“Black Indigeneities and Diasporic Intimacies in Black Central America”

“Black Indigeneities and Diasporic Intimacies in Black Central America”
Dr. Nicole D. Ramsey, The Carter G. Woodson Institute, University of Virginia
Nicole Ramsey completed her Ph.D. in the department of African American & African Diaspora Studies at the University of California Berkeley. Originally from Los Angeles, California, she holds an MA in African American Studies from UCLA and a BA in American Studies from UC Santa Cruz. Nicole’s interdisciplinary approaches to blackness, indigeneity, migration and popular culture are grounded in a diasporic and transnational framework. Her dissertation, "Sub Umbra Floreo (Under the Shade I Flourish): Performing the Belizean Nation," explores performances of nation, blackness, and cultural production in Belize and its diaspora.
Co-sponsors: SPAP / USLT
Flyer for Ramsey Event Black Indigeneities and Diasporic Intimacies in Black Central America