Monday, January 19, 2026

Findings from Black Novelists 500 (January 2026)




Based on findings from Black Novelists 500

Birth years and generational cohorts 
• The birth years span nearly two centuries, from the early 1810s to 2000, revealing the long historical arc of Black novelistic production.

• The center of gravity falls squarely in the mid- to late-20th century, with a heavy concentration of births between the late 1940s and late 1970s, reflecting the generational boom in post–civil rights era literary careers.

• Novelistic production, as reflected in this dataset, is overwhelmingly modern, with nearly 86% of the 500 novelists born after 1928, suggesting that African American literary production and visibility have greatly expanded in the post–World War II era.

• Generation X is the largest cohort, with 135 novelists, indicating that writers born between 1965 and 1980 form the structural backbone of late-20th- and early-21st-century Black fiction.

• Only 22 novelists in the dataset were born before 1901, highlighting how limited access to publishing, education, and literary markets was for Black writers in the 19th century.

• With just 6 novelists so far, Gen Z’s small presence reflects the lag time between birth, first publication, and cultural visibility, making this dataset a baseline for watching the next generational wave emerge.

Countries of birth
• The dataset reflects a broad but clustered global diaspora, spanning 32 countries across Africa, Europe, the Caribbean, and Latin America, with most nations represented by a small number of novelists, notwithstanding the United States and Nigeria.

• The dataset is predominantly U.S.-centered, with 298 of the 500 novelists born in the United States, showing how strongly Black fiction, as tracked through visibility and reception, has been shaped by U.S.-based literary institutions and markets.

• Nigeria is the single largest non-U.S. country of origin, with 66 novelists, underscoring the pronounced global influence and productivity of Nigerian-born writers within Black fiction.


Related:

Sunday, January 18, 2026

Black Novelists 500



Black Novelists 500 is a dataset and series of blog entries, short essays, podcast episodes, and visualizations that document 500 Black novelists across career trajectories, time, geography, and genre. The project brings together biographical information and publication histories to make visible both the breadth of Black novelistic production and the uneven patterns of attention that extend beyond the most frequently cited figures.

In African American literary studies, scholarly articles commonly focus on two or three authors, while broad survey texts typically identify no more than a hundred novelists. I was curious about what we might learn by extending that scope to consider hundreds of Black novelists at once.

Entries: 

A Checklist of 500 Black Novelists

Chris Abani, Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé, Leila Aboulela, Joseph Wilfred Abruquah, Elizabeth Acevedo, Chinua Achebe, Diran Adebayo, Ayobami Adebayo, Sade Adeniran, Tomi Adeyemi, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Segun Afolabi, Ama Ata Aidoo, Rochelle Alers, Kwame Alexander, Kianna Alexander, André Alexis, Zaynab Alkali, Jeffery Renard Allen, T. M. Aluko, Elechi Amadi, Raymond Andrews, Tina McElroy Ansa, Ayi Kwei Armah, Bediako Asare, Jabari Asim, Sefi Atta, Ayesha Harruna Attah, William Attaway, Kofi Awoonor

B 
Mariama Bâ, Yaba Badoe, James Baldwin, Toni Cade Bambara, Ellen Banda-Aaku, Biyi Bandele, Kelly J. Baptist, Tracey Baptiste, Amiri Baraka, Steven Barnes, A. Igoni Barrett, Rena Barron, Yvonne Battle-Felton, Kaylnn Bayron, Blitz Bazawule, Paul Beatty, Brit Bennett, Mongo Beti, Daniel Black, Lauren Blackwood, Eleanor Taylor Bland, J. J. Bola, Tonya Bolden, Cynthia Bond, Arna Bontemps, Coe Booth, David Bradley, Oyinkan Braithwaite, Dionne Brand, Monica Brashears, Connie Briscoe, Maurice Broaddus, Erna Brodber, Asha Bromfield, Gwendolyn Brooks, William Wells Brown, Cecil Brown, Diane Marie Brown, Echo Brown, Frank London Brown, India Hill Brown, Roseanne A. Brown, Mahogany L. Browne, Elise Bryant, Kalisha Buckhanon, Noviolet Bulawayo, Gabriel Bump, Octavia Butler

C 
Maisy Card, Lorene Cary, Kashana Cauley, Colin Channer, David Chariandy, Tami Charles, Paula Chase, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Charles W. Chesnutt, Alice Childress, Shimmer Chinodya, Tracy Clark, Austin Clarke, Pearl Cleage, Zinzi Clemmons, Michelle Cliff, Lesa Cline-Ransome, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Rita Akoto Coker, Brandy Colbert, Teju Cole, Alyssa Cole, Jay Coles, Maryse Condé, J. California Cooper, Kia Corthron, S. A. Cosby, Naima Coster, Leesa Cross-Smith, Countee Cullen, Christopher Paul Curtis
 

Sunday, January 4, 2026

A Consistent Creative Voice: Kassandra Timm and Black Lit Network


If there was uncertainty here and there about various aspects of the second phase of our Black Lit Network project, we knew one thing for sure: we would continue to work with our talented voice actor, Kassandra Timm. 

