“Conceiving the Local: Empire and Politics in the Revolutionary Atlantic.”
The Franklin W. Knight Lecture in Black Studies Herman Bennett, Distinguished Professor of History and Director, Institute for Research on the African Diaspora in the Americans and the Caribbean (IRADAC) at the Graduate Center, CUNY, delivers the keynote address for the Symposium on Franklin W. Knight: His Scholarship, Impact, and Legacy. 2022

Artist Dr. Leslee Stradford and Professor Herman Bennett gave a fascinating talk at The Church on Afrofuturism and its relationship to padrãos, steles that were erected in Africa by Portuguese colonists during the time of slavery. Dr Stradford created a collage reflecting on this phenomenon and she and Herman Bennett, historian and author of AFRICAN KINGS AND BLACK SLAVES, had a dynamic conversation about Afrofuturism, described as “an ever-expansive aesthetic and practice—where music, visual arts, science fiction, and technology intersect to imagine alternate realities and a liberated future viewed through the lens of Black cultures”. 2022

Kings and Slaves: Diplomacy, Sovereignty, and Black Subjectivity in the Early Modern World
Noted historian of the African Diaspora, Herman Bennett, delivered an evening lecture in honor of the 75th anniversary of the founding of the John Carter Brown Library’s Associates. Friday, October 4, at 5:30pm. Brown University 2019