For Black History Month, Āé¶¹¾«Ń”Today is spotlighting students, alumni, faculty and staff in our university community who are taking an active role in making history and creating positive change in the world.
Bertice Berry, MA ā86, Ph.D. ā88, has earned a long list of descriptors, including sociologist, educator, lecturer, author, television host, podcaster, humorist and storyteller. She also is a Āé¶¹¾«Ń” alumna who has been awarded the universityās Oscar Ritchie Distinguished Alumni Award.

In addition to the Ph.D. she earned at Kent State, Berry has been awarded more than 10 honorary doctorates and Savannah Technical College named their Change and Transformation classrooms in her honor.

She has won numerous awards for her presentations and her best-selling books, both fiction and non-fiction. But she doesnāt consider herself a celebrity.
āIām not a celebrity; Iām just hardworking,ā Berry said.

Berry spoke with Āé¶¹¾«Ń”Today about one of her books that has a connection to the university, āBlackWorld,ā which captures her memories of her time in Kent and Kent Stateās place in history.

The Historical ā and Feverish ā Origins of āBlackWorldā
Berry lives just outside of Savannah, Georgia, in an area thatās rich in history and inspiration for her imagination and her writing. Henry Ford lived here, and Berry shares the local tales of how Ford and George Washington Carver worked together on growing plants to make paint. āJust down the road from me, thereās the old house where Ford built a clinic for colored children because they werenāt allowed to go to a hospital,ā she said.
Berryās friend purchased the house and turned it into an art shop. When she passes the house now, Berry says she imagines Carver saying, āHere are the herbs and the things that you can use to heal others.ā
āI live on land that was the original ā40 acres and a muleā allotment ⦠[I imagine] Harriet Tubman just yonder over the river,ā Berry said.

āBlackWorldā was born from these inspirations in combination with a bad bout with the flu. āIt was before the pandemic and it was one of those flus that probably kills most people,ā Berry said. āI knew I was dying; I was on my way out. I couldnāt get myself together, I couldnāt move, I couldnāt do anything.ā
āI felt like: if this is it, I want to say something,ā she said. So, she wrote a short book, in a handwritten draft and said, āI didnāt die.ā
āMy literary agent asked, āOh, could you make it longer?ā And I was like, āyeah, but in all fairness to me, I thought I was going to die,āā Berry said.
āBlackWorldā and Its Connection to Kent State
āBlackWorld,ā as described by Berry is a corner of heaven where the living and the dead can converse, for counsel and advice and ask for help. People can visit BlackWorld to spend time with people who have passed on. Itās a way for the living to know people they didnāt know personally and use what they knew then, today, to be hopeful about the future.
āThis is an aspect of wanting to share Black history in a way that is hopeful,ā she said.
VIDEO: Berryās fictional characters in the story encounter the same real Āé¶¹¾«Ń”faculty members who were admired by Berry when she attended Kent State, including Betsy Justice, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus Edward Crosby and Elizabeth Mullins.
Rose, the main character in āBlackWorldā is working on her doctoral dissertation at Kent State. Berry said that she didnāt realize how much the experiences of other characters in the story paralleled her own experiences while she studied at the university, until people who know her read the book and told her. āAll of them have some aspects,ā she said. āItās like Jung said: āEverybody in your dream is you.ā And Iām pretty sure I was delirious when I came up with this corner of heaven.ā
She added, āBut people who donāt know me so well say that her experiences feel like theirs. And thatās the goal to make the reader feel that this story is your story.ā

Berry said that you donāt have to be Black to visit BlackWorld, ābut it helps.ā She said that she called it BlackWorld to create a positive association, āBecause then you have to say āBlackā to go to a good place.ā
She said that people can get to BlackWorld through meditation, by listening to certain music or whatever works for them. āSomebody told me they put on Nina Simone and the next thing they knew, they were in BlackWorld,ā Berry said. āIn the book, the way you get to BlackWorld is through [W.E.B.] Du Boisā double consciousness. The way the world sees you, the way you see yourself. And then the third portal is the way God sees you, which is the truth about who we are, that weāre all beautiful and amazing and marvelous. And once you recognize that about yourself, going in and out of BlackWorld is a nonstop, daily occurrence ā except time is only a construct there.ā

āWeāre In It Togetherā
When Berry attended Kent State, she said that May 4 seemed like āKentās dirty little secret.ā She thought it was something that the university āshould brag aboutā because āin places like Berkeley and other institutions where children were going to school, meaning NOT middle America, they were holding deans hostage, they were shutting down operations,ā she said. āThe National Guard, Nixon, the rest of āem decided we need to stop this. We need to stop this rioting.ā
Berry said that the students at Kent were not doing the same kinds of things. āAnd yet they became the target because they were working-class middle America folks that those in power felt that they could make an example for the rest of the nation, using Kent State, which makes us the marginalized people,ā she said.
āSadly,ā she said, āpeople on the margins donāt recognize enough what they can do. Folks who are owning and controlling the means of production can make the rest of us feel like weāre separate and apart from each other; not the same. In the eyes of the 1%. Weāre all the same ā and until we recognize that we are, youāre my brother, weāre not going to move the needle. Weāre in it together.ā

āAll Roads Lead to Kentā
āI donāt think people think of a few things when they think of Kent State,ā Berry said. āThey donāt think of the brilliance and the kind of rigorous study in academic endeavors and liquid crystal. They donāt tend to think of those things; but itās all right there.ā
Berry encourages students at Āé¶¹¾«Ń”to embrace their experiences. āYou can either be here on the āIām just getting my degree thing.ā Or you can be here on the āKent: this is a pivotal point in my life. And everything from this point on will be determined by who I am here and how I live and how I walk through life and what I do.ā Itās amazing.ā


When Berry attended graduate school at Kent State, she and her housemate were the 36th and 37th Black women in the world to earn Ph.D.s in sociology. She has fond memories of her time in Kent, except for the cold winters (āI donāt play in the cold anymore,ā she said.) and the retail clothing options (Berry is a talented designer and makes most of her own clothing). āIt wasnāt the place to look for stores with the best clothes,ā she said. āItās the best place to look for the best education for the rest of your life.ā
Berry also taught sociology at Kent State.
About a year ago, when Berry was in New York she was returning to her hotel and heard someone call her name. āI turn and itās one of the kids whose hair I used to braid from Kent, and Iām like āWhat are you doing here?ā Sheās like āI just got back from Paris.ā I said, āOf course you did ā all roads lead to Kent!āā

Special thanks to Jody Kovolyan, senior project and traffic manager, Āé¶¹¾«Ń” Communications and Marketing, and Kris Palcho, who are Āé¶¹¾«Ń”alumni and friends of Bertice Berry, for their assistance in creating this story.