Robyn Spencer-Antoine

Robyn Spencer-Antoine

Visiting Scholar in the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History
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Robyn C. Spencer-Antoine is a historian that focuses on Black social protest after World War II, urban and working-class radicalism, and gender. Her book The Revolution Has Come: Black Power, Gender, and the Black Panther Party in Oakland was published in 2016. She is co-founder of the Intersectional Black Panther Party History Project and has written widely on gender and Black Power. Her writings have appeared in the Journal of Women’s History and Souls as well as The Washington Post, Vibe Magazine, Colorlines, and Truthout. She has received awards for her work from the Mellon foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies and the Association of Black Women Historians. Her latest book project, Vietnam Blues: A Retelling of the Black Freedom Movement, focuses on the intersections between the movement for Black liberation and the movement against the US war in Vietnam. In addition, she is working on biographies of radical activist, scholar and thinker Angela Davis and Patricia Murphy Robinson, Black feminist psychotherapist. She created @PATarchives on Instagram to spotlight how Patricia Murphy Robinson’s unprocessed home archives reframe the Black Radical Tradition.

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