HETTIE WILLIAMS
Hettie Williams, a
historian at Monmouth University in New Jersey, has been selected as the
new director of the William Monroe Trotter Institute for the Study of
Black Culture at UMass Boston.
Provost
Joseph Berger announced the choice of Williams, a professor of African
American history, to the campus community July 25. She is scheduled to
take up her new position at the start of the academic year in September.
Williams’
research has focused on African American intellectual history, Black
women’s history and race/ethnic studies. Currently the president of the
African American Intellectual History Society, Williams is the author or
editor of six books and numerous essays, articles and book chapters.
Williams
has been active in producing digital humanities projects and has
extensive experience engaging with local communities, while making her
scholarly contributions more widely accessible through the innovative
use of social media and podcasts.
She earned her Ph.D. in history and culture from Drew University, a
master’s degree in history from Monmouth and a bachelor’s degree, also
in history,from Rowan University. All those schools are in New Jersey.
Williams becomes the Institute’s first permanent director since Quito Swan departed
for Indiana University two years ago. Michael Johnson, a professor of
public policy, has been interim director since then.
The
Trotter Institute was founded in 1984 and takes its name from activist
and publisher William Monroe Trotter, who was known for his staunch
political advocacy and journalism in the Boston Guardian newspaper.
The
Institute’s mission is to address the concerns of Black communities in
Boston and Massachusetts through critical research, public advocacy and
community engagement. Throughout the years, the Institute has advanced
this mission through a research nexus of social advocacy, digital
humanities and community engagement. It publishes the longstanding
Trotter Review, a journal that addresses current Black studies, race and
race relations in the United States and abroad.