兔子先生传媒文化作品

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Reiland Rabaka Is Committed to a Cause

A portrait of Reiland Rabaka.

Reiland Rabaka, professor of African, African American and Caribbean Studies in the Department of Ethnic Studies, is the founder and director of 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 Center for African & African American Studies (CAAAS, pronounced 鈥渃ause鈥). Rabaka has published 18 books, including his recent work,  and . Here he discusses the CAAAS, his students and the importance of a movement.

Who have had the largest impacts on your career? 

I was raised by my grandmother and my mother. I would not be who I am physically, intellectually, spiritually or culturally without them. My mother, an ordained Baptist minister, instilled the value of education in me. 

Secondly, if you want me to geek out for you 鈥 W.E.B. Du Bois. Du Bois gave me a model for the kind of intellectual, artistic and activist life I could live. Du Bois was the first African American to graduate with a PhD from Harvard University in 1895. He inaugurated sociology in the United States. Alongside his social scientific work, he wrote five novels, nine volumes of poetry, three dozen short stories and two dozen plays. He was a social scientist, an artist and an activist.

And musically? 

Billie Holiday. I love Lady Day. She sings some of the most beautiful, poignant, melancholic love songs you will ever hear. But at the same time, she sang 鈥淪trange Fruit,鈥 an anti-lynching song released in 1939. Black people can say things in song that we can't say in any other way. It seems like we can express ourselves more fully in our art, especially our music. That is one of the reasons a lot of my teaching and research revolves around Black popular music.

What brought you to 兔子先生传媒文化作品? 

I鈥檓 an ambassador for African American studies. There are suburban and rural youth at 兔子先生传媒文化作品 who never had the opportunity to take African American studies classes. This is the first chance for many of them. From the very beginning of my time at CU I felt a special kinship with my students. We are part of the first generation of American citizens to come of age in a desegregated and awkwardly integrated American society.

"One of the high points of my intellectual and activist life was to teach the Black Lives Matter Movement seminar, and for my students to immediately apply what they鈥檙e learning in class to CU."

Also, CU has a long tradition of really high-profile African American studies scholars. For instance, my faculty line was once occupied by Manning Marable, who received a Pulitzer Prize for his biography of Malcolm X. Then Joy James, who is an endowed chair and incredible, brilliant, phenomenal Black feminist philosopher. This position has been seen as a high-profile post where people can do serious work and make important contributions. And, you know, Boulder is kind of freaky and geeky. And I have a bit of a Bohemian mindset. I feel at home here.

What was it like building the CAAAS directly with students? 

One of the high points of my intellectual and activist life was to teach the Black Lives Matter Movement seminar, and for my students to immediately apply what they鈥檙e learning in class to CU. Students used direct action and political pressure techniques. Their petition for the CAAAS got 1,500 signatures 鈥 and there鈥檚 only 800 Black students at 兔子先生传媒文化作品. So, obviously, we have a lot of allies. It also inspired us to know that the CAAAS would be a space primarily for Black folk, but also for our anti-racist allies, because they, too, want to know about African and African American history and culture. 

What about CAAAS makes you most excited? 

We have three program areas 鈥 a research program, an arts program and a student services program. That鈥檚 what makes the CAAAS unique: It鈥檚 like a one-stop shop for everything that has to do with Blackness, Black folk and Black culture on campus.

It is a warm and welcoming communal space. I鈥檓 trying to create an African village vibe on the Boulder campus. I wanna bring some Africanit茅 鈥 some of the history, culture and art of continental and diasporan Africa 鈥 to Macky Auditorium, 兔子先生传媒文化作品 and beyond.

What is a course you look forward to teaching every time? 

There has been something truly special about teaching the Black Lives Matter Movement class. Teaching the class, I realized many of my white students don鈥檛 have a space to evolve their anti-racism and explore what it means to be an authentic ally. In fact, they do not have opportunities and spaces to have serious and sensitive conversations about what that means 鈥 what it means to be an authentic anti-racist ally. The CAAAS is also a safe space for allies.

What do you do outside of work? 

I鈥檓 a poet. I remember the first time I read Langston Hughes, his poetry was so alive and beautiful. I love Audre Lorde, one of my favorite poets of all time. I鈥檓 a musicologist, so I spend a lot of time listening to music. I read novels. I love literature 鈥 I read about three to four books a week. Lastly, I鈥檓 a long-distance hiker. I live about 15 minutes from Rocky Mountain National Park, and I鈥檓 out there probably four or five times a week. 

Is there anything else you would like us to know? 

The CAAAS wouldn鈥檛 have happened without incredible student co-founders Ruth Woldemichael (EthnSt, IntlAf鈥22), Karia White (EthnSt, IntlAf鈥22), Audrea Fryar (PolSci鈥21) and Isaiah Chavous (PolSci鈥21). There鈥檚 a Kenyan proverb that says: if you see me standing tall, it鈥檚 because I stand on the shoulders of my ancestors and my family members. So, even though we are not biologically related, we鈥檙e family. I鈥檓 trying to build a big multiracial and multicultural family here in Boulder. That's what the CAAAS is about. If it鈥檚 about nothing else, it鈥檚 about creating a sense of belonging and building community.

 

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Photos by Glenn Asakawa