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Skip to content Skip to search Skip to footer Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity Open Menu Back Close Menu Search for: Search Close Search AboutAbout Origins Leadership Staff Email Us Give to CRE² FundingFunding Grants Faculty Fellowships Graduate Fellows Program Graduate Student Conference Travel Grants Research Working Groups Course Innovation Grants Colors of COVID Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences & CRE2 Partnership: The Just-In-Time (JIT) Core Usage Funding Program CRE2 Event Cosponsorships CRE2 ResearchCRE2 Research WashU & Slavery WUSM-CRE2 Grand Rounds Partnership Latinx | Latin American Race & Ethnicity Research Unit CRE2 Research Workshop Series LearningLearning Course Innovation Washington University Student Research Awards St. Louis High School Student Paper Awards CommunityCommunity Everywhere with CRE2 Podcast Arts & Culture Community Grants Arts & Culture Race and Opera Community Partnerships Heartland Journalism Fellowship Join the CRE2 Mailing List AffiliatesAffiliates Our Faculty Affiliates Our Graduate Student Affiliates Our Postdoctoral Affiliates Our Resident and Trainee Affiliates Our Staff Affiliates Become an Affiliate Events News Open Search WashU & Slavery In late Spring 2021, Washington University in St. Louis joined Universities Studying Slavery (USS). USS is a global consortium of academic institutions independently and collaboratively examining the relationships between their institutional histories and slavery, and addressing legacies of these connections.Please visit the WashU & Slavery Project website to learn more about the initiative, including project research, creative work, teaching and learning opportunities, events, and ways to get involved. Background and Organization An organizing committee (below) convened by former CRE2 Associate Director Geoff Ward in Fall 2020 began examining relationships between slavery, its legacies, and our institution, and planning an initial approach to participation in the consortium. Several courses offered this academic year began engaging students in related research. The committee proposed an initial approach that draws from examples at several of the more than 70 schools across five countries active in USS. Chancellor Andrew Martin and Provost Beverly Wendland provided initial funding to support this project proposal and formally accepted the invitation for WashU to join Universities Studying Slavery. WashU & Slavery is based in the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity (CRE2), where Professor Ward has transitioned into the project director role. Building WashU & Slavery through CRE2 will aid its integration across the institution, interdisciplinary project design, and links to the strategic efforts of the center and other campus and community partners. Kelly Schmidt joins WashU & Slavery as Postdoctoral Fellow Kelly SchmidtFormer Postdoctoral Fellow, African and African American Studies Email: [email protected] Twitter Collective Memory and Commemoration Family Migration Repair work Resistance Slavery – Higher Education Slavery – Religion Dr. Kelly Schmidt has joined WashU & Slavery as a Postdoctoral Fellow. Dr. Schmidt completed a joint PhD in Public History and U.S. History at Loyola University Chicago in 2021. She is a public historian and digital humanist who specializes in African American history with a focus on slavery, racism, abolition, and resistance. She brings extensive knowledge and experience related to understanding and addressing the history of enslavement in St. Louis and the wider Mississippi and Ohio Valleys, including how it relates to higher education institutions. In 2016, she began studying the ways higher education institutions were addressing their connections to histories and legacies of slavery. From 2016 to 2021, while completing her dissertation research on people enslaved to the Jesuits in the central and southern United States, Kelly worked with Saint Louis University and the Jesuits of Canada and the United States as Research Coordinator for their joint Slavery, History, Memory, and Reconciliation Project (SHMR).In that role and other capacities, including years volunteering and working at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, Dr. Schmidt has developed an extensive record of public history work—in research and interpretation; museum education and exhibition development; digital media; archival collections and conservation; development of walking tours; and work with high school and college educators and students. Kelly will not only greatly enrich the research insights and project scope of the WashU & Slavery Project, but will also help advance our efforts to position WashU as a key partner in this important work of commemoration and reckoning in our region, through collaboration with academic and other institutional and community partners. Dr. Schmidt’s appointments are formally in CRE2 and the Department of African and African-American Studies, but she will engage with various academic units and work closely with the libraries and museum, through project-related research, teaching, and creative work. Her time will be split between work on the WashU & Slavery Project and continued development of her scholarship on enslaved communities in the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys, the focus of a book project tentatively titled “Their Earnest Desire to be Free”: Enslaved People, Jesuit Masters, and Negotiations for Freedom on American Borderlands, 1823-1930. WashU & Slavery Organizing Committee Geoff WardDirector, WashU & Slavery; Professor of African and African American Studies; Sociology (Affiliate); American Culture Studies (Affiliate) Phone: 314-935-9884 Email: [email protected] Twitter Histories of Racial Violence, Legacies, and Reckonings; Visual Redress; Youth Justice; Policing and Courts William AcreeProfessor of Spanish; American Culture Studies (Affiliate) and Performing Arts (Affiliate) Phone: 314-935-5145 Email: [email protected] Latin American Cultural History; Popular & Material Culture; Global Street Cultures; Public Space & State Formation; Afro-Latin America Iver BernsteinProfessor of History Email: [email protected] Slavery and Emancipation; African American Political Culture; Democratic Movements; Structural and Sexual Violence; the US Civil War; Politics of the Slavery Archive; Collective Memory Elizabeth Childs Etta and Mark Steinberg Professor of Art History and Chair, Department of Art History and Archaeology Carl Craver Professor of Philosophy and Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology Karma FriersonAssistant Professor of African and African-American Studies Email: [email protected] Afro-Latin America; Cultural Politics; Expressive Culture; Identity; Multiculturalism; Popular Culture; Race and Ethnicity Nadia GhasediAssociate University Librarian for Special Collections Services Email: [email protected] Academic Libraries; Community Archives; Moving Image Preservation Peter Kastor Samuel K. Eddy Professor and Chair, Department of History Dineo Khabele Mitchell & Elaine Yanow Professor and Chair, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology David Konig Professor of Law, Emeritus Professor of History Michelle PurdyAssociate Professor Email: [email protected] Twitter U.S. Educational Access and Opportunity; Equitable Educational Policies and Practices; Black Students’ Experiences; Archival Research; Oral History; Qualitative Methods Miguel A ValerioAssistant Professor of Spanish Email: [email protected] Twitter Africans and Afro-descendants in colonial Latin America literature and culture Africans and Afro-descendants in the Mediterranean Africans and Afro-descendants in Renaissance and Baroque literature and culture Black confraternities in the Iberian Empires Renaissance and Baroque festival culture Funeral rituals among black confraternities Afro-Latin American literature and culture The history of race and racism Identity formation Helina WoldekirosAssistant Professor of Anthropology Email: [email protected] Twitter Ethnicity and foodways, health and human development, historical and ecological analysis, Identity, religion, and mortuary practice, State formation, Sustainable agriculture Research CRE2 Research Latinx | Latin American Race & Ethnicity Research Unit WashU & Slavery WUSM-CRE2 Grand Rounds Partnership CRE2 Research Workshop Series Funding Opportunities Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity302 Seigle HallMSC 1221-228-302One Brookings DriveSt. Louis, MO [email protected] the CRE2 mailing list Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube Give to CRE² ©2024 Washington University in St. Louis

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