award was established in 2007, created in honor of Dr. Vera Mae Green who was a pioneer in public and caribbean anthropology. She focused on activism, issues of poverty, and international human rights, along with contributing to a better understanding of aging an migration. Dr. Green was a prominent activist in encouraging African Americans and people of color to pursue anthropology.The applicants must have a Ph.D with work pertaining to public anthropology. the winner will be published in ABA's journal: Transforming Anthropology