Saturday, July 26, 2025

Sarah Arbuthnot Lendt and the Invisible Workings of African American Literary Studies


Sarah Arbuthnot Lendt making announcements at the NEH Black Poetry Institute, July 2015

A few months back, I heard something surprising. Sarah Arbuthnot Lendt, the longtime program coordinator/budget director/planner for the Project on the History of Black Writing (HBW), told me that she didn’t even live in Lawrence, Kansas during the time of all those successful NEH institutes run by Maryemma Graham at the University of Kansas. 

Sarah was commuting from somewhere else.

But whenever we, the participants, arrived for the day’s events, Sarah always was already there. Folks stopped by the table where she sat to ask questions about anything and everything: payments, lodging details, transportation, the room temperature, even (no lie) how to get a particular brand of bubble bath, etc. 

We’d formally refer to Sarah as a program coordinator or administrator, but on a practical level, for our everyday needs, wants, and dilemmas, we viewed her as a... no, we viewed her as the problem-solver extraordinaire.

She played that role for the 2015 institute, and before that the 2013 institute, and before that the 2010 one. She also held lead administrative roles for a program from 2015 to 2019, and then again for a separate program between 2021 and 2024.

For each of those projects, somewhere out there is a final report or white paper. Sarah wrote or co-wrote those documents or gathered the necessary materials to make them happen. She rarely signed her name, instead attributing the reports to “HBW staff” or the broader team of project contributors.

I’ve been thinking about this lately, how much invisible labor supports major African American literary studies projects. Sometimes that labor takes the form of program coordination. Sometimes it’s editorial work. Sometimes, it’s meetings, documentation, or the quiet organizing that holds everything together without ever demanding the spotlight.

It's worth thinking about how this invisible work facilitates African American literary studies.  

Related

When an advanced group of scholars converged to study Black poetry

Participants in the NEH Summer Institute on Black Poetry at the University of Kansas, July 2015

One of the great things about Black poetry is that even advanced scholars still feel they have more to learn, especially by gathering with others to deepen and expand their knowledge. Without that shared spirit of curiosity, there’s no way we could’ve brought together so many talented people for the NEH Summer Institute, Black Poetry After the Black Arts Movement, in July 2015.

The participants came from across the country and were at various stages in their professional careers. All of them arrived with accomplishments in literary studies. Yet, they chose to be there because they wanted to learn more about the histories and evolving dimensions of Black poetry.

Looking back, it’s striking to remember that room full of intellectuals, artists, researchers, and educators. Everyone was there with a common purpose to develop stronger, more effective ways of understanding and teaching Black poetry, so they could pass those lessons on to their students, readers, and broader communities.

They did it. They're still doing it.

Maryemma Graham, NEH, and African American literary studies

Maryemma Graham, NEH Summer Institute, Kanas, July 2015


Here are two interrelated things we haven’t talked about enough:
1.) The decimation of the NEH by the current administration can—and will—have devastating effects on African American literary studies.
 
2.) Maryemma Graham has been one of our most crucial forces in implementing NEH Summer Institutes and other NEH-funded projects focused on African American literary studies.
There hasn’t been enough research or writing on the role and impact of the NEH in shaping our field, so it’s not surprising that many people simply aren’t aware of how summer institutes and other initiatives extended scholarly contributions and ideas well beyond the walls of academia. Folks often don’t realize how rare and important it was to bring together veteran scholars, rising scholars, and K–12 educators to focus on subjects in African American literature.

Consider just three of the many NEH-funded projects that Graham led at the University of Kansas: In 2010, "Making the Wright Connection: Reading Native Son, Black Boy, and Uncle Tom’s Children;" In 2013, "Don’t Deny My Voice: Reading and Teaching African American Poetry." And in 2015, "Black Poetry after the Black Arts Movement."

Those projects brought together several dozen specialists in African American literary studies and approximately 75 summer scholars to study Black literature and literary history, and then take what they learned back to their classrooms and communities. It was an incredible undertaking. Just imagine the intellectual and practical benefits for the wide networks of scholars, educators, students, general readers, and more.

But what happens when funding and institutional support for such projects disappears or is drastically defunded? We find ourselves in a position where an entire generation of professionals and students may be unaware of what they missed, of what could’ve been.

Meanwhile, hundreds of people benefited directly or indirectly from the many NEH projects that Maryemma Graham led, supported by her large, evolving teams of contributors. We knew, at the time, that what Graham was doing was special. But I don’t think we fully understood how fleeting those moments were, or how fragile that kind of support has always been.

If and when we find ourselves in better circumstances, it will be because we studied, took note of, and passed along the lessons from the gatherings and projects she organized.

Related:

You forgot to tell Evie Shockley how she unknowingly sparked all that Black poetry commentary

Evie Shockley at the NEH Black Poetry institute at the University of Kansas, July 2015


I can’t remember if I ever mentioned here how poet-scholar Evie Shockley served as a crucial motivator for the poetry-related work on this blog. 

Really, it’s true. Some poets, not in a mean or rude way, will flat-out tell you that they don’t have the time or interest to read what scholars write about poetry. That’s understandable, I guess. Sometimes our work is necessarily dull and meticulous in ways that creative writers, not to mention the general public, might find off-putting.

