Historically White Universities and Plantation Politics: Anti-Blackness and Higher Education in the Black Lives Matter Era Article

Dancy, TE, Edwards, KT, Earl Davis, J. (2018). Historically White Universities and Plantation Politics: Anti-Blackness and Higher Education in the Black Lives Matter Era . URBAN EDUCATION, 53(2), 176-195. 10.1177/0042085918754328

cited authors

  • Dancy, TE; Edwards, KT; Earl Davis, J

abstract

  • In this article, the authors argue that U.S. colleges and universities must grapple with persistent engagements of Black bodies as property. Engaging the research and scholarship on Black faculty, staff, and students, we explain how theorizations of settler colonialism and anti-Blackness (re)interpret the arrangement between historically White universities and Black people. The authors contend that a particular political agenda that engages the Black body as property, not merely concerns for disproportionality and inequality, is deeply embedded in institutional policy and practice. The article concludes with a vision for what awareness of anti-Black settler colonialism means for U.S. higher education.

publication date

  • February 1, 2018

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 176

end page

  • 195

volume

  • 53

issue

  • 2