Join activist Ericka Huggins and professor Ula Taylor as they explore the power and promise of Liberatory Education. Moderated by Gabrielle Williams, Assistant Professor of Literary Studies and Provost Faculty Fellow.
This conversation is part of the Pedagogy as Praxis series, curated by Gabrielle Williams, with support from the Provost's Office.
Pedagogy as Praxis invites guests to be in conversation with New School faculty to explore liberatory education, critical pedagogy, and new and transformative ways of teaching and learning as a collective. Originating from Paulo Freire's work on critical pedagogy, pedagogy as praxis sees education as a dialogic, collaborative process where teachers and learners together reflect on their experiences, analyze them critically, and take conscious steps to apply what they've learned to effect change.
Location will be shared with registered guests.
Ericka Huggins is an educator, former Black Panther Party member, former political prisoner, human rights advocate, and poet.
For 50 years, Ericka has used her life experiences in service to community. From 1973-1981, she was director of the Black Panther Party’s Oakland
Community School. From 1990-2004 Ericka managed HIV/AIDS Volunteer and Education programs. She also supported innovative mindfulness programs for women and youth in schools, jails and prisons.
Ericka was professor of Sociology and African American Studies from 2008
through 2015 in the Peralta Community College District. From 2003 to 2011 she was professor of Women and Gender Studies at California State Universities, East Bay and San Francisco.
Ericka is a Racial Equity Learning Lab facilitator for WORLD TRUST Educational Services. She curates conversations focused on the individual and collective work of becoming equitable in all areas of our daily lives.
Additionally, she facilitates workshops on the benefit of spiritual practice in sustaining social change.
Ula Taylor earned her doctorate in American History from UC Santa Barbara. She is the author of The Promise of Patriarchy: Women and the Nation of Islam, The Veiled Garvey: The Life and Times of Amy Jacques Garvey, co-author of Panther: A Pictorial History of the Black Panther Party and The Story Behind the Film and co-editor of Black California Dreamin: The Crisis of California African American Communities.
Her articles on African American Women’s History and feminist theory have appeared in the Journal of African American History, Journal of Women’s History, Feminist Studies, SOULS, and other academic journals and edited volumes.
In 2013 she received the Distinguished Professor Teaching Award for the University of California, Berkeley. Only 5% of the academic senate faculty receive this honor and she is the second African American woman in the history of the University to receive this award.
Gabrielle Williams is an Assistant Professor of Literature at Eugene Lang College (ELC), a Leadership Council Member for the Andrew W. Mellon Initiative for Faculty Excellence, a Provostial Faculty Fellow, and a DEI & EISJ conflict resolution advisor to faculty, students, and administrative staff at TNS. She teaches undergraduate courses in African American, African Diaspora, and “classic” literatures with a focus on aesthetics, critical race theories, disability studies, food studies, discourses of blackness, poetics, performance studies, queer studies, and rhetoric. Dr. Williams has a B.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies from TNS, an MA in African American Studies from UC Berkeley, and a PhD in African American & African Diaspora Studies from UC Berkeley. As well, she completed a fellowship sponsored post as a Visiting Scholar in the Taught MA Anthropology of Food program at SOAS, University of London. Prior to her work in academia, Dr. Williams pursued a long-term career as a Contemporary Modern dancer. Given the diversity of her training in aesthetic and intellectual arts, her approach to research, teaching, and service is community-facing, holistic, interdisciplinary, and social-justice seeking. Courses that she has devised & taught at ELC such as, Flies in the Buttermilk: Food, Power, and Hunger in Africana Literature, Ugly: Distorted Aesthetics of Exquisite Blackness, and, The Revelation and the Word: Toni Morrison & Language, reflect Dr. Williams' fluid disciplinarity. Dr. Williams has directed, mentored, and taught for several educational initiatives geared toward assuring success for disabled, first-generation, justice-impacted, LGBTQIA+, undocumented, and other marginalized campus populations. She has also received extensive training in a variety of approaches to conflict & crisis resolution management for small- and large-scale occurences relevant to DEI & EISJ issues. Currently, Dr. Williams is completing a manuscript surrounding her research interests in portrayals of phenomenological hunger in Africana novels. She is also working on a collection of experimental prose poems.
Committed to amplifying diverse voices, The New School offers more than a thousand public programs and events each year, providing fresh perspectives and unique learning opportunities. These lectures, exhibitions, concerts, and performances feature prominent and emerging artists, activists, and thought leaders. Be sure to visit our Events Calendar to see the full roster.
To receive updates about public programs and events at The New School, subscribe to our mailing list. Visit our Livestream and YouTube channels to watch select events live and recorded.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vestibulum sagittis mi eu elementum malesuada. Maecenas arcu felis, suscipit vitae mi in, posuere ultricies nunc. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut ante velit, condimentum eget erat a, suscipit porttitor nisl. Pellentesque in semper nunc. Duis ultricies lacus nec dolor elementum efficitur. Cras congue neque et ipsum egestas, tincidunt tempor magna elementum. Maecenas in rhoncus ante, ac mattis lectus. Donec pulvinar nulla a varius malesuada. Ut auctor enim mi, mollis laoreet eros aliquam eget. Proin lectus tellus, ullamcorper nec neque a, ornare facilisis tellus. Proin in eros sit amet diam imperdiet varius. Duis tincidunt dolor nibh, ac interdum odio molestie vel. Cras dignissim enim at mi varius aliquet.