This article is part of a series focusing on fall grads of the 国民彩票 Class of 2024. Visit the Convocation website for more information and to access live webcasts听of the ceremonies.
When Tyeshia Angel Jordan first moved to Halifax from her hometown of Truro, she planned on pursuing a degree in biology 鈥 a field she鈥檇 long been interested in. That was before she became 鈥渁bsolutely mesmerized鈥 by a gender studies course during her first semester.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 a huge surprise to my close friends that I switched to the arts,鈥 says Angel, who always had a love for subjects like English, history, and sociology.
This fall, Angel 鈥 as she鈥檚 known to friends and family 鈥 graduates from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) with a Bachelor of Arts with major in Gender and Women鈥檚 Studies and minor in Black and African Diaspora Studies.
She hadn鈥檛 really considered Gender Studies before that life-changing course but by the end of her second year she was finding that biology wasn鈥檛 for her. That was around the same time George Floyd鈥檚 murder took place, putting an emphasis on the importance of social justice and understanding systemic violence and inequality for Angel.
鈥淕ender and Women鈥檚 Studies, along with Black and African Diaspora Studies, felt like a natural transition for me at the time,鈥 says Angel. 鈥淎s a Black person with roots in Nova Scotia, I have always been interested in the Black Canadian experience and the experiences of the Black diaspora as a whole in terms of philosophy, history, culture and identity.
鈥淚n school, we only scratched the surface. Most of what I learned regarding Black Nova Scotian history actually came from listening to my mother, grandparents and other elders. Gender studies was a bit more unexpected but, as a Black woman, I also felt like I wanted to understand how race and gender interact and intersect with one another and how we understand the world through a gendered lens.鈥
Pathways in research
Angel鈥檚 move to FASS also introduced her to paid research opportunities, including the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council听, the first time that the award has been offered for social sciences and humanities work. This allowed her to work as a research assistant for 国民彩票 Social Anthropology Associate Professor Dr. Martha Radice, analyzing her field work research from New Orleans, an experience Angel describes as 鈥渆xtraordinary.鈥
鈥淚t was my first experience doing research-related work, and Dr. Radice really took the time to teach me everything from scratch,鈥 says Angel, noting her interest in Black culture and Mardi Gras in New Orleans, a place her mother had always dreamed of visiting. 鈥淚 think Black people everywhere see New Orleans as a Mecca or a centre of Black culture and it鈥檚 just so unique and beautiful.鈥
Angel also notes that Dr. Radice gave her a lot of creative freedom to dive into Black cultural practices in New Orleans both within and outside of carnival. She was able to research and write about different carnival krewes 鈥 social clubs that organize carnival activities 鈥 and the socioeconomic impacts from Hurricane Katrina on Black communities.
鈥淏lack communities were probably hit the hardest and neglected the most during the hurricane and many have been unable to return to New Orleans because of things like gentrification and the changing economy,鈥 Angel explains. 鈥淚 also got to explore creole identity and culture which I found fascinating. As a Black and African Diaspora student, I find it