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Visiting Scholars Program
The Hooks Institute hosts scholars and others from across the United States to work
for an uninterrupted period of time to complete manuscripts and other projects. Visiting scholars also bring new and refreshing perspectives to the work of the Institute
and to the University of Memphis. In addition, published and completed works of visiting scholars promote the work
of the Institute to a national audience.
July 2011 - July 2012
Shannen Dee Williams, Ph.D. in African-American and United States history from Rutgers University on May 19,
2013. Dr. Williams is currently revising her dissertation, "Subversive Habits: Black
Nuns and the Struggle to Desegregate Catholic America after World War I," into a book
manuscript. Her study unearths the hidden history of black sisters in the fight to
dismantle racial and gender barriers in the U.S. Catholic Church. When completed,
it will be the first historical monograph on black Catholic sisters in twentieth-century
America. Dr. Williams is a native of Memphis, TN and the 2000 salutatorian of Craigmont
High School. She earned a B.A. from Agnes Scott College in and a M.A. in Afro-American
studies from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
2006-2007
Daphene R. McFerren, J.D., focused on completing interviews and compiling primary source materials on the Fayette
County Movement. In October 2006, McFerren organized a two-day conference attended
by persons from across the nation on The Fayette County, Tennessee Civil Rights Movement: How African Americans Changed
Themselves, Their Community, and Their Nation by Demanding the Right to Vote.
Fall 2005
Clyde Robertson, Ph.D., the Director of Africana and Multicultural Studies for the New Orleans Public School
District, received his doctorate in Africana Studies from Temple University in 1998.
Dr. Robertson earned an M.A. in Communications Theory from Howard University in 1982
and a B.A. in Broadcast Management/Mass Communications from Clark University in 1981.
He is the recipient of awards and honors, and the author of several publications.
Dr. Robertson's work at the Institute involved memorializing the tragedy and aftermath
of Katrina through the development of theatrical works.
Jason Ogle is a former native of New Orleans and former Chair of the English Department at McDonogh
35 Senior High School in New Orleans. Ogle was a Fulbright Scholar in the summer of
2005 in Barbados, Trinidad, and Tobago. As a Visiting Scholar operating out of Houston,
Mr. Ogle was primarily responsible for conducting interviews with high school students
on Katrina's impact on their lives. In July 2006, Ogle served as the Director of the
ACE (Achievement/Confidence/Excellence) Academy, a Hooks Institute initiative [now
called Hooks Youth for Social Change (HYSC)] that focused on assisting high school
students in developing strong academic progress in critical reading and analytical
thinking skills, in logic/problem-solving, writing and presentations.
Baderinwa Ain was the Hooks Institute's Artist-in-Residence. In July 2005, Baderinwa was a Fulbright
Scholar in Barbados, Tobago, and Trinidad. Ain was also a member of the Katrina Task
Force and worked with Clyde Robertson, Ph.D., to memorialize the tragedy and aftermath
of Katrina through the development of theatrical works.
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