

Angela Katrina Lewis-Maddox ed., "Disrupting Political Science: Black Women Reimagining the Discipline" (SUNY Press, 2025)
Jul 3, 2025
Angela Katrina Lewis-Maddox, a Political Scientist and assistant dean at UAB, dives into the pivotal role of Black women in reshaping political science. She discusses the unique challenges and insights they bring to the discipline, advocating for inclusivity in academic discussions. The conversation highlights the impact of COVID-19 on community building among Black women scholars and critiques traditional research frameworks that overlook their experiences. With rich personal narratives, Lewis-Maddox calls for a reimagined political science that embraces diverse voices.
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Career Setbacks Spark New Project
- Angela K. Lewis-Maddox faced career setbacks in political science promotions and administration roles due to unfamiliar reviewers and shifting departments.
- Her experience, combined with community support during COVID-19, led her to reimagine her scholarship and assemble the book to share Black women political scientists' stories.
Foster Supportive Scholarly Communities
- To nurture Black women scholars, create supportive writing communities that prioritize care and allow flexible scholarly expression.
- Avoid traditional academic pressures; let contributors share stories authentically to disrupt standard publishing norms.
Challenges of Studying Black Subjects
- Political science expects Black scholars to compare Black subjects to white subjects, enforcing a hierarchy of scholarship.
- Lewis-Maddox argues Black people should be studied independently as fully valid subjects without obligatory comparisons.