News and Events of the Africana Studies Department

(Pictured above Meloseri Dumnoi, Destiny Gbor, Matthew Bediako, as well as Africana Studies students Torian Smith, Karega Atkinson Jr., Adejumoke Ademiluyi, and Angelina Mancini).
 
 

Patrice Nganang and Zebulon Miletsky 

Drs. Miletsky (left) and Nganag
Dr. Zebulon Miletsky (left) with Dr. Patrice Nganang

In accordance with Africana Studies departmental bylaws, Dr. Zebulon Miletsky was voted in as Chair of Africana Studies following Dr. Patrice Nganang's two terms   Dr. Miletsky brings his perspective as a trained historian to the role. He is active in UUP (United University Professionals),  ASALH  (Association for the Study of African American Life and History) and History Makers.  Dr. Miletksy's Before Busing  explores in depth the ambivalence (that led to acceptance)  of integration in Boston's working class neighborhoods.  Many thanks to Dr. Nganang for making Africana Studies what it is today with two fellows (one becoming tenure track and the other on the path to tenure track) , an assistant profestor hiring, numerous promotions, and two highly successful Black Pulsations  series, Dr. Nganang brought a global perspective to the role with enabling Stony Brook's particiapation in a world conference: African Languages and the Challrenges of Modernity: Writing Challenges, Teaching Strategies and Visions for the Future  (Sepetember 2025).  Dr. Nganang's A Trail of Crab Tracks  caught the attention of the New Yorker in its piece "When a novel reimagines a nation" .  His new work Scale Boy  chronicles his youth evoking he paradoxes of modern Africa-complex, contradictory, and full of conflict, tragedy, and joy. Dr. Nganang's current project makes learning African languages accessible and fun to those of us in the west!  Welcome to the Chair, Dr. Miletsky and Thank you, Dr. Nganang!

Africana Studies Graduation 2026

AFS Class of 2026
Africana Studies pose in front of AFS faculty, May 22nd, 2026

Bliss Verdon and Richard B. Moore scholarship winners 2026
Adejumoke Ademiluyi and Angelina Mancini, 2026 AFS scholarship winners

Adejumoke Ademiluyi (left) received the Richard B. Moore Scholarship, and Angelina Mancini received the Bliss Verdon Scholarship, both students were honored for this achievement at the 2026 AFS graduation!

The Richard B. Moore scholarship (endowed by the Turner Family whose maternal grandmother was Richard B. Moore's daughter) celebrates the first African American self-made millionare born in Barbados whose work in Harlem as an Afro-Carribeanist inspired generations of Harlem residents.  Mr. Moore propelled the term "African American" over Black or Negro believing it more respectful and illustrative.  The award goes to a an African or African American student with impeccable academic credentials and demonstrable work in social justice.  The Bliss Verdon scholarship, named after a Stony Brook AFS student murdered by her partner the year of her graduation (1995)  went to Angelina Mancini for her academic record and devotion to the Africana Studies Department demonstrated by her club work and TA work with AFS faculty.  This scholarship supports travel and research.  Congratulations to both!
 

Congratulations to Dr. Georges Fouron

Dr. Georges Fouron
Dr. Georges Fouron
Congratulations to Dr. Georges Fouron who was named to the rank of Toll Professor, spring 2026. Dr. Fouron plans to  use his Toll  professorship to further research Transnational Identities  and to teach AFS 501, the foundations course in our Masters Program.  Dr. Fouron is above all concerned with his beloved Haiti-her people and her landscape.



Africana Studies Society (AFSS) by Angelina Mancini

AFSS picture


On April 24th, we welcomed a brand new student organization  with an exuberant and bustling opening event. After six months of hard work,dedication, and burning passion, The Africana Studies Society kicked off their first campus event with an impressive launch party that welcomed 90+ attendees. We received overwhelming support, kindness, and interest by faculty, students and community members.

