Teaching Position:
Assistant Professor of Africana Studies, SUNY-Stony Brook (2005-)
Area of Research:
Civil Rights/Black Power Movement; African American History; African American
Intellectual History; Comparative Black Nationalism; Twentieth Century American
Social History; African Diaspora; Pan-Africanism
Education:
Ph.D. 2000, Temple University (American History)
Major Publications:
Joseph is the author of Waiting 'Til the Midnight Hour: A Narrative History of Black
Power in America (New York: Henry Holt, 2006).
He is the Editor and author of the
introduction of The Black Power Movement: Rethinking the Civil Rights and Black Power
Era (New York: Routledge, 2006).
He was the Guest Editor of "Black Power Studies II," The Black Scholar, Volume 32,
number 1, (Spring 2002), and Guest Editor, "Black Power Studies I," The Black Scholar,
Volume 31, number 3-4, (Fall/Winter 2001).
Joseph is currently working on a number of book manuscripts including A World of Our
Own: Black Intellectuals and the Pan-African Dream, Any Day Now: African American
Historical Criticism, and Revolutions in Babylon: Stokely Carmichael and
America in the 1960s.
Co-editor (with Manning Marable of Columbia University) of The Palgrave Macmillan
Series in Contemporary Black History Book Series.
Fellowships and Awards:
Joseph is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including:
Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars Residential Fellowship,
Washington, D.C., September 2002-May 2003;
Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship, Institutional Affiliation: Dept. of
Africana Studies, Brown University, May 2002-August 2002, June-August 2003;
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2002-2003 (declined);
Smithsonian Institution Postdoctoral Fellowship, 2002-2003 (declined);
Robert Woodruff Special Collections Library Grant, Emory University, Summer 2002.
URI Council of Research Grant, Summers 2001 and 2004;
Teaching Assistant, Dept. of History, Temple University, 1993-1996.
Additional Info:
Formerly Assistant Professor of History and African/African-American Studies,
University of Rhode Island (2000-2005).
Joseph has appeared on television and radio programs, including the Tavis
Smiley Show on PBS, the Bev. Smith Radio Show, the Bob Edwards Show on XFM Sattelite
Radio; and others.
Midnight Hour has also been featured in "Black Issues Book Review"; "Diverse:
Issues in Higher Education"; and Joseph has been interviewed in publications such as
"The Crisis."
Waiting Til the Midnight Hour was named an October Bestseller for Hardcover Non-
Fiction by Kramerbooks in Washington, DC.
Joseph is a member, Editorial Working Group, "Souls: A Critical Journal of Black Politics,
Culture, and Society."
I was born in New York City, the second son of Haitian immigrants. My mother moved my older brother and I to Queens Village in 1975, and raised us as a single parent. A historian in her own right, I grew up in a family where dinner table conversation centered on Haitian history, contemporary labor politics, and anti-racist struggles. Raised in a predominantly African American neighborhood, Haitian Creole and history coupled with black popular cultural innovations such as the emerging Hip Hop era made my childhood a kind of delicious gumbo. My mother's tales of tumult, passion, joy, and sorrow inspired a life-long fascination with social justice. Activism, in a variety of forms from joining organizations, standing on picket lines, protesting the Gulf War, apartheid in South Africa, and the quarantine of Haitian refugees in Guantanamo, is a legacy passed on from my mother, a trade-unionist, hospital worker, and member of local 1199 for almost forty years.
As an undergraduate at Stony Brook University, my double major in European history and Africana Studies was complimented by my involvement in campus activism and journalism as a writer for the campus newspaper. After graduating from college I decided to pursue a Ph.D. in American history. A graduate degree, I thought, would allow me to raise the stakes of my community activism to ivory towers where black faces were few and far between.
I purposely applied to schools away from New York city in hopes of widening my
intellect and experience.
Accepted into Temple University I arrived in Philadelphia
mildly surprised to witness a level of urban misery that I had almost regarded as
being exclusive to my hometown.
In graduate school I became intensely involved with issues surrounding police
brutality, social justice, and the death penalty during these years. Local politics
in Philadelphia reminded me of the stories that I had grew up on regarding black
militancy during the 1960s and re-ignited my curiosity about the era.
These experiences dovetailed into my efforts to write a narrative history of the Black Power Movement that focused on the lives, political activism, and legacy of the era's iconic and obscure figures. The enormity of the black freedom struggle has always held a particularly strong appeal for me. The sheer vastness of the historical era, a canvas broad enough to include a diversity of ethnicities that range from Caribbean born Black Power activists to Jewish civil rights supporters, African rulers, White House officials, and Black Muslims, is perhaps the most enduring story of our time. Yet most people are unaware of the period's expansive hopefulness, radical democracy, and contemporary resonance. It is my hope that the narrative's accessibility, insights, and sweep will provide contemporary activists of all stripes a window onto a past that has enormous lessons to teach us about the present. With Waiting 'Til the Midnight Hour, I have come full circle, writing a historical narrative that would not be an unfamiliar source of dinner table conversation in my youth.
By Peniel E. Joseph
"Black Power at the local, national, and international level would launch a radical
political movement that while racially specific was nonetheless interpreted by a variety
of multiracial groups as a template for restructuring society. Black Power, beginning
with its revision of black identity, transformed America's racial, social, and political
landscape. In a premulticultural age where race shaped hope, opportunity, and identity,
Black Power provided new words, images, and politics. If the movement's confrontational
posture quickened the pace of racial change, it also provoked a visceral reaction in
white Americans who could more easily identify with civil rights activists than with
Black Power militants. Ultimately, Black Power accelerated America's reckoning with
its own uncomfortable, often ugly racial past, and in the process spurred a debate
over racial progress, citizenship, and democracy that would scandalize as much as it
would change the nation." --
Peniel E. Joseph in "Waiting Til the Midnight Hour: A Narrative History of Black
Power in America"
About Peniel E. Joseph