A lot of times, if you write about Black poetry, you don’t dwell on the indifference. You just keep it moving.

But every once in a while, hold up, every once in a while, you luck up and encounter someone like Evie Shockley. A noted poet and scholar. And she shows up at just the right at the moment when you’re just beginning to write about Black poetry on your little bitty blog. You're nervous and uncertain and a bit directionless. And she encourages you to keep going. She informs and reminds you that what you’re doing matters. That the writing and reading and researching and blogging you’re doing is valuable. It’s useful. It counts.

And when you get that kind of encouragement, from someone like an Evie Shockley, like the Evie Shockley, then, well, you just keep it moving. You go from writing 3, 7, maybe 13 blog entries per year to publishing over 200 entries a year for a stretch. All focused on Black poetry, Black poets, and Black literary history. You got so immersed in the work that you forgot to tell Evie Shockley how she unknowingly sparked all that Black poetry commentary productivity.

But even if you do tell her she was one of the key motivators behind the output, she’ll smile, say “thanks,” and probably go right back to her usual: “Have you read so-and-so’s new book? Or so-and-so’s latest poem? It’s really great.”

When Joanne Gabbin organizes a Black poetry gathering

Joanne Gabbin, Houston A. Baker, Jr., and Jerry W. Ward, Jr., September 2004, James Madison University


"When Ma Rainey / Comes to town," writes Sterling Brown. "Folks from anyplace / Miles aroun’,/ From Cape Girardeau,/ Poplar Bluff,/ Flocks in to hear/ Ma do her stuff."

We could apply a remix of that for one of our greatest Black poetry organizers. 
When Joanna Gabbin 
Organizes a poetry gathering
Folks from anyplace
Miles around
From here and there and everywhere 
Flock in to hear.
Well, I'm not a poet, but you get the picture. 

First in 1994, then in 2004, and again in 2014, and with the torch passed in 2024, James Madison University became the site of epic gatherings of Black poets--each one shaped by the vision of Joanne Gabbin and her Furious Flower poetry events

Gabbin was fresh off her most recent gathering in 2015 when she joined the NEH institute Black Poetry After the Black Arts Movement at the University of Kansas. Beyond the landmark conferences every ten years, she also founded the Furious Flower Poetry Center at James Madison University. The center, in its own words, "is committed to ensuring the visibility, inclusion, and critical consideration of Black poets in American letters, as well as in the whole range of educational curricula."

Through those major conferences and smaller seminars focused on key poets, Gabbin addressed a crucial challenge: how to bring large numbers of poets and educators into the same rooms. We have academic conferences for scholars and educators, and we have festivals that showcase creative writers. But bringing both communities together in distinct and purposeful ways is one of Gabbin’s great, yet often underdiscussed, contributions.

While Black poetry remains one of the most densely populated art forms, it continues to be neglected in scholarly discourse. Part of the reason is that poets and educators don’t always communicate enough. There’s too often a gap between those who write the poetry and those who teach it. With her gatherings, both conferences and seminars, Gabbin quietly and powerfully addressed those issues.

No wonder Maryemma Graham called on Gabbin to participate in those NEH institutes. Graham knew, as we all do, that special things happen when Joanna Gabbin comes to town.

Jerry W. Ward, Jr. and Black Poetry

Jerry W. Ward, Jr. and Tyehimba Jess, July 2015 at the NEH Black Poetry Institute, University of Kansas


In the summer of 1997, I first began to get some sense that one of my undergrad professors Jerry W. Ward Jr. had a highly respected reputation beyond our little campus at Tougaloo College. On campus, he was well-known for his high standards, along with deep and expansive knowledge about literature. But that was about it. 

During the summer of 1997, I was a rising junior and participating in a UNCF/Mellon program at Emory University. At some point, a PhD student from Emory learned that I was a student at Tougaloo and said to me with a tone of disbelief, "you work with Jerry Ward? The Jerry Ward?" Before then, I hadn't thought enough about Ward's scholarly writings and his attendance at literature conferences and other gatherings taking place across the country. 

When I returned to campus that fall, I had far more questions for Dr. Ward. He was amused that I was "discovering" who he was beyond Tougaloo. More importantly, we ramped up our conversations about literature, Richard Wright, the Black Arts Movement, and more. I'm not sure if it was simply becoming more experienced as a student or the outside knowledge that I had this nationally-recognized resource right at Tougaloo.

Either way, I began to benefit from Dr. Ward's knowledge of Black poetry, among other topics. I was thus pleased many years later when we got the opportunity to collaborate on NEH Summer Institutes directed by Maryemma Graham at the University of Kansas, first with "Making the Wright Connection: Reading Native Son, Black Boy, and Uncle Tom's Children" in 2010, "Don’t Deny My Voice: Reading and Teaching African American Poetry" in 2013, and "Black Poetry after the Black Arts Movement" in 2015. 

Those NEH Black poetry institutes gave Dr. Ward and me opportunities to work with others to share knowledge about the history and teaching of African American verse. In 2013, we collaborated with several resident faculty and 25 summer scholars, and we did the same in 2015. That’s a sizeable group of people studying, thinking about, and discussing African American poetry.

