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Editor’s Note: To interview Dr. Rose Gladney,
contact Elizabeth Smith in media relations.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The department
of American studies at The University of Alabama is raising
funds to support a new lecture series: The Rose Gladney Lecture
on Justice and Social Change.
Dr. Rose Gladney, who recently retired as an associate professor
of American studies, spent her career working on issues of social
justice and change. She was one of the early professors in UA’s
women’s studies department
and helped craft the master’s program in that field. She also
helped develop and sustain the African American studies minor.
Her role in working for equity for all people on the UA campus
and in the larger Tuscaloosa community led to a 1987 award of the
first Autherine Lucy Foster Award for service, leadership and support
for minority programming.
“I’ve always been interested in people’s lives
and oral histories,” she said. “We have to write our
own history and get past the idea that only whites are Southerners.
The South is a multi-cultural region. All its people have created
the culture and are worthy of study.”
Gladney grew up in Louisiana, and it was while working on her
doctorate in New Mexico in the early 1970s that she was introduced
to Lillian Smith. That introduction led to a 1993 book, “How
Am I to Be Heard?: Letters of Lillian Smith,” which Gladney
edited. In it, she explored Smith’s views of Southern self-deception
about race, class, gender and sexuality and the ways in which the
South’s attitudes and institutions perpetuated dehumanizing
experiences for all its people.
“It was because of Smith’s work that I knew it was
important for me to teach in the South and to teach about Southerners
who have both appreciated and challenged their culture,” Gladney
said. “Lillian Smith was about using the past to move into
the future, and so am I.”
The department is working toward a goal of raising $20,000 that
will enable the lecture series to become a yearly event. Anyone
interested in making a contribution to the establishment of the
fund should contact Dr. Lynne Adrian, associate professor of American
studies, 205/348-9762.
The departments of American studies and women’s studies
are housed in the College of
Arts and Sciences, the University’s largest division and
the largest public liberal arts college in the state, with approximately
5,500 undergraduates and 1,000 graduate students. The College has
received national recognition for academic excellence, and the College’s
students have been selected for many of the nation’s top academic
honors, including 13 Rhodes Scholarships, 14 Goldwater Scholarships,
seven Truman Scholarships and 15 memberships on USA Today’s
Academic All-American teams.
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