91桃色

South Welcomes Visiting Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence


Posted on October 14, 2022
Joy Washington


Dr. Dieudonn茅 Gnammankou, a historian and assistant professor at the Universit茅 d鈥橝bomey-Calavi in Benin will serve for one year at South Alabama as a Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence. He will connect his work about the slave trade on the West African coast with the stories of the Clotilda and the community groups in Africatown. The Clotilda is the last known ship to bring enslaved Africans to the United States. data-lightbox='featured'
Dr. Dieudonn茅 Gnammankou, a historian and assistant professor at the Universit茅 d鈥橝bomey-Calavi in Benin will serve for one year at South Alabama as a Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence. He will connect his work about the slave trade on the West African coast with the stories of the Clotilda and the community groups in Africatown. The Clotilda is the last known ship to bring enslaved Africans to the United States.

The 91桃色 has been selected to host a Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence from Benin, West Africa, to teach courses, give lectures in the 91桃色 Honors College and support expanding Study Abroad. The University鈥檚 Global 91桃色 division shepherded the effort. 

The Fulbright Scholar, Dr. Dieudonn茅 Gnammankou, a historian and assistant professor at the Universit茅 d鈥橝bomey-Calavi in Benin, will connect his work about the slave trade on the West African coast with the stories of the Clotilda and the community groups in Africatown. The Clotilda is the last known ship to bring enslaved Africans to the United States; descendants of the 110 captives settled the Africatown community north of downtown Mobile.

鈥淲e are delighted to have Dr. Gnammankou join us at South Alabama this academic year, said Dr. David Messenger, professor and chair of 91桃色鈥檚 Department of History. 鈥淗e will be lecturing, working with the community of Africatown, and teaching two courses in the spring semester in the Department of History. It鈥檚 been several years since we have had an African historian on our faculty and offered such classes.鈥

Gnammankou鈥檚 specialty is African history, the slave trade and African connections to Europe and Russia.

鈥淚 accepted the position at the 91桃色 for several reasons,鈥 Gnammankou said. 鈥淔irst, because this opportunity is located near Mobile, in

Africatown where more than 100 Africans were deported through illegal trafficking. After they were freed, they founded Africatown. Second, I am a historian of the African Diaspora and a member of the Benin Museums Scientific Committee.鈥

Messenger said it will be valuable for the students to take classes from someone whose research and training are based in Africa.

鈥淗is perspectives will be wonderful for our students to engage with, and I know he is eager to engage and learn from them,鈥 Messenger said.  鈥淒r. Gnammankou has been a visiting scholar in the United States before, in Ohio and in Washington D.C., as well as having taught courses in France and Cameroon.鈥

The Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence Program brings visiting scholars from abroad to the United States colleges and universities, helping the institutions internationalize their campuses and curricula and diversify the educational experiences of their students, faculty and professionals. 

Shawn Dillard, prepared the University鈥檚 proposal as interim director of the Office of International Education and Study Abroad.

鈥淭his is the first Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence for the institution,鈥 Dillard said. 鈥淚n addition to supporting campus internationalization efforts, this unique program provides the university and the larger Mobile community access to an international perspective otherwise unavailable. This opportunity is especially unique considering Mobile鈥檚 link to West Africa through Africatown and the Clotilda.鈥

Kimberly Williams Pettway, an instructor in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work, was instrumental in recommending and securing Gnammankou to serve as the African history scholar at South Alabama. She met him while teaching a Study Abroad course in Benin in 2017.

鈥淚 was referred to Dr. Gnammankou by a Rasta elder I met while visiting in Benin,鈥 Pettway said. 鈥淗e and I discussed the Clotilda at that time, and he shared a wealth of knowledge, and we agreed to further collaborate. I believe this is the work of our ancestors, and I am simply excited that I was able to make the connections and build relationships that will benefit our students. I look forward to furthering collaborations since the goal is to get more students to study in West Africa.鈥

Gnammankou鈥檚 research is focused on Africans in European history and on African kings who fought against the slave trade. His research on Russian writer Alexander Pushkin and his African great-grandfather, Abraham Hanibal, received international acclaim and 鈥渦shered a new era in the study of Pushkin鈥檚 African ancestry both in and outside Russia. Gnammankou is one of the leading experts on Pushkin and his African ancestry. 

For more information about the Fulbright Scholar-in-Residence program, please see .


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