In honour of Black History Month, the Department of History is featuring undergraduate student research that addresses Black histories, Black cultures, and Black experiences. Throughout the month of February, we will post the eight essays deemed to be the strongest of the many exceptional projects we received during our open submission call. We hope you enjoy reading our studentsā work.
The Selection Committee would like to thank all of those who submitted their work for consideration.
Our second student project feature is an essay entitled "The Reclamation of Dignity: The History of Dance for Black Women in the United States," written by Amy Abraham for the upper-level History seminar course, HIST 473: Black Women in U.S. History.
Amy's paper explores the historical importance of dance for Black women in the United States. She argues that African American women, from the plantations to the Harlem Renaissance, have used dance as a method to protest their circumstances and foster community, pleasure, and agency for themselves.
As Amy explains,
[I] examine the erasure of culture caused by slavery, the unique discrimination experienced by working-class Black women throughout history, the politics of respectability, and how dance can be used as a method of activism. This study finds that the historical context for Black womenās dancing being labeled as ātoo promiscuousā is rooted in ideas of racism, sexism, and classism that can be traced back to the slave trade. The lack of scholarship on the topic denies Black women their historical due diligence and credit for the establishment of much of todayās popular culture.
Amy is a fourth-year History student at ¾ÅŠćÖ±²„.