The Black Lit Network is a dynamic, data-rich, and publicly accessible digital platform designed to strengthen and transform African American literary studies by expanding the discoverability of Black-authored works and connecting them to engaging multimedia resources for scholars, students, and broad public audiences.
The Network is organized around four main portals:
The Literary Navigator is a searchable, multi-genre digital archive that enables readers, students, and scholars to discover and explore more than 2,000 Black-authored works through interconnected, reader-centered pathways across genres, historical periods, and themes.
Remarkable Receptions Podcast is an audio series that examines the critical and popular responses to African American literary works, highlighting how Black writers and their texts have entered and shaped public and scholarly conversations.
This portal also includes a variety of videos, some focusing on African American poetry, and some on aspects of Black literary history.
The Literary Data Gallery showcases visual projects that use data to highlight Black writers, artists, and their cultural legacies. Through charts, timelines, and other visualizations, the Gallery reveals patterns in publishing, creative production, and critical attention, offering new ways to understand African American literary and artistic histories.
The Multithreaded Literary Glossary is a multimedia hub
offering concise definitions, curated lists, key scenes, and interconnected
commentary that illuminate the authors, genres, movements, and recurring themes
shaping African American literary studies.
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