Sunday, April 5, 2026

Painting the Enslaved as Liberated

A brief take on Kerry James Marshall’s portraits of John Punch, Scipio Moorhead, and Harriet Tubman, reimagining enslaved figures as liberated subjects through contemporary Black artistic interpretation.

Written by Howard Rambsy II
Read by Kassandra Timm

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Phillis Wheatley Across Time

A brief take on Phillis Wheatley’s portrait, tracing Scipio Moorhead’s 1773 image, Kerry James Marshall’s reinterpretation, and its circulation on a 2026 U.S. Postal Service stamp.

Written by Howard Rambsy II
Read by Kassandra Timm


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Naming Black Poetry

A brief take on evolving labels for Black poetry, tracing shifts from Negro poetry to Black poetry to African American poetry through anthology titles reflecting changing cultural identities.

Written by Howard Rambsy II
Read by Kassandra Timm

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Racialized Anointments

A brief take on racialized anointments, tracing how media repeatedly elevate one Black writer at a time, narrowing attention while obscuring the broader landscape of African American literary production.

Script by Howard Rambsy II
Narration by Kassandra Timm

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Toni Morrison from Nine Appearances to Thousands

A brief take on Toni Morrison’s rise in graduate research, showing how dissertation data tracks her shift from minimal attention in the 1970s to central prominence in African American literary studies.

Script by Howard Rambsy II
Narration by Kassandra Timm

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Thursday, April 2, 2026

Free Books

A brief take on free book distribution at SIUE, showing how giving students hundreds of titles and hosting browsing sessions sparked excitement and expanded opportunities for reading, conversation, and engagement with arts and humanities. 

Script by Howard Rambsy II 
Narration by Kassandra Timm

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The Fantastic Findings Forum

A brief take on the Fantastic Findings Forum, showing how short reflections demonstrate that brief insights can open new interpretive pathways in African American literary studies. 

Script by Howard Rambsy II 
Narration by Kassandra Timm

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"Don't Susan Smith Me" -- Yes, Students Read Cornelius Eady's Brutal Imagination

Last spring I was on sabbatical, but I still wanted the students in the African American literary studies program I coordinate to read some selections I selected. I felt that they needed to read a couple of poems from Cornelius Eady’s Brutal Imagination (2001) and learn about the circumstances of Susan Smith.

Smith is the white woman who fabricated a story about a Black man kidnapping her children. She had, in fact, killed them. Eady composed an arresting volume of poems that characterizes the tendency toward brutal imaginings that project and create Black men as criminals. I discovered Eady’s book when I was in graduate school, and the work has stayed with me throughout my career.

I wondered if my junior colleagues received my messages and instructions to discuss some of Brutal Imagination with the young’uns. Apparently they did. When I showed up on campus this time last year, I would encounter students and jokingly say that I heard they weren’t taking their studies seriously. More than a few responded, “Nooo, Professor Rambsy, don’t Susan Smith me.” That is, don’t lie on me.

It was hilarious. They had transformed Susan Smith into a verb. When I joked with one student about not working hard enough, she responded that I was “Susan Smithing” her. I told another student that folks told me he’d been skipping class, and he said, “Nope, they trying to Susan Smith me. They lying.”

So, yes, I learned that, even though I was away, students in African American literary studies at SIUE were made aware of Cornelius Eady’s Brutal Imagination.

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