Black With No Chaser News

Why Angela Y. Davis at Tougaloo Matters Right Now

At a time when the word freedom is everywhere but the true practice of it feels increasingly fragile, having Angela Y. Davis at Tougaloo College is not symbolic—it is strategic.

On Wednesday, January 28, 2026, Mississippi for a Just World, in partnership with Tougaloo College and Black With No Chaser, will host Professor Davis as part of the Voices for a Just World Lecture Series. The conversation, centered on Davis’s book Freedom Is a Constant Struggle, will be moderated by Dr. Ebony Lumumba and held at The Historic Woodworth Chapel.

Here’s why this moment matters—right now.

1. Freedom Is Under Attack

Across the country, we are watching hard-fought freedoms come under renewed pressure—from voting rights to academic freedom to global human rights. Angela Y. Davis has consistently reminded us that freedom is not a destination, but a responsibility. Her presence forces us to interrogate what freedom looks like in practice, not theory, especially in moments of political retreat.

2. Tougaloo Is Not Just a Venue—It’s a Legacy

Tougaloo College has long been a site where intellectual courage and social action meet. From the Civil Rights Movement to today’s struggles, the campus has served as a training ground for conscience and commitment. Hosting Angela Y. Davis at Tougaloo is a continuation of that lineage—not a departure from it. The conversation is rooted in place, history, and responsibility. Tougaloo ain’t new to this, we TRUE to this.

3. Mississippi’s Story Is Global

Mississippi for a Just World has been intentional about connecting freedom struggles in the Deep South to those in the Global South. Davis’s work makes clear that systems of oppression do not operate in isolation—and neither can resistance. This event situates Mississippi not as an outlier, but as a critical node in a global movement for human dignity.

4. Students Need More Than Inspiration—They Need Context

For students navigating a world shaped by war, inequality, and disinformation, this conversation offers more than motivation. It provides historical grounding, political clarity, and a framework for action. Hearing directly from Angela Y. Davis challenges students to think critically about their role—not someday, but now.

“Professor Angela Y. Davis has long reminded us that freedom is not a moment but a movement that each one of us has a responsibility to maintain.”

Candace Abdul-Tawwab
Executive Director of Mississippi for a Just World.

5. Angela Davis at Tougaloo Is a Moment for Alignment, Not Performance

In an era of viral activism and surface-level solidarity, this lecture emphasizes depth over spectacle. It is an invitation to slow down, listen carefully, and recommit to collective struggle. For Black With No Chaser, this aligns with a broader mission to document moments where culture, politics, and justice converge with intention.

6. “Freedom Is a Constant Struggle” Is Not a Metaphor

The title of Davis’s book is often quoted, but rarely examined. This conversation creates space to wrestle with what that phrase actually demands of us—locally, nationally, and globally. It asks participants to move beyond agreement and toward accountability.


Event Details
Voices for a Just World: Angela Y. Davis
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
5:00–6:30 p.m. (Doors open at 4:00 p.m.)
The Historic Woodworth Chapel, Tougaloo College, Tougaloo, Mississippi
Registration: https://bit.ly/justvoices
Livestream: https://bwncnews.com/justworld/

Angela Y. Davis at Tougaloo is not about nostalgia. It is about urgency. It is about grounding today’s questions in a long tradition of struggle—and reminding us that freedom only survives when people are willing to sustain it.


About the Author
George “Chuck” Patterson is a cultural strategist, writer, and civic organizer whose work sits at the intersection of storytelling, community power, and political truth-telling. As Co-Founder and Board President of Mississippi MOVE, Inc. and Chief Experience and Design Officer at Black With No Chaser, Patterson uses narrative as a tool for liberation, amplifying voices and visions often ignored in the mainstream. He is a husband, father, and advocate committed to building community-centered futures rooted in justice and collective struggle.

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