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American professor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Katherine Olukemi Bankole-Medina is a professor of history and chair of the Department of History, Geography and Global Studies at Coppin State University.[1][2] She specialises in histories of African American enslavement from a medical humanities perspective.
Katherine Bankole-Medina | |
---|---|
Academic work | |
Discipline | History |
Sub-discipline | History of medicine; African-American history |
Institutions | Coppin State University |
Bankole-Medina joined Coppin State University as professor and chair of the Department of History, Geography and Global Studies in 2008.[3] Before this, she was the administrative director of the Center for Black Culture and Research and an Associate Professor of History in the Department of History at West Virginia University.[3][2]
While at West Virginia University, Bankole-Medina was named a 2004-2005 Humanities Scholar for the West Virginia Humanities Grant Project “Segregation and Integration of High School Sports in West Virginia,” a project coordinated by Dana D. Brooks and Ronald Althouse.[3] In 2006, she was named the Judith Gold Stitzel Endowment Teacher, and in 2007 she was awarded the WV Humanities Council Grant.[3]
While at Coppin State University, Bankole-Medina received a Distinguished Faculty Researcher Award in 2009.[3][4] In 2012, she was named a Fellow to the Molefi Kete Asante Institute in Philadelphia, PA.[5] In 2018, Bankole-Medina was awarded a 2018-2019 Inclusion Imperative Visiting Faculty Fellowship from the Dresher Center for the Humanities at UMBC, funded by the Mellon Foundation, for her project entitled "African Americans as Specimens, Objects, and Agents: Race and Clinical Care in the Maryland Medical Journal, 1877-1918."[6]
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