Portland State, "Black Studies Center public dialogue. Pt. 2" May 30, 1975. by Portland State Library Special Collections published on 2014-01-24T21:58:53Z Portland State, "Black Studies Center public dialogue. Pt. 2," May 30, 1975. Series: Public Dialogue on the American Dream Theme. Panel Members: Toni Morrison, Primus St. John (Professor, Portland State), John Callahan (Lewis and Clark), Judy Callahan (Lewis and Clark), and Lloyd Baker (student, Portland State). VANGUARD: Friday May 30th 1975: Novelist Toni Morrison will speak on "A Humanistic View." Transferred to digital format from original ยผ inch reel to reel audio recording. Transferred and preserved by Portland State University Libraryโs Special Collections with the generous support of the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library Services and Technology Act, administered by the Oregon State Library. This digital access copy is made available as streaming media for personal, educational, and non-commercial use only. It cannot be reproduced in any form, distributed or played for commercial purposes. It is made accessible because of one or more of the following situations: the rights are owned by State Board of Higher Education, on behalf of Portland State University; Portland State University has permission to make it accessible; it is made accessible for education and research purposes under "fair use"; or there are no known restrictions on use. In the event that previously unknown information is shared that may change the status of this item, it will be immediately removed from public view until pertinent rights issues are clarified. Comment by Hunter Moyler 1:50:32 same 2022-02-07T01:16:10Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 1:32:05 "Educating the conqueror is not our business. But if it were, the best way to do it is to *not* explain anything to him, but to make ourselves strong." 2022-02-07T00:51:45Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 1:25:20 "I do not make a distinction between politics and art in this sense. To me, all of the best art is political. All of it." 2022-02-07T00:40:37Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 1:12:00 Morrison talks about Black music as something untampered by white people 2022-02-07T00:25:06Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 46:17 leaves out the important role of Douglass's wife, Anna Murray, in his escape. Douglass also happens to leave her out in his own book 2022-02-06T23:21:40Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 38:30 Interesting point, since it definitely *does* seem like so much Black effort (not only intellectual effort) has been put forth trying to prove to white people that we are indeed humans and do have languages, arts, etc. Of course, they only demanded such proof after they purposely whipped things like that out of us. 2022-02-06T23:10:51Z Comment by Hunter Moyler 34:28 very good point 2022-02-06T22:59:04Z Comment by Sipho Eric Ndlovu Love the way Toni Morrison starts 2021-06-29T22:47:04Z Comment by KediT Love 2021-03-30T17:09:17Z Comment by Bryan Lattimore ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ 2020-09-24T19:45:05Z Comment by Bryan Lattimore ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ๐๐พ 2020-09-24T18:57:27Z Comment by SHAMAPRIZNA What has happened to this essential nugget of Black Americana? 2019-10-29T21:37:03Z Comment by sissies of wakanda this recording is such a blessing,so nutritional. thank you for posting! 2017-09-06T05:42:45Z Comment by radikal_queen She makes me feel so PROUD of myself. And even more powerful than I knew. 2014-11-16T19:18:12Z Comment by Portland State Library Special Collections 35:48 "It's important, therefore, to know who the real enemy is.." 2014-10-18T00:45:35Z Comment by freethought Important points... 2014-07-14T10:43:18Z