The Africana Studies Society,  a student-led academic society that is dedicated, driven to bring  visibility, respect, and exposure to African American  Study focusing on community-building, creating pathways for equitable education, advocating for prison abolition, and providing free and adequate education, resources, and guidance to youth through various initiatives  meticulously designed over the last half of a year. This organization was brought forth by two undergraduate students of Africana Studies, Meloseri Dumnoi and Angelina Mancini, and could not have been accomplished without the unwavering support of their faculty sponsor, Dr. Jarrett Marin Drake.

The launch party was highly successful, the president, Adejumoke Ademiluyi, vice president, Angelina Mancini, secretary, Matthew Bediako, and treasurer, Prisca Boadu worked alongside the rest of the groups amazing members to put on an event that centered Africana Studies, promoted intellectual growth, and showed the joy of learning to the campus community, while encouraging  peers to join  in this Journey. Pictured students include: Adejumoke Ademiluyi, Angelina Mancini, Meloseri Dumnoi, Destiny Gbor, Peyton Edwards, Mackayla Nerjuste, Hikma Abdulmumin, Amarachi Marshall, Amber McLeod, Deron-Messiah Adams, and Electra Buvoli and also features the Africana Studies Societies Faculty Advisor, Dr. Jarrett Martin Drake!



Celebration of Dr. Annie May Walker, the first Chair of Africana Studies!

Annie May Walker bio by Dr. Abena Ampofoa Asare
Annie May Walker

In 1945, the young Mrs. Annie Mae Tooks traveled from  Bethune-Cookman College and her home in Daytona Beach, Florida to attend the Bank Street Cooperative School, a progressive teacher training program that stressed the importance of educating “the whole child” and building a more humane, just, and rational world.

Dr. Annie Mae Walker went on to become the first director of Stony Brook University’s Black Studies program (1969). In this role she navigated the demands of Black and Puerto Rican student organizers and the directives of university administrators to establish an educational unit that has persisted for almost six decades. From 1969 to 1975 Stony Brook’s newly formed Black Studies Program (now Africana Studies), established by and supported by Dr. Annie Mae Walker, was decidedly internationalist, unapologetically political, and closely connected to local communities beyond the university’s walls.

On April 16th, Africana Studies hosted a celebration in Dr. Walker's honor funded by the Provost and the Vice President for Diversity Equity and Inclusiveness.  Former students of Dr. Walker's from the class of 1972 came to celebrate, remember and reflect on the difference Dr. Walker made in their Stony Brook lives.  Also present were Dr. Walker's family from Daytona Beach and Atlanta who reminded us that Dr. Walker was not only a gifted, pioneering educator, she was a pianist and cross stitch artist who was very generous with her extended family.  Current Africana Studies students read poetry and  Africana Studies faculty delivered addresses on Dr. Walker's contribution to Stony Brook University and to the world.   A memorial plaque under one of Stony Brook's many flowering trees near the home of Africana Studies (Social and Behavioral Sciences) is being planned and an appropriate location scouted. Contribtuions are being sought by the students who remember her so well from the class of 1972.

from left, Zebulon Miletsky, Dwight Loines, Mwwata Nubian, Barry A. Cozier
from left, Zebulon Miletsky, Dwight Loines, Mwwata Nubian, Barry A. Cozier and April Rita Moore (grand-niece)

Ben Crump, Esq. Visits Stony Brook and AFS students were there...

Angelina Mancini, Ben Crump, Esq. Destiny Gbor and Adejumoke Ademiluyi
Angelina Mancini, Ben Crump, Esq. Destiny Gbor and Adejumoke Ademiluyi
Stony Brook's Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion invited Ben Crump, esq. (famed civil rights attorney and successful litigator for Breonna Taylor's family) to speak, sign, and answer questions regarding his New York Times Bestseller, Worse Than a Lie. This event was a great opportunity to learn from someone who works tirelessly to bring legal justice in the aftermath of egregious human rights violations; hearing his story was extremely impactful, and reflective of the Africana Studies'  teachings to bring about tangible changes in the ongoing, collective struggle for Black American Liberation. Pictured are Africana Studies Students Adejumoke Ademiluyi, Destiny Gbor, and Angelina Mancini who attended this event and got the amazing opportunity to meet Ben Crump!

 

 

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