Tag Archives: black lives matter

A Long Time Coming: The Role Of Race In American History

Ray Anthony Shepard has put together an award-winning book for young readers to counter what he says are “years of sanitized Black History months and schoolbooks.” He has chosen instead to tell the story from the inside – examining the question of race through the lyrical biographies of six prominent American heroes, all of whom challenged and changed the racial barriers of their day – Ona Judge, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Ida B Wells, MLK and Barack Obama.

Shepard intertwines his academic research with personal memories of his mother’s stories about her enslaved father, accounts informed by his own experiences of living through eight decades from the era of Jim Crow to the present day. He provides a refreshing and corrective understanding of the role of race in American life – Black and White. As a retired history teacher and textbook editor, he now writes books “that didn’t exist when I was in the classroom and books I couldn’t publish as an editor.

Recorded 2/27/2024

CF: Long Time Coming 1
CF: Long Time Coming 2
The Role Of Race In American History

Ray Anthony Shepard graduated from the University of Nebraska and the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

The conversation will be moderated by Jude Nixon, Professor of English and former Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Salem State University.

Black Voices Matter

Legacies Of Slavery

Pulitzer prize-winning historian, David Hackett Fischer’s latest book AFRICAN FOUNDERS: How Enslaved People Expanded American Ideals draws on decades of ...

BLACK HISTORY: ON REWIND 

To celebrate our newly digitized collection of eminent historical black orators, Cambridge Forum has teamed up with the Lincoln Institute ...

Mississippi: Then And Now

Bob Moses (January 23, 1935 – July 25, 2021), a veteran of the civil rights struggle, draws an analogy between ...

N***er: The Strange Career of a Troublesome Word

It’s “the nuclear bomb of racial epithets,” a word that whites have employed to wound and degrade African Americans for ...

Truth And Reconciliation

Without forgiveness, there's no future.- Archbishop of South Africa Desmond Tutu Desmond Tutu: South Africa anti-apartheid hero dies aged 90 ...

Nelson Mandela At Harvard

The greatest single challenge facing our globalized world is to combat and eradicate its disparities. While in all parts of ...

I’ll Make Me A World

Filmmaker Sam Pollard is a dedicated chronicler of the Black experience in America, moving freely across film and long-form television ...

Epic Journeys Of Freedom

Historian Cassandra Pybus traces the lives and adventures of the runaway slaves who absorbed the dreams of liberty from their ...

Eyes On The Prize

EYES ON THE PRIZE tells the story of the civil rights era from the point of view of the ordinary ...

Slavery And The Invention Of America

America must adopt a new paradigm that fully embraces all citizens and must include the abolishment of race, which is ...

Beloved Community: African American Women

Civil rights activist and Baptist minister Cheryl Townsend Gilkes reflects on the role of African American women in forging the ...

The Life and Times of Madame C.J. Walker

A'Lelia Bundles, Emmy-winning NBC news producer and journalist shares stories from her best-selling book about her great-great grandmother, Madame C.J ...

The Third Chapter

We must develop a compelling vision of later life: one that does not assume a trajectory of decline after fifty, ...

Beloved Community: Cornel West & bell hooks

Can America ever become such a beloved community as Martin Luther King Jr. imagined it, a society free of prejudice ...

Colored People

Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Director of the Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University, discusses his book ...

Beloved Law Community: Lani Guinier

Can America ever become such a beloved community as Martin Luther King Jr. imagined it, a society free of prejudice ...

Beloved Community: Cosmopolitanism

Afro-American scholar and philosopher K. Anthony Appiah considers the idea of a community founded on the principles of inclusion, hope, ...

Beloved Community: African American Lives

Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham, Professor of History and African and African American Studies at Harvard University, discusses African American Lives at ...

Brown

“I think brown marks a reunion of peoples, an end to ancient wanderings. Rival cultures and creeds conspire with Spring ...

Parenting While Black

Writer, poet and teacher CLINT SMITH in conversation with Jude Nixon, Professor of English at Salem State University.  Both men are educators and fathers, and their discussion explores what it means to raise children during this challenging period of Black Lives Matter. 

CF: Parenting While Black

Recorded July 24, 2020.

Clint Smith is a writer, teacher, and Emerson Fellow at New America. He currently teaches writing and literature in the DC Central Detention facility. His essays, poems, and scholarly writing have been published in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, The Atlantic, The New Republic, Poetry Magazine, The Paris Review, the Harvard Educational Review and elsewhere. 

CF: Living While Black

Smith’s first full-length collection of poetry, “COUNTING DESCENT” was published by Write Bloody Publishing in 2016. It won the 2017 Literary Award for Best Poetry Book from the Black Caucus of the American Library Association, was a finalist for an NAACP Image Award, and was selected as the 2017 ‘One Book One New Orleans’ book selection.

Cambridge Trust is proud to support Cambridge Forum in our joint endeavor to help eradicate racism and inequities in our black
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