 |
 Dana Patterson ('06 Ph.D.) finds her new job as director of the Coretta
Scott King Center at Antioch College "a perfect fit for me in light of
what I want to do." Photo courtesy Dana Patterson.
Yellow Springs, Ohio, is a small college community with a rich
history of social justice. It was a stop on the Underground
Railroad and, much later, home to Antioch College, where civil
rights activist Coretta Scott King went to school.
Dana Patterson, who completed her doctorate in higher education
administration at Washington State University last spring, was
seeking a career that would lead her into social justice and human
rights activism, when she applied to be first director of the new
Coretta Scott King Center at Antioch. Looking at the job
description, she realized, “It’s a perfect fit for me in light of
what I want to do and what I have done.”
In the early 1990s, Patterson worked as a parenting specialist
at a substance abuse treatment facility for women in Lexington,
Kentucky. Later, she was director of the Multicultural Resource
Center at Emporia State University in Kansas, a good preparation
for her time directing the Talmadge Anderson Heritage House at WSU.
She has been a foster parent and has furthered her education, all
the while working on issues of equality, diversity, and
intellectual freedom.
As a graduate student, she drew from all those things to
determine the focus of her studies.
Tying together issues of family, gender, and race that for many
black women in higher education have been obstacles, she had her
topic: “Divorcing the doctor: Black women and their intimate
relationships during the doctoral process.” The work allowed her to
look at her own experience and those of seven other
African-American women in higher ed. She explored how they saw
themselves, how they related with their families and communities,
how they maintained relationships within the academy, and how they
nurtured their own intellectual development. She wove her own life,
her interests, and her work into her studies. “I give this advice
to people all the time: Every paper, every project, every
opportunity that comes your way, use it to build on your
dissertation.”
When Patterson finished her degree, she and her family moved to
Chicago, where she settled in to spend time with her daughters and
look for work. In late September, the phone rang. Antioch, five
hours away in Ohio, was ready.
While the job is a good fit, it’s not necessarily a comfortable
one, admits Patterson. There is a lot of challenging work to be
done. As director she will guide students and the Yellow Springs
community to seek out injustice and to push for social change. One
of her first efforts this past winter was to speak with the local
human relations commission about the shrinking availability of
affordable housing which was affecting people of diverse
backgrounds. That sort of thing is just the beginning of what the
center can do locally and nationwide, says Patterson.
For Patterson, Coretta Scott King is a source of inspiration, a
guidepost. “I’m from where she’s from,” says Patterson, who spent
her childhood in King’s home state of Alabama. “I have four
children, she had four children. And now here I am getting to carry
on the legacy she left in this space.”
—Hannelore Sudermann
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