For nearly forty years, the College failed to sustain more than one full-time appointment in Africana Studies, which had immense implications for students’ ability to complete the major, the available mentorship for black students, and on the advisorship of the African American Society. Randy Stakeman was the final professor to maintain all of these roles at once, in addition to serving as associate dean of the faculty and overseer of Bowdoin’s Mellon Mays program. Upon Stakeman’s retirement in 2006, President Barry Mills determined to focus the College’s recently-launched capital campaign, at least partly, on raising funds to establish four additional Africana Studies professorships. Due in part to this investment, the program is stronger than it has ever been. With the celebration of the program’s 50th anniversary, it is important to remember that this strength is both recent and long-fought-for—not just in these fifty years, but in Bowdoin’s longer history of racism and slow change.
Reflections at 20
Come the twentieth anniversary, the program and Society celebrated its community, bringing together alumni, former professors, students and current faculty and staff. They also reflected on its two decades with frustration. Vincent Jacks ’91 said in an interview with the Orient that “the irony is we are celebrating accomplishments that are few and far between, which based on twenty years of existence should have rooted more change.”