English and Comparative Literature 225 Anniversary Timeline

1969 - Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies Established

In response to increased activism on the part of students, especially members of the Black Student Movement, founded in 1967 and led by Preston Dobbins (1946- ), the Faculty Council endorsed a proposal to establish a curriculum in African studies in 1969. A curriculum in African American studies was approved in 1972. The curricula were merged in 1979 and became the Department of Afro and African-American Studies in 1997. In 2013 the department was renamed the Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies. English Professor Trudier Harris (1948- ) chaired the curriculum from 1990-1992.
 
Although the undergraduate student body had been integrated since 1955, few students of color were enrolled, and few courses reflected their interests or cultural heritage. In a context shaped by 1960s activism and protests over segregation, apartheid, a UNC cafeteria workers strike, and the War in Viet Nam, students increasingly pressed the administration for change. The Black Student Movement was an active voice in these campus demonstrations and in December 1968 delivered to Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson (1911-1995) a list of 23 demands for additional support for African American students and campus workers, including a department of Afro-American and African studies. Acceding to this demand, Dean Raymond Dawson (1927-2019) formed the College of Arts and Sciences Dean's Committee on Afro-American and African Studies to develop the curriculum. 

The Curriculum in African Studies was approved in 1969, and the Curriculum in Afro-American Studies, in 1972. Professors James H. Brewer (1910-1974) and Gordon B. Cleveland (1917-1994) were the first co-directors of these two programs, and the interdisciplinary curricula were administered by an advisory committee chaired by English Professor Blyden Jackson (1910-2000); English and American Studies Professor Townsend Ludington (1936- ) was a committee member. In 1979 the separate curricula were housed in one academic unit, the Curriculum in African and Afro-American Studies, which became the Department of African and Afro-American Studies in 1997.  Since then the department has become “a transnational program that emphasizes the histories, cultures, cultural linkages, and contemporary socio-political and economic realities of Africa and the African Diasporas in the context of a globalizing world” (“About Us”). To reflect its transnational scope the department was renamed the Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies in 2013.

SOURCES

“About Us.” Department of African, African American, and Diaspora Studies. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2021, https://aaad.unc.edu/home/.

Graham, Nicholas, and Cecelia Moore. “African, African American, and Diaspora Studies, Department of” and “Black Student Movement.” UNC A to Z: What Every Tar Heel Needs to Know about the First State University. Chapel Hill, N.C.: U of North Carolina P, 2020. 5, 26-27.

Record of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Undergraduate Bulletin [1972]. Chapel Hill, N.C.: U of North Carolina P, June 1972, p. 152,
https://lib.digitalnc.org/record/36437#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=153&r=0&xywh=121%2C-175%2C3465%2C2106.
 

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