Backlash and BackTalkersInstructor: Ernest Quarles, Esq.October 20 - December 1 (6 Sessions - Skips Thanksgiving Week)Tuesdays, 7:00PM - 9:00PM ETVirtual va Zoom
Brought to you by Odyssey
Course Description: This course will explore the American story through the writings of women thinkers on the topics of race, justice, and human progress. By examining the evolution of feminist thought from the pioneers of the late nineteenth century to the present, students will better understand why the promise of a multiracial democracy remains unfulfilled, including the strategies and mechanisms that have been used to resist movements for equality and how they have evolved over time. Thought leaders like Kimberle Williams Crenshaw will guide our efforts to more accurately frame American history, showing us in the process that while the government can try to ban words and manipulate history, there will always be backtalkers who will defend and memorialize the truth.
In a national moment where the goal is to erase and silence truth, our course journey will enable us to explore and embrace the multi-racial core of our American identity and potentially take us to places where many have been reluctant to tread. The story of America has always been one of glaring contradictions; of soaring ambitions towards freedom, equality, and justice for all held back and down at every turn by bitter, often brutal forces of division. Forces that perpetually pit us against one another along lines of gender, race, religion, and class. In this course our collective aim will be to further expose and examine the divisive forces behind these historic contradictions and the harms they engender in a safe space that inspires and encourages us to write the next chapter of American history from a place of community, solidarity, and grace.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ernest J. Quarles is an attorney, intersectional critical race researcher, and historian who teaches at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. His courses focus on deficits in America’s storytelling, erased and marginalized histories, and U.S. racial history. Within those spaces, his methodology embraces intersectional frames and other critical lenses and, in so doing, enables truly transformational learning. Quarles began his study of race matters under the late Hon. Leon A. Higginbotham while studying at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He is also a graduate of Brown University.
He currently sits on the board of The African American Policy Forum and works on several initiatives which impact and support the development of truth narratives to counteract mainstream narratives about race and social justice. This unique space has enabled him to provide students with a more holistic view of the world that is rooted in empathy and a view of research that informs social activism as a moral imperative.
Event DateStarts: Tuesday, October 20, 20267:00pm EDTEnds: Tuesday, December 1, 20269:00pm EDT
ContactOdysseyAlumni Relations Lifelong Learning800-JHU-JHU1 (548-5481)odyssey@jhu.edu
Signing in with your Johns Hopkins Events (or Ecommerce, Alumni) account will automatically fill in your name and address information in the next step of event registration. If facing issues while logged in, try submitting the form without login. Selecting Continue as Guest will allow you to register for an event without signing in to an existing Johns Hopkins account.
Thank you for joining the Odyssey Program! If you're passionate about learning and want to help us continue this work, please consider a tax-deductible gift to support this program.