Quandra Prettymen Prize in Africana Studies
The inaugural Barnard College Quandra Prettymen Prize in Africana Studies was awarded to Megnot Mulugetta, Class of 2019.
The Barnard College Quandra Prettymen Prize is awarded to a senior Africana Studies Major or Minor who has been nominated by the Africana Studies Department Faculty. The prize is awarded to a student who exemplifies a scholarly commitment to the study of the field. It honors Professor Quandra Prettyman who embodies what Africana faculty strive to cultivate in our students—intellectual curiosity, generosity of spirit, constant growth, and a belief in the generative power of community. Our hope is that recipients of this prize remain true to these commitments to herself and to her community, as Professor Prettyman does.
Tribute to Professor Quandra Prettymen by Professor Kim Hall, Lucyle Hook Chair, Professor of English Literature and core faculty member of Africana Studies (delivered when Professor Prettymen was honored by the Barnard Organization of Soul Sisters--BOSS--in April 2019).
Even for an English Professor, it’s difficult put into words Professor Prettyman’s extraordinary nature and the gift she has been to Barnard College. In an early essay, black feminist theorist bell hooks makes the case for the creation of “homeplace" not as lan essential woman’s duty, but as a radical black feminist practice. She writes, “in our young minds houses belonged to women, were their special domain, not as property, but as a places where all that truly matters in life took place – the warmth and comfort of shelter, the feeding of our bodies, the nurturing of our souls. There we learned dignity, integrity of being; there we learned to have faith. The folks who made this life possible who were our primary guides and teachers, were black women.” Many of us are here-and remain here— because Quandra has been our homeplace at Barnard College. Her classes are places that affirm our dignity and integrity. While Higher Education has encouraged all of to be hurried consumers of knowledge on the way to “the real world,” she insists that we stop and explore, that we learn our history and then linger in that space between ourselves and the text. Both her actual students and those of us graced with her friendship have been offered the literal comfort and feeding of her home. She embodies what we faculty strive to cultivate in our students— intellectual curiosity, generosity of spirit, constant growth and a belief in the power of community. And she has consistently stepped up to supply that which the campus could or would not: supporting the growth of the Barnard Center for Research on Women; creating one of the first courses on Minority Women Writers in the country, designing a Literature of the Great Migration course that would serve the Africana major. And she does this all with terrific humor and sly mischief —reminding us that intellectual life, like “regular” life is meant to be lived with joy as well as purpose. Thank you, Quandra, for being our “homeplace” for all of these years.
2020 Quandra Prettymen Prize in Africana Studies
AFRICANA STUDIE at BARNARD congratulates
JULIA KELLER & INEM RICHARDSON
co-recipients of the 2020 Quandra Prettymen Prize
The Quandra Prettymen Prize in Africana Studies honors Professor Quadra Prettyman, who embodies intellectual curiosity, generosity of spirit, constant growth, and a belief in the generative power of coommunity. The Prize is awarded to a senior Africana Studies Major, Combined Major or Minor who exemplifies a School a scholarly commitment to the study of the field of Africana Studies. Our hope is that recipients of this prize remain true to thier commitment to themselves and to their community, as Professor Prettyman has throughout her lifetime.