African American studies is a discipline that focuses squarely on the Black experience
in the United States and in the African Diaspora across time and space. As an area
of academic inquiry, it spreads beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries, yet it
still, as Dr. Perry Hall once noted, "comprises one discreet, integral body of knowledge."
Unlike many other disciplines which were born as a result of faculty deliberations,
the history African American studies is deeply rooted in the protest and student movements
of the 1960s - particularly the Civil Rights movement - which called into question
the disconnect between America's core values and its anti-democratic practices. While
the first AAMS department was not established until 1968, the forbearers of the discipline
include great luminaries such as Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Anna Julia Cooper, W.E.B. DuBois,
C.L.R. James, and Carter G. Woodson.
Today, AAMS explores the full range of the multifaceted and interrelated cultures
and experiences of African Americans and people of African descent. In doing so, it
allows us to engage complex issues in innovative ways that are oftentimes beyond the
scope of conventional fields. In this way, AAMS is an applied discipline, as its scholars
have worked to address many of the problems of Black communities across the nation
and around the world. This is just one of the many lasting contributions that AAMS
has made to the academy.
Finally, at Winthrop, AAMS has attracted students from a variety of fields of study,
including art, dance, history, mass communications, world languages, political science, psychology, and sociology. Thus, it complements all majors.