She narrated all 18 podcast episodes for us in fall 2025. With that work, she has now voiced more than 200 podcast episodes for our Remarkable Receptions podcast, in addition to providing narration for several audio compositions across other areas of the network. 

Timm has been a critical contributor to our ongoing efforts to make African American literary studies audible.
 
At a time when AI-generated voices are increasingly common, working with a live voice actor remains essential to our work. A human voice brings responsive intelligence to the project, knowing when to attend to tone, pacing, rhythm, and emphasis in ways that shape meaning. Timm takes cues from the directions we provide and, just as importantly, she offers creative interpretations that strengthen the scripts themselves.

Having a consistent voice across the project also helps establish a sense of identity. Moreover, beyond serving as our outward-facing voice, Timm is now one of the voices we hear internally as we write and revise episodes.

It’s sometimes easy to take the quality of Timm’s audio productions for granted. But then I listen to some of the recordings and narration I’ve produced on my own. Hearing my own and other amateur efforts quickly reminds me just how professional and high-quality Timm’s work truly is.

Working with Timm has also expanded how I think about the work I do. Who knew that producing African American literary history could involve working with scripts, collaborating with a voice actor, and treating audio as a core scholarly medium rather than a secondary supplement? There practices have reshaped how we imagine scholarship, reminding us that making Black literary studies audible is both an intellectual and creative endeavor.

Related:

Thursday, December 25, 2025

Related Works and the Literary Navigator

Sometimes it feels nearly invisible, but we accomplished quite a bit of technical work since August on the Literary Navigator site concerning the presentation of related materials. 

If you click on Beloved, you'll see "related publications" below, which connect to the novel in some way. Scroll further, and you'll see "related podcasts" with corresponding items, and below that, you'll see "related data gallery items" with corresponding episodes. Go further, and you'll see "related glossary items," and those too link to aspects of Beloved and Morrison. 

It all looks simple, and Dan Schreiber, the web developer for our DH Center, has been crucial to making it  all happen and appear seamless. What he's doing technically emerges from the conversations and planning that take place with him, Meg, and me. 

It also matters that Elizabeth Cali, various contributors, and I built up a body of content over the last two years. That content now serves as the "related" works. 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Building African American Literary Projects Through Conversation


By the time we reached the second phase of this Mellon grant, Elizabeth Cali and I had already been in an eleven-year, nearly nonstop conversation about Black writers and artists, African American literary studies, and classroom approaches. The grant gave us an opportunity to extend some of those long-running conversations beyond ourselves and bring the ideas we had been developing to a broader public.

Beginning major African American literary studies projects with extended conversations may seem obvious. But perhaps it isn’t. The reality is that regular, extended conversations among specialists in our discipline are far rarer than we tend to acknowledge.

This is a structural problem. With relatively few scholars of African American literature in most English departments, it is not surprising that there are limited opportunities for scholars to gather regularly and talk through shared questions, methods, and project ideas.

Being a scholar of African American literature is typically structured as a solitary endeavor: teach your classes, write your single-authored articles and books, and move on. Under most circumstances, there is no built-in infrastructure for meeting once or twice per week with colleagues to discuss plans, processes, and shared intellectual concerns. Meetings themselves are discussed in negative terms, in part because they rarely focus on the substance of African American literary projects or collective intellectual work.

Meanwhile, beginning in 2014, my colleagues Tisha Brooks and Elizabeth Cali started meeting weekly to talk about African American literary studies and teaching, a practice that has continued ever since. As the number of colleagues and graduate students working in our area grew, Cali and I added an additional meeting devoted to planning special projects, including this Mellon grant.

I began our once-per-week meetings 2014 with a practical goal in mind: developing a competitive National Endowment for the Humanities grant proposal. Along the way, however, those meetings became spaces for discussions about broader issues in African American literary studies and pedagogy. Those conversations, and the habits they created, paved the way for where we are now.

In some ways, scholars in our field may not fully maximize their connections to one another. Many of us will devote an evening each week to a graduate seminar, yet only occasionally meet with peers. For some, conferences become the primary venue for peer interaction, even though we all know, and rarely say aloud, that conferences are not especially conducive to deep idea development. At best, they happen once a year.

I sometimes wonder: where would my thinking, and where would my projects, be if I only had space for extended idea-generation conversations once a year? What if I wasn't getting regular input from a really good problem solver like Cali? What if scholarly articles and books were my only public projects?

Those questions clarify for me that regular, collective conversation functions as essential infrastructure, shaping how ideas develop and which projects come into being.

Related:

The year in African American poetry, 2025

February: Ariana Benson wins Kate Tufts Discovery Award.
August: Jada Renée Allen, DeeSoul Carson, Maryhilda Obasiota Ibe, and Aris Kian awarded Ruth Lilly & Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowships.
October: Cornelius Eady awarded the Wallace Stevens Award.
October: Aracelis Girmay awarded the Academy of American Poets Fellowship.
November: Patricia Smith wins National Book Award for Poetry for The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems.