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Tsitsi E. Jaji, Bacca Foundation Associate Professor of English and African and African American Studies

Tsitsi E. Jaji

Please note: Tsitsi has left the "African & African American Studies" group at Duke University; some info here might not be up to date.

Jaji is an associate professor of English at Duke University with expertise in African and African American literary and cultural studies, with special interests in music, poetry, and black feminisms. She previously taught at University of Pennsylvania and has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities/Schomburg Center, Mellon Foundation, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies, and National Humanities Center.

Her book, Africa in Stereo: Music, Modernism and Pan-African Solidarity (Oxford), won the African Literature Association’s First Book Prize, as well as honorable mentions from the American Comparative Literature Association and Society for Ethnomusicology. The book traces how exchanges between African American, Ghanaian, Senegalese and South African artists shaped cultural and political liberation projects. She is now at work on two new projects: Cassava Westerns is a study of how global Black writers and artists reimagine the American frontier myth to serve new, local purposes. The second, Classic Black is a study of poetry set to music by black concert music composers. Jaji has received a New Directions Fellowship from the Mellon Foundation to pursue musicology studies in support of this project.

Originally from Zimbabwe, Jaji is also a poet. Her most recent collection, Mother Tongues (2019) was awarded the Cave Canem Northwestern University Press Prize. Both her first collection Beating the Graves (2017) and a chapbook, Carnaval (2014) were published through the African Poetry Book Fund with University of Nebraska Press. Her poems have appeared in Harvard Review, The Academy of American Poets' Poem-A-Day series, Black Renaissance Noire, Almost Island, Prairie Schooner, Bitter Oleander, etc. and she has read at the Poetry Foundation, Library of Congress, and United Nations, among others.

Contact Info:
Office Location:  304D Allen Building, Durham, NC 27708
Office Phone:  (919) 684-2741
Email Address: send me a message
Web Page:  http://www.aas.duke.edu/aaas/~tej12

Teaching (Spring 2024):

  • ENGLISH 276.01, AFRICAN DIASPORA LITERATURE Synopsis
    Old Chem 003, WF 01:25 PM-02:40 PM
    (also cross-listed as AAAS 224.01)
  • MUSIC 690S-1.03, COMPOSITION SEM (TOPICS) Synopsis
    Biddle 069, F 10:05 AM-12:35 PM
    (also cross-listed as ENGLISH 590S-3.03)
Teaching (Fall 2024):

  • AAAS 195FS.01, LIBERATING ARCHIVES Synopsis
    Friedl Bdg 216, MW 03:05 PM-04:20 PM
  • FOCUS 195FS.16, SPECIAL TOPICS IN FOCUS Synopsis
    George/Geo 02, M 05:00 PM-06:30 PM
Office Hours:



Education:

Ph.D.Cornell University2009

Recent Publications   (More Publications)

  1. Jaji, T, Our Readers Write: mediating Africa Poetry's Audiences, Research in African Literatures (2020), Indiana University Press
  2. Jaji, T, Trade of Tears: Removal's Resonance in the Black Atlantic, in The Acoustics of the Social on Page and Screen, edited by Aghoro, N (2020), Bloomsbury
  3. Jaji, TE, Mother Tongues Poems (November, 2019), pp. 104 pages, Northwestern University Press, ISBN 9780810141360  [abs]
  4. Jaji, T, Zimbabwe in Verse: Anthologizing an Alternative Historiography, New Literary History, vol. 50 no. 4 (2019), pp. 609-639, Project MUSE [doi]
  5. Jaji, T, Bingo Magazine in the Age of Pan-African Festivals, Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art, vol. 2018 no. 42-43 (November, 2018), pp. 110-123, Duke University Press [doi]


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