
The Eric
Williams Memorial Collection
________________________________________________________________________________________________
P.O.
Box 561631,
Miami,
Fl
33256-1631,
USA*Tel:
305-271-7246*Cell:
305-905-9999*Fax:
305-271-4160
The
Tenth Annual FIU Eric Williams Lecture Analyzes the Emergence
of Barack Obama
Media Contact
Erica
Williams Connell
305-905-9999
ewc.suilan@juno.com
MIAMI, Florida
(November 2, 2008)―Trinidad
and Tobago-born Dr. Arnold Rampersad, the distinguished man of letters, waxed
warm on his topic with his timely and thought-provoking delivery at the Tenth
Annual Eric E. Williams Memorial Lecture on October 24, 2008.
His lecture, “The
Challenge of Leadership in
America:
Race, History and the Emergence of Barack Obama,” was held at
Florida
International
University, as part of its African &
African Diaspora Studies Program Distinguished Africana Scholars Lecture Series.
Rampersad, an engaging and
self-effacing lecturer with a markedly dry wit, is currently a Sara-Hart-Kimball
Professor in the Humanities (Emeritus) at
Stanford
University. He holds a B.A. and
an M.A. from Bowling Green
State
University and an M.A. and a Ph.D. from
Harvard.
But it was his sound historical
knowledge on how the phenomenon that is Barack Obama could have occurred within
the context of today’s current climate that was most notable, several times
causing the 300-plus audience to erupt in both applause and approbation.
Professor Rampersad effectively reviewed many of the century’s African Americans―as
well as Whites―who, by their sheer talent, courage,
persistence, and the infiltration of Black culture into White consciousness,
made Obama’s rise possible.
Nevertheless, the lecture characterized Obama, himself, as unique―at
one and the same time both an enigma and master orator―a
man deemed virtually unflappable, with the capacity to be a great leader.
With a vibrant discussion of the implications for contemporary times, Rampersad
paid tribute to
America’s
“relentless capacity for rejuvenation and reinvention.”
In a sense, whatever happens on November 4th, Obama’s immense
achievement will have been that of America’s as well―a
land where less than fifty years ago, he would have had a difficult time finding
a clerk’s job on 125th Street in Harlem.
In the lively Question & Answer
session that followed, Rampersad ably fielded numerous on-point questions,
including a contrast of the “socialist” nametag attributed to both Eric Williams
in his time and, now, Barack Obama.
Several US Federal and
Florida elected officials,
including Governor Charlie Crist,
proffered courtesy greetings, Mayoral Proclamations, the silver Seal of the City
of Miami, and hearty congratulations
on the Lecture’s Tenth Anniversary.
As in the past, pledges to the Lecture Endowment Fund were actively solicited.
The Memorial Lecture is named in
honor of Trinidad and Tobago’s
first Prime Minister and quarter-century leader, Eric Williams.
An internationally-renowned scholar, best known for writing
Capitalism and Slavery, his book was
first published in 1944 and has been translated into seven languages, with
Korean, Hindi and Urdu editions planned.
“The Williams Thesis” was cited in the
New York Times Book Review (1997) as
continuing to be on “the cutting edge of slave trade research in academic
circles.”
The Lecture seeks to provide an
intellectual forum for the examination of pertinent issues in
Caribbean and African Diaspora history and politics.
It is co-sponsored by: the
Caribbean Consular Corps (Miami); Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural
Affairs; FIU’s Ruth K. and Shepard Broad Educational Series – Department of
International Relations, the Labor Center, Caribbean Students Association;
AFSCME Local 1363; Capital World Wide Ventures, Inc.; Caribbean Airlines, Ltd.;
Classic Realty, Inc.; Delancyhill, P.A.; Diane Galloway’s Herbal Gardens, Inc.;
Dipcon Construction, Ltd.; Laureen Gosine Foundation; Priscas Cosmetics; Soca
Afrique Creations; Sweet Hand Kathy; Zagada Markets.
The Lecture is also supported by
the Eric Williams Memorial Collection at The University of the West
Indies (Trinidad and Tobago
campus), which was inaugurated by former
U.S. Secretary of State, Colin L. Powell in 1998.
It was named to UNESCO’s
prestigious
Memory of the World Register in
1999.
- EWMC -