Panel Discussing "The Creative Potential of the Mellon Mays Network" |
Me Giving My Presentation |
All in all, I'm glad that the MMUF program exists, and I'm committed to remaining an active part of the Mellon family throughout my career. In the solitude of graduate school, it's easy to forget that so many of us are struggling through the same things. I love my department, but I must confess that it's tiring to be one of the few brown faces around the place. Navigating the space between my rural East Texas upbringing and the cosmopolitan scholarly life I hope to live would be much more difficult if not for the resources that the MMUF program provides. It's more than fellowship money. It's the reassurance I feel when I see young professors of color who are pursuing this path with their spirits intact. It's the comraderie I feel when I have lunch with other students who can relate to the same insecurities and frustrations that come with graduate school. The mission of the MMUF program reminds me that I'm doing something worthy. Even if people think that I'm "just" reading books or that the research I do doesn't matter, I know that there are young people out there who desperately need to see teachers, scholars, and activists who look like them and can relate to them. And that's why I'm doing this. (Well, that and the fact that I'd go crazy if I had to work a 9-to-5 forever. My previous job was great, but I couldn't be an office admin for the rest of my days. Let's be real.) I'm doing this because I see a very real need for poor people and people of color to be represented in academia, in government, in the upper levels of commerce. My way of addressing this need is to learn how to play this game so that hopefully I can change it. (I think I inadvertently stole that line from a rap song...)
I leave you with an image that, to me, captures the essence of the conference. Someone had a copy of Dr. Manning Marable's new Malcolm X volume next to an Amstel at Thursday night's party. Lovely.
Peace,
V
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