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November 2000

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Subject:
From:
JAMES HAMILL <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Drum: Black World Studies at Miami University
Date:
Fri, 17 Nov 2000 09:14:17 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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text/plain (124 lines)
Rodney,

do you have any interest in Oklahoma Indian for this project? i'll be in
nex mon and tues (21, 21 nov)if you w2ould like to talke about it.

jh


<<< [log in to unmask] 11/16  2:51p >>>
Rodney:
Got the voice-mail message. When would this "Race" & Culture course
needed
to be taught. Next semester I have a 3 course load and I wouldn't take
on
another. Indeed the teaching load here is very heavy. I would think
about
doing something in the summer.  But I heard the fee was around $4000 and
did you mention a mere $2100? Let me know.

About your book. Yes, I'll do a chapter on something. I'm not exactly
sure
yet, but it will focus on the 'Black Atlantic Culture: Continuities and
Difference'.... If this is OK then I shall begin to formulate a chapter
for
you.
Hope all is well with you. I am OK. It could be better, but it could be
far
worse too.
Best wishes
Mark

At 10:53 AM 11/16/2000 , you wrote:
>I am putting together a special issue of Critical Sociology..
>
>The purpose is to have a critical dialogue regarding Race, Race
Relations
>and/or Racism.
>
>Here are some of my thoughts, and the rough abstract of the paper I
will be
>doing for the Volume.
>I call upon you individually to think about contributing to this
>project.  Please contact me directly, within the next 2 weeks if you
are
>interested in contributing.  (Papers are anticipated from a multitude
of
>perspectives which will include economic, psychological, Marxian, world
>systems, post modern, sociological, cross cultural.   These papers will
>also deal with different demographic groups as well to include -
Hispanic,
>Asian, White Ethnics, Black, Native American - and others not specific
to
>the continental U.S.   I plan to have this volume completed by summer
of
>next year, and published by the fall of 2001.
>
>Thanks..
>
>
>
>Rodney D. Coates
>professor of Sociology
>Director of Black World Studies
>Miami University
>
>
>My rough Abstract..
>
>        The Cultural Production of Race and Racialized Systems
>        Rodney D. Coates
>
>
>
>        Amazingly, more than 30 years since the "marching stopped",
> Kenneth Clark
>convinced the supreme court that separate was wholly unequal, since 3
>little children were killed in a bombed out church, since the long hot
>summers caused us to question whether we would continue to be a nation
>divided, since the passage of the voters rights act, creation of
>Affirmative Action, since the slaying of Medger, Malcolm, John and
Robert,
>and since Martin Luther King's Dream of a multi-cultural future for
America
>and the systematic dismantling of most obvious forms of racial
>discrimination   we find ourselves once again discovering race, and
>horrified by racial crimes.   As we approach the beginning of a new
>millennium, the intractability of race and racism in such things as the
>corporate glass ceiling (where the Man Farthest Down is once again a
black
>woman), the disparities in sentencing and the administration of capital
>punishment, racial profiling.  Within the Academe again we watch as
race is
>reified as the primary factor in the lack of performance and
criminality of
>persons of color, where blaming the victim and the culture of poverty
are
>once again in vogue (while at times it is disguised as discourse and
>research in human capital or the human genome studies).  The paper
argues
>that sociology and the discipline, as well as much of America, while
>acknowledging the more obvious causes and manifestations of race and
racism
>(i.e. the social construction) have failed to understand or come to
grips
>with the cultural production of race and racialized systems.  This
failure
>has obvious significance for both research and policy.  Finally, this
paper
>suggests specific theoretical, practical and empirical ways in which a
>cultural approach to race and racialized systems can be realized.
>
>
>
>
>For more of my poetry please check out
>
>http://gw.cas.muohio.edu/umoja/www.ulbobo.com/umoja/index.html
>
>umoja
>
>only when lions have historians will hunting cease to be glorified
>
>rodneyc..

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