Faculty Profile: Linda-Susan Beard
Linda-Susan Beard shares some thoughts with the Bulletin.
Linda-Susan Beard focuses her teaching and research on post-colonial literatures, South African and African American literature, and contemplative intelligence. She also co-founded Emmaus Monastery, a contemplative, monastic community in rural Michigan.
The question
鈥淔or far too many Americans, slavery is an opaque abstraction hidden in a sanitized and seemingly unknowable past.鈥
the family tree
鈥淢y father, who passed away last July in the 102nd year of his life, had a slave grandfather we have traced ... and we believe that we know one of the masters who owned us: the Baird family.鈥 (Read more about this connection.)
Exceptional Amnesia
鈥淭he single narrative we have inherited about American exceptionalism has always been self-serving and amnesiac about this ugly chapter of our history, with its unexplored vantage of white hegemony鈥攅ven in the anti-slavery struggle鈥攁nd its myopia that continues to dismiss Black achievement against the odds.鈥
Exodus
鈥淭he favorite biblical text of the slave was Exodus. It is the remarkable indomitability of the human spirit that we study, even in the midst of life-threatening and mortal abuse in the attempt to destroy the slave鈥檚 sense of self.鈥
Past, Present, Future
鈥淲e are bound together in our narrative of the past; we are also yoked in the present and in the futures we choose to imagine together.鈥
Published on: 02/07/2020