Bowling Green State University, Department of Ethnic Studies records

 Collection
Identifier: UA-0066

Collection Overview

Abstract

Records documenting the establishment, evolution and course offerings of the Department of Ethnic Studies at Bowling Green State University.

Dates

  • Creation: 1970-2003

Extent

8.88 Cubic Feet (3 record cartons, 15 letter size archive boxes, and 1 half-letter size archive box.)

Creator

Scope and Contents

This collection documents the development, evolution, and course offerings of the Department of Ethnic Studies. Included in the collection are correspondence, studies, meeting minutes, reports, workshop materials, and course syllabi. The collection is arranged in the order received.

Biographical / Historical

The Department of Ethnic Studies at Bowling Green State University is the result of years of evolution and development. Due to demands for BGSU to seriously address national issues of race and ethnicity, an Ethnic Studies Committee was formed, by then-President William T. Jerome, in spring 1970. Chaired by John Scott, who was then an instructor in Theatre, the result of the committee's work was the formation in July 1970 of the Ethnic Studies Program/Center, directed by Dr. Robert L. Perry. The stated purpose of the program was to "provide multicultural education and to improve racial balance in university course offerings" and an undergraduate degree program in Afro-American Studies was subsequently approved by the university's Academic Council in October 1971.

As was the case with many new Ethnic Studies programs of the late 60s and early 70s, the primary concentration and focus of BGSU’s Ethnic Studies curriculum was initially the African American experience. However, over the following few years the program addressed the broad spectrum of American ethnicities, and graduated its first class in spring 1975. Becoming a full department in the College of Arts and Sciences in 1979, Ethnic Studies increased and maintained its high profile and consistent efforts to encourage BGSU as an institution to respond to issues of diversity and multiculturalism.

In 1985 BGSU's then President Paul Olscamp established a Minority Studies Committee which was chaired by Ethnic Studies Professor Ernest Champion and included both Dr. Rolando Andrade and Dr. Win Stone as serving members. The result of the Committee's report was the establishment in 1992 of the University's Cultural Diversity requirement that all students at BGSU take a class in multiculturalism. ETHN 1010: Introduction to Ethnic Studies, amongst other courses offered by the department, plays a significant role in allowing students to fulfill this requirement.

Having chaired the department for almost two decades, Dr. Perry retired in 1997. His replacement was Dr. Michael Martin, chair of the Department of Africana Studies at Wayne State University for six years. Dr. Martin came to the department with the intention of continuing and expanding the legacy of nearly thirty years of Ethnic Studies at BGSU. Just as the department evolved from a concentration on African American Studies into a broader emphasis on Ethnic Studies as a field, the department is now evolving from a focus on ethnicity and race in the United States to a broader comparative focus embracing the issues of globalization and international migrations, so increasingly important to understanding domestic issues.

In 2011, the Department of Ethnic Studies joined with the departments of Popular Culture, Women's Studies, and American Culture Studies to create the School of Cultural and Critical Studies.

Conditions Governing Access

No known access restrictions.

Conditions Governing Use

Researchers using this collection assume full responsibility for conforming to the laws of libel, privacy, and copyright, and are responsible for securing permissions necessary for publication or reproduction.

Language of Materials

English

Processing Information

During review of this collection for input into ArchivesSpace, some files were taken out of records cartons and put into archive boxes for better storage/easier access. In order to maintain the original box numbers, letters were added after box numbers. For example, folders in former box 4 are now in boxes 4a, 4b, and 4c, etc. Some records in this collection are unprocessed, covering approximately boxes 6b through 11.

Title
Guide to the Bowling Green State University, Department of Ethnic Studies records
Author
Cindy Radford
Date
March 2019
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin