Next month is looking great for WOMEN WRITERS OF THE DIASPORA. Join us at Calabar Imports Harlem
(134th St. & Frederick Douglass Blvd.) at 6pm on the first and third Thursdays of May 2016.. Clear your calendars!
May 19, 2016 - Mecca Jamilah Sullivan is a Harlem native
who uses her fiction to explore the intellectual, emotional, and bodily lives
of young black women, through voice, music, and hip-hop inflected magical
realist techniques. She is the author of the short story collection, Blue Talk and Love (2015). Her work has
appeared or are forthcoming in Best New
Writing, American Fiction: Best New Stories by Emerging Writers, Prairie
Schooner, Callaloo, Crab Orchard Review, Robert Olen Butler Fiction Prize
Stories, BLOOM: Queer Fiction, Art, Poetry and More, TriQuarterly, Feminist
Studies All About Skin: Short Stories by Award-Winning Women Writers of Color,
Baobab: South African Journal of New Writing and many others. She is the
winner of the Charles Johnson Fiction Award, the James Baldwin Memorial Playwriting
Award, and fellowships, scholarships and residencies from the National
Endowment for the Arts, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, The Yaddo Colony,
the Hedgebrook Writers’ Retreat, and the Center for Fiction in New York City,
where she received a 2011 Emerging Writers Fellowship.
Sullivan is Assistant Professor of
Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies at UMass Amherst. She holds a Ph.D. in English
Literature from the University of Pennsylvania, an M.A. in English and Creative
Writing from Temple University, and a B.A. in Afro-American Studies from Smith
College. Her critical and scholarly work
on sexuality, identity, and poetics in contemporary African Diaspora culture
has appeared in publications including Palimpsest:
Journal of Women, Gender and the Black International, Jacket2, Public Books,
GLQ: Lesbian and Gay Studies Quarterly, From Uncle Tom’s Cabin to The Help:
Critical Perspectives on White-Authored Narratives of Black Life, Ebony.com,
Zora Magazine, TheRoot.com, Ms. Magazine online, and The Feminist Wire, where she serves as Associate Editor for Arts
& Culture. Her research and scholarship have earned support from the
Mellon-Mays Foundation, the Social Sciences Research Council, Williams College,
where she received the Gaius Charles Bolin dissertation fellowship, and Rutgers
University, where she was awarded the Postdoctoral Fellowship in African
American and African Diaspora Literature. She is currently working on a book
exploring the relationships among sexuality, identity, and genre in contemporary
women’s literature of the African Diaspora..
The Women Writers of the Diaspora series was created by the series moderator, Dr. Celesti Colds Fechter. The series is co-sponsored by Mosaic Literary Magazine, and the venue, Calabar Imports is provided by Atim Oton.
Follow our blog at http://womenwritersofdiaspora.blogspot.com/
Contact us at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com
Contact us at womenwritersofdiaspora@gmail.com