
Donette Francis on Writing African Diaspora
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
12:00 PM–1:00 PM
Virtual
Get DirectionsThe Research and Academic Program presents "What 'Minor Histories' Allow Us to See": Donette Francis on Writing African Diaspora.
In this episode of the Research and Academic Program (RAP) podcast In the Foreground: Conversations on Art & Writing, Caitlin Woolsey (assistant director of RAP) speaks with Donette Francis, an associate professor of English at the University of Miami, Coral Gables and a founding member of the Hemispheric Caribbean Studies Collective. Donette's research and writing investigate place, aesthetics, and cultural politics in the African diaspora and they discuss the politics of making visible what she calls “minor histories.” Across her work on the novel as well as in the realm of contemporary art, Donette invites us to ask: What does attending to these histories allow us to see?
Donette Francis is the founding co-director for the Center for Global Black Studies and past director of the American Studies Program at the University of Miami, Coral Gables. She is the author of Fictions of Feminine Citizenship: Sexuality and the Nation in Contemporary Caribbean Literature, and is currently working on two book projects: Illegibilities: Caribbean Cosmopolitanisms and the Problem of Form, an intellectual history of the Anglophone Caribbean’s transnational literary culture from 1940 to 1970, and Creole Miami: Black Arts in the Magic City, a sociocultural history of Black arts practice in Miami from the 1970s to the present.
This episode launches on Tuesday, March 28. For more information and to listen to the episode, check clarkart.edu/rap/podcast, iTunes, Spotify, and anywhere else you may listen to podcasts.
Image: Juana Valdés, Colored China Rags 1 (detail), 2012.