We may have taken Dr. Ward's participation for granted. That is, we didn’t think it unusual that he was a leading force in conceptualizing those NEH institutes. But limited resources have made it increasingly difficult for faculty in literary studies at HBCUs, or at teaching-focused institutions of any kind, to establish such well-respected reputations in scholarly discourse.

After all, Dr. Ward taught four courses per semester for much of his decades-long career, lived on a modest salary, rarely had access to a research-level library, and lacked the kinds of travel budgets that are standard for many others. Yet he produced thoughtful and illuminating scholarly writings and consistently participated in, and even led, scholarly gatherings like the NEH institutes on Black poetry.

Related: 

Monday, July 14, 2025

Tracking the Reception of Colson Whitehead and his Books

Since May 2001 with the release of Colson Whitehead's second novel John Henry Days, I've worked on a bibliography citing coverage of his work in newspapers, magazines, and scholarly journals. 

In 2011 with the release of Zone One, I began producing public coverage roundups of Whitehead's books, continuing with The Noble Hustle (2014) The Underground Railroad (2016), The Nickel Boys (2019), Harlem Shuffle (2021), and Crook Manifesto (2023)

I worked with a designer to produce a visualization on some of the novels, Covering Colson Whitehead, 2016 - 2023.

Related:

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Novels by Black Writers, 2025 - 2000


Here's a roundup of novels published since 2000. As always, it's a partial list. The list emerges from the work that I've done on the Novel Generator Machine.

2025
Til Death by Busayo Matuluko
The Life of Herod the Great by Zora Neale Hurston
Flirting Lessons by Jasmine Guillory
When the Harvest Comes by Denne Michele Norris
Zeal by Morgan Jerkins
Nightcrawling by Leila Mottley
The Girls Who Grew Big by Leila Mottley
The Turner House by Angela Flournoy
The Wilderness by Angela Flournoy
Saint Monkey by Jacinda Townsend
Mother Country by Jacinda Townsend
Trigger Warning by Jacinda Townsend
The Love Lyric by Kristina Forest
King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby
Blood in the Water by Tiffany D. Jackson
The Scammer by Tiffany D. Jackson
Marvel: Black Panther: The Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

2024 
The American Daughters by Maurice Carlos Ruffin
James by Percival Everett
A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams
Long After We Are Gone by Terah Shelton Harris
Faebound by Saara El-Arifi
Ours by Phillip B. Williams
The Queen of Sugar Hill--A Novel of Hattie McDaniel by ReShonda Tate
The Poisons We Drink by Bethany Baptiste 
One of Us Knows by Alyssa Cole
Smoke Kings by Jahmal Mayfield
The Unicorn Woman by Gayl Jones
American Ghoul by Michelle McGill-Vargas
Out of Body by Nia Davenport
• 54 Miles by Leonard Pitts Jr.
Out of Office by A.H. Cunningham
The Queen of Sugar Hill: A Novel of Hattie McDaniel by ReShonda Tate
This Could Be Us by Kennedy Ryan
The Eternal Ones by Namina Forna
Children of Anguish and Anarchy by Tomi Adeyemi
One of Our Kind by Nicola Yoon

2023 
Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead
Let Us Descend by Jesmyn Ward
Every Man a King—A King Oliver Novel by Walter Mosley 
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride
The Fraud by Zadie Smith
Lone Women by Victor LaValle
• Chain-Gang All-Stars by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
The Unsettled by Ayana Mathis
A Spell of Good Things by Ayobami Adebayo
Dangerous Love by Ben Okri
All the Sinners Bleed by S. A. Cosby
The Reformatory by Tananarive Due
Hide by Tracy Clark
Family Lore by Elizabeth Acevedo
River Spirit by Leila Aboulela
The Mystery at Dunvegan Castle by Tendai Huchu
Black Candle Women by Diane Marie Brown
An Autobiography of Skin by Lakiesha Carr
The House of Eve by Sadeqa Johnson
The Survivalists by Kashana Cauley
You Never Know by Connie Briscoe
Maame by Jessica George
House of Cotton by Monica Brashears
The Art of Scandal by Regina Black
Liquid Snakes by Stephen Kearse
Blue Hour by Tiffany Clarke Harrison
Gone Like Yesterday by Janelle M. Williams
Symphony of Secrets by Brendan Slocumb
Goodbye Earl by Leesa Cross-Smith
The New Naturals by Gabriel Bump
Promise by Rachel Eliza Griffiths
Night Wherever We Go: A novel by Tracey Rose Peyton
No One Dies Yet by Kobby Ben Ben
Last Seen in Lapaz by Kwei Quartey
The Wildest Sun by Asha Lemmie
Decent People by De'Shawn Charles Winslow
Token by Beverly Kendall
Time's Undoing by Cheryl A. Head
Teeth, Claws, and Blood Red Heart by Fiona Zedde
Lucky Gril by Irene Muchemi-Ndiritu
Splinter--A Diverse Sleep Hollow Retelling by Jasper Hyde