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Jeffrey
O.G. Ogbar (on leave Fall, 2004)
Jeffrey
O.G. Ogbar, was appointed Director of the Institute for African
American Studies in August 2003. An associate professor in the Department
of History, Dr. Ogbar has been active in activities concerning African
American studies and African American students at UConn since his
arrival in 1997. Prof. Ogbar's research interests include the 20th
century United States with a focus in African American history.
More specifically, Dr. Ogbar studies black nationalism and radical
social protest. He has developed courses, lectured and published
articles on subjects as varied as Pan-Africanism, African American
Catholics, civil rights struggles, black nationalism and hip-hop.
In 1999-2000 Dr. Ogbar worked as a research fellow at Harvard University's
W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research, while completing
his book manuscript on the Black Power movement (forthcoming with
Johns Hopkins University Press). In the fall of 2001 Prof. Ogbar
was a scholar-in-residence at the Schomburg Center for Research
in Black Culture in New York City, while working on his second book
manuscript, which is on the culture and politics of hip hop, to
be published as part of the University Press of Kansas series on
American popular culture. In early 2003, Prof. Ogbar published his
edited book, The Civil Rights Movement, which is part of Houghton
Mifflin's Problems in American Civilization series. His articles
appear in the "Journal of Religious Thought," the "Journal
of Black Studies," "Souls" and other scholarly publications.
He earned his BA from Morehouse College and his MA and Ph.D. from
Indiana University.
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