Professor Barbara D. Savage is going to the United Kingdom to present her book about Merze Tate to the University of Birmingham. The event is described as follows:
In her new book, Merze Tate: The Global Odyssey of a Black Woman Scholar, Professor Barbara Savage (University of Pennsylvania) uncovers the life and work of a prolific diplomatic historian at Howard University in Washington, DC from 1942-1977.
Despite living in what Tate called a “race and sex discriminating” world, she earned graduate degrees from Oxford (international relations, 1935) and Harvard (government, 1941). She spent a year in India in 1950-51 as a Fulbright scholar, traveled in Asia and the Pacific, and published five groundbreaking books on arms limitations and on US imperialism in the Pacific.
This talk examines Tate’s final and unpublished work on Africa in the late 1970s. She brought prescient attention to the growing US corporate presence there by focusing on new seaports and railroad construction, a network she called the “sinews and arteries of empire.” Tate warned of international capital’s threat to post-independence Africa. Savage will conclude by raising questions about another consequence of globalization: increased African immigration to the US (post-1970s) and to the UK and how that unsettles paradigms in African American Studies and Black British Studies.