- Throwback Thursday: Living with a Host Family (Sarah on GIEU Uganda)
- Throwback Thursday: Williamena on Contemporary London
- Throwback Thursday: Building Connections Through Study Abroad (Asia on GCC: Japan)
- Flashback Friday: New Perspectives (Brigitte on GIEU Israel and West Bank)
- Flashback Friday: Life in China (Heather on ASIANLAN 203 in Nanjing)
- Flashback Friday: Abroad in the time of Brexit (Zoe on Kings College London)
- Flashback Friday: Dos and Don'ts (Reid on Spanish 230 in Granada)
- Throwback Thursday: Mi Bonito Barrio (Anna in Spain)
- Throwback Thursday: Toledo, No, Not Ohio (Ashley in Spain)
- Throwback Thursday: Week One in Salamanca (Ashley in Spain)
- Recording the Journey by Bailey Burke, LSA ‘23
- Flashback Friday: GCC in Rio de Janeiro and Florianópolis, Brazil (Theatre & Incarceration)
- Flashback Friday: Azia speaks on being Black in Costa Rica
- Flashback Friday: Molly discusses identity, ethnicity and mental health in Argentina
- Flashback Friday: Allyson explores anxiety as a foreigner in Czechia
- Throwback Thursday: Phoebe's take on Health and Community in Argentina, South Africa, Vietnam, and the U.S.
- Throwback Thursday: Jonathan talks about being Vietnamese American in South Africa
- Stockholm vs. Copenhagen: How Do They Compare?
- Flashback Friday: Kelsey Pease - I am: A Transfer Student
- Flashback Friday: Hira Khan - I am: Muslim
- Flashback Friday: Emmanuel Saint-Phard - I am: Black
- Flashback Friday: Thu Tran - I am: A Heritage Seeker
- Throwback Thursday: Taiye reflects on her spring term in Cuba
- Flashback Friday: Illya reflects on Cross Cultural Psychology in the Czech Republic
- Flashback Friday: Haleigh shares about volunteering with the HOME Project in Athens
- How to Save Money While Studying Abroad in Barcelona
- Throwback Thursday: Rachael shares story of final night in Athens
- Some Food for Thought: Eating My Way Through Santiago de Compostela, Spain
- Flashback Friday: Jordan shares about classes in Brazil from Brazilian Studies & Portuguese Language
- Flashback Friday: Alana explores differences between African Americans and Black Londoners
- Things To Do in DIS: Copenhagen, Denmark and DIS: Stockholm, Sweden
- Student perspectives about scholarships and identity from GCC: Environmental History in Tokyo, 2019
Contemporary London, 2019:
When I first arrived in London I knew I had to meet black Londoners and see how they live and are treated compared to black people in America. I wanted to see if racism and discrimination are as bad in London as it is in the U.S. Initially when I arrived I felt that people weren’t judging me based on my race. I didn’t feel like I had to constantly be aware of my race and how people would react to me. I was a person before I was black. But after speaking to Londoners about Brixton, an area heavily populated by black people, the area was deemed dangerous. Actually going to Brixton showed something different. The area was nice, full of culture, and not dangerous as it had been portrayed. The experience just made me realize that London has just as many problems with racism and discrimination but the issues are more subtle. People aren’t overtly racist as they are in the U.S., but the issues exist.
During a tour of Brixton, the tour guide, who was a black woman, told our group that when she went to Harlem she was “afraid she was going to be shot”. Admittedly the statement angered me because I found that Londoners don’t talk about England’s history with slavery, racism, and discrimination. They choose to almost ignore their history, instead deferring to the U.S. It’s as if they are saying, “Yes, things were bad here but things were worse in the U.S. so let’s focus on that.” From another tour, we learned that kids in the UK actually learn about the U.S.’s involvement in the slave trade and the racism and discrimination there. Being black abroad was especially interesting for me as a DAAS major because I like to compare the struggles black people face in the U.S. to the struggles black people face in other places. It’s also interesting to see how different black culture is everywhere.