Thursday, September 10

Black Wests

Reshaping Race and Place in Popular Culture

Virtual (Zoom Access)| 6 PM

Free Admission, Donations Appreciated

About the Program

What does it mean to imagine the American West through Black experience? For too long, popular culture, from Hollywood Westerns to novels, music, and television, has erased or distorted Black presence in the West, leaving us with an incomplete story of American identity. Black Wests: Reshaping Race and Place in Popular Culture brings those histories back into focus.

In this talk, Dr. Sara Gallagher explores how Black writers, filmmakers, and performers have reimagined the Western landscape in ways that challenge dominant myths about race, land, and belonging. Moving across literature, film, and music, she examines how figures ranging from Oscar Micheaux to contemporary creators like Beyonce have reshaped what we think the “West” looks like, sounds like, and means.

The “Black West” is more than a geographic space, it is a cultural and imaginative terrain that reveals hidden histories of migration, labor, homesteading, and community-building. At the same time, it offers new perspectives on familiar genres, from the Western film to the jazz archive. This presentation will highlight how Black artists and thinkers have unsettled the frontier myth, opening up conversations about power, resistance, and the legacies of race in American culture.

Audiences will come away with a deeper understanding of how popular culture both reflects and shapes our understanding of history, and how Black voices have been central to reshaping the story of the American West.

Topics from this talk are utilized in our exhibit The Reel American West, on display throughout the 2026 exhibition season.

Virtual Access

This program will take virtually via Zoom. Registration is free and required to attend.

About the Presenter

Dr. Sara Gallagher

Professor, Durham College in Ontario, Canada

Dr. Sara Gallagher is a scholar of Black American literature, popular culture, and the American West. She is the author of Black Wests: Reshaping Race and Place in Popular Culture (University of Oklahoma Press, 2025), which explores how Black writers, filmmakers, and musicians have reimagined the Western frontier in ways that challenge dominant myths of race, land, and belonging. Her research and teaching focus on Black American cultural production, Black Westerns, and the intersections of literature, film, and music. She is also co-editor of Unsettling the Midwest, a forthcoming collection on Black life, migration, labor, and resistance in the American Midwest. Gallagher is a professor at Durham College in Ontario, Canada.

This program is made possible by Commemorate 250 Funding provided by the City of Auburn’s Historic and Cultural Sites Commission and the Equal Rights Heritage Center