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Note to Readers: An Introduction to First Readings 2020: The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice: Challenging Legacies, Renewing a Tradition

Note to Readers: An Introduction to First Readings 2020
The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice: Challenging Legacies, Renewing a Tradition
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table of contents
  1. Of Place and Purpose
  2. The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice: Challenging Legacies, Renewing a Tradition
  3. About the Digital First Readings Edition
  4. Acknowledgments
  5. Start Reading the Slavery and Justice Report

The Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice: Challenging Legacies, Renewing a Tradition

When the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice was formally launched in 2012, no one imagined the extent of its impact today. Within eight years of its founding, the CSSJ is leading an international curatorial project with the National Museum of African American History and Culture on racial slavery and the making of the modern world and is conducting research, led by Brown undergraduate students, for a PBS documentary on the Atlantic slave trade. The Center has collaborated with graduate and undergraduate students in the creation of a Carceral State Reading Group and has worked with its faculty fellows to develop research clusters on topics such as Race, Medicine, and Social Justice; Mass Incarceration and Punishment in America; and Human Trafficking. Beyond campus, the CSSJ supports a youth program involving students from Providence public schools, and since last year spearheads an international African and African Diaspora Arts Initiative. These are just a few of the pathbreaking projects undertaken by the Center since its founding.

The establishment of the CSSJ was one of many recommendations to have emerged from the Report of the Brown University Steering Committee on Slavery and Justice. The report — commissioned in 2003 by Dr. Ruth Simmons, the first African American president of an Ivy League university — was a pioneering document. No other university had the courage to investigate its historical linkages to the Atlantic slave trade and the founding of America. Today, many universities around the world have followed Brown’s lead. The report is historic in two senses: as the final product of students, faculty, and staff engaged in three years of study, discussion, and debate; and as a historical document itself, detailing the history of Brown, the State of Rhode Island, and the United States in relation to the Atlantic slave trade. This trade of “commerce in human flesh” laid the foundations for the remarkable wealth of America. It was an inhumane system built upon violence and systematic, structural anti-black racism. Slavery and anti-black racism were two sides of the same coin.

Racial slavery was ended in the US by a civil war. However, its structural legacies lived on in systems of formal segregation (Jim Crow); disenfranchisement of political rights; active racial discrimination in housing, education, employment; and, especially, violence against black bodies by both the police and the American justice system. This history is often elided. As recent events have demonstrated, however, only by confronting what is wrong in our society can we address injustice. Silence, elision, and avoidance do not erase wrongs, they only allow them to fester. Research and scholarship are tools of change and knowledge. The CSSJ, building upon a University tradition that seeks to deploy knowledge in order to make a difference, opens its doors and welcomes you to Brown. As you read this report and think about its meanings, keep in mind that this is a university where exploration of ideas, commitment to research, and deep engagement in debate and democratic argument are the underlying ethos. We at the Center are committed to these values, and we invite you to join us in continuing the traditions that make Brown such a special place.

Anthony Bogues
Asa Messer Professor of Humanities and Critical Theory and Professor of Africana Studies
Inaugural Director of the Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice

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