Tennis, Race, and Serena Williams

By Claire Cheek, Hannah Quiroz, and Ellen Nilsson  “Answer the question. The question, jerk!” This token phrase came from none other than tennis legend John McEnroe. During the Swedish Open in 1984, number one ranked tennis player John McEnroe threw yet another infamous temper tantrum during a match. Frustrated with decisions made by the umpire, […]

Black Panther and the Global Afro-Future

by Cord J. Whitaker This post contains spoilers for Black Panther.   I left Black Panther with a smile on my face and thinking one very comforting thought: black people will rule the world—and soon. It’s not that Wakanda exists, nor that vibranium exists, nor even that white people should get their comeuppance. Everybody is […]

On Race and Medieval Studies

by Medievalists of Color   Medieval studies is increasingly acknowledging realities of race and racism in the profession—reflected in everything from the call to recognize that racism is inherent in the very use of the term “Anglo-Saxon”; to Richard Spencer and the so-called alt-right’s cooptation of Western European medieval studies to buttress their white supremacist ideology; […]

Multiracial Identity Today

by Rachele Byrd, Shivani Dayal, and Molly Hoyer   Between 1990 and 2000, the percentage of babies in the US born to two parents of different races rose significantly, from 5 to 9 percent. This increase is part of a larger trend in the United States that, over the course of the last thirty years, […]

Race at Wellesley

by Rachele Byrd, Shivani Dayal, and Molly Hoyer   We would like to believe that our education system is a meritocracy—that those who are most deserving will be offered a spot at the nation’s most prestigious institutions. That ideal, however, has hardly ever been the reality of the matter. Over the centuries, various ethnic groups […]

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