Emma Bowen – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Thu, 25 Apr 2024 12:44:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Emma Bowen – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Undersung and Exemplary: Emma L. Bowen https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/undersung-and-exemplary-emma-l-bowen/ Fri, 24 Feb 2023 18:10:27 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=169560 Photo courtesy of the Emma Bowen FoundationDigging through the WFUV files in the Fordham archives in Walsh Family Library last fall, my colleague Kelly Prinz and I found countless pieces of ephemera from the 75-year history of Fordham’s public media station. There was a 1947 New York Times story about Fordham as a “radio newcomer” led by former Army chaplain Richard F. Grady, S.J. His task? To steer the station “between the Scylla of academic boredom and the Charybdis of shallow popularization.” (Read Kelly’s story to see how it’s going.) There were log sheets signed by Pete Fornatale, FCRH ’67, who created WFUV’s first popular music show in late 1964. His pioneering Campus Caravan featured album cuts and in-depth interviews at the Rose Hill campus with artists including the Beach Boys and Paul Simon. And there was a 1987 “Memo from the Manager,” Ralph Jennings, Ph.D., introducing several new advisors to the station. Among them was an exemplary Fordham graduate named Emma L. Bowen.

Born in South Carolina in 1916, she moved to New York City to live with an aunt during the Great Depression. By 1974, when she earned a bachelor’s degree from Fordham College at Lincoln Center, she was in her late 50s. She had served as executive secretary of the city’s Community Mental Health Board, and two years earlier, helped form and lead Black Citizens for Fair Media, a volunteer group that challenged broadcasters’ discriminatory employment practices and negative depictions of Black people.

“At first we thought broadcasters could do as they pleased. … Then we found out that ‘the airwaves belong to the people,’ and that phrase became our slogan and call to action,’” she once wrote.

They pressured major networks into changing their programming, employment, and training policies—and if they resisted, Bowen’s group filed challenges to the renewal of their broadcast license with the Federal Communications Commission until they relented. In the late 1980s, her group became the Foundation for Minority Interests in Media. Renamed the Emma Bowen Foundation following her death in 1996, it connects students of color with internships at leading media companies.

At Fordham, Emma Bowen’s spirit is reflected not only in the public service mission of WFUV but also in the students supporting Bronx farmers markets through the Center for Community Engaged Learning and in alumni like trustee Valerie Irick Rainford, FCRH ’86, and Patricia David, GABELLI ’81, recently honored by Inclusion magazine as “trailblazing leaders who wrote the playbook for implementing” diversity, equity, and inclusion values and practices in the workplace. Bowen’s life and legacy deserve to be better known.

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