Metadata
Title
Carole Boyce Davies
Category
general
UUID
e2c8a78a363f426a81aa08f90b0843d6
Source URL
https://africana.cornell.edu/carole-boyce-davies
Parent URL
https://africana.cornell.edu/africana-studies-research-center-faculty-books
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T07:16:59+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Carole Boyce Davies

Source: https://africana.cornell.edu/carole-boyce-davies Parent: https://africana.cornell.edu/africana-studies-research-center-faculty-books

The Frank H.T. Rhodes Professor Humane Letters, Emerita

Overview

Carole Boyce Davies is Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and Professor of  Africana Studies and Literatures in English. She has held distinguished professorships at a number of institutions, including the Herskovits Professor of African Studies and Professor of Comparative Literary Studies and African American Studies at Northwestern University. She is the author of Black Women, Writing and Identity: Migrations of the Subject (Routledge, 1994) and Left of Karl Marx: The Political Life of Black Communist Claudia Jones (Duke University Press, 2008). In addition to numerous scholarly articles, Boyce Davies has also published the following critical anthologies: Ngambika: Studies of Women in African Literature (Africa World Press, 1986); Out of the Kumbla: Caribbean Women and Literature (Africa World Press, 1990); and a two-volume collection of critical and creative writing entitled Moving Beyond Boundaries (New York University Press, 1995): International Dimensions of Black Women’s Writing (volume 1), and Black Women’s Diasporas (volume 2). She is co-editor with Ali Mazrui and Isidore Okpewho of The African Diaspora: African Origins and New World Identities (Indiana University Press, 1999) and Decolonizing the Academy: African Diaspora Studies (Africa World Press, 2003). She is general editor of the three-volume, The Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora (Oxford: ABC-CLIO, 2008), and of Claudia Jones: Beyond Containment:  Autobiography, Essays, Poetry (Banbury: Ayebia, 2011). More recent work include Caribbean Spaces: Escape Routes from Twilight Zones (Illinois, 2013) and a children’s book, Walking (EducaVision, 2016) and the forthcoming Circularities of Power.  Black Women's Right to Political Leadership (Lexington Books - Rowman and Littlefield, 2022). A member of the scientific committee for UNESCO’s updated General History of Africa, she edited the epistemological forum on “Global Blackness” for the African Diaspora volume. She is a past-president of the Caribbean Studies Association which organized under her leadership the first CSA Conference in Haiti in 2016. Her popular essays and reviews have been published in media including The Washington Post, The Crisis, Ms Magazine, Ithaca Journal, The Black Scholar, Miami Herald, Trinidad Guardian and Trinidad Express.

Research and Teaching Interests\ African diaspora studies\ Black women's writing (internationally)\ Comparative black literature\ African literature\ Caribbean oral and written literature\ Transnational feminist theory\ Black women and political leadership in the African Diaspora

Languages\ English - fluent; Portuguese - conversational

Research Focus

In the news

Courses - Fall 2025

Courses - Spring 2026