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The Fire that Time: Transnational Black Radicalism and the Sir George Williams Occupation

07 June 2023, 5:30 pm–7:00 pm

Book cover: The Fire That Time

An event part of the UCL Americas Caribbean Seminar series

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Sold out

Cost

Free

Organiser

UCL Institute of the Americas

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In 1969, in one of the most significant black student protests in North American history, Caribbean students called out discriminatory pedagogical practices at Sir George Williams University, before occupying the computer center for two weeks. Upon the breakdown of negotiations, the police launched a violent crackdown as a fire mysteriously broke out inside the center and racist chants were hurled by spectators on the street. It was a heavily mediatized flashpoint in the Canadian civil rights movement and the international Black Power struggle that would send shockwaves as far as the Caribbean. Half a century later, we continue to grapple with the legacies of this watershed moment in light ofits transnational reach and implications forcurrent resistance. We ask:How is the Sir George Williams “affair” remembered, forgotten, or contested? How is blackness included or occluded in decolonizing dialogues?

About the Speakers

Kirland Ayanna Bobb

Kirland Ayanna Bobb holds a BA in History and is a graduate teacher in the Ministry of Education, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. She is currently pursuing a PhD in history at UWI and has a special interest in Caribbean traditions of Black Radicalism.

Amanda Perry

at Champlain College-Saint Lambert in Montreal

Her current book project examines the resonancesof the Cuban Revolution as a Caribbean event.She received her PhD in Comparative Literature, with distinction, fromNYUin 2019.

Ronald Cummings

Associate Professor at McMaster University, Canada

RonaldCummings is an associate professor in the department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University, Canada.Nalini Mohabir is an associate professorof geographyat Concordia University.Together, they have co-editedThe Fire That Timeand workedon a series of publications aboutthe 1969 Black and Caribbeanstudent protest in Montreal.

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