At some point, in our continuing efforts to chart the development and scope of African American literary studies, we will need to reckon with the many contributions of one of the field’s most influential figures, Farah Jasmine Griffin. For me, she has certainly been a model of possibility, offering multiple blueprints and routes.
I was inclined to briefly comment on her contributions after listening to her talk yesterday.
Back in 1995, Grifin she hit the scene with "Who Set You Flowin'?" The African-American Migration Narrative and has been producing groundbreaking work ever since. Her books include the If You Can't Be Free, Be a Mystery: In Search of Billie Holiday (2001), Clawing at the Limits of Cool: Miles Davis, John Coltrane, and the Greatest Jazz Collaboration Ever (with Salim Washington, 2008), Harlem Nocturne: Women Artists and Progressive Politics During World War II (2013), and more recently, In Search of a Beautiful Freedom: New and Selected Essays (2023).
In 2021, I did a series of blog posts on her book Read Until You Understand: The Profound Wisdom of Black Life and Literature, which touched on her work but likely did not go far enough in noting how Griffin has been one of our discipline's most critical cultural witnesses. She began her career at the University of Pennsylvania in the 1990s and moved to Columbia University around 2000, where she has since built a distinguished career.
Consider that Griffin entered the profession in the mid-1990s, during a defining moment when African American literary studies was developing in new and consequential ways. There is understandably a tendency to focus on more prominent figures from that period—Henry Louis Gates Jr., bell hooks, Houston A. Baker Jr., Barbara Christian, Hazel Carby, and Trudier Harris among others. But Griffin, a junior to those figures, was there as well, just at an earlier stage of her career. Her soft-spoken and measured style also placed her somewhat outside the more visible Black public intellectual circuit that gained prominence during that period.
At Columbia University, Griffin became a member of the influential Jazz Study Group, which helps explain her sustained engagement with jazz. Founded by Robert G. O'Meally, the group brings together scholars, musicians, critics, and students for wide-ranging discussions of the music. O’Meally, Brent Hayes Edwards, and Griffin later co-edited Uptown Conversation: The New Jazz Studies (2004), a volume that reflects the intellectual energy of the group's exchanges.
Based on various articles and presentations over the last two decades, Griffin is viewed as one of our leading Toni Morrison scholars. If you were hosting a gathering on Morrison at Princeton or Cornell or wherever, and you wanted expert thoughts on Morrison, then you likely thought of Farah Jasmine Griffin.
So it's possible that a large group of people know Griffin as a jazz scholar, and then a whole other group know her as a literary scholar. And there's more. She's been an important chronicler of Black Studies based on this notable document, Inclusive Scholarship: Developing Black Studies in the United States: A 25th Anniversary Retrospective of Ford Foundation Grant Making, 1982-2007. She also provided key leadership as the inaugural chair of its African American and African Diaspora Studies Department at Columbia.
When I spoke Griffin her after talk, somehow the subject of William J. Harris came up. "Did you know he was one of my professors?" she asked.
"Did I know?" I responded, "You're one of the main reasons I can never become his top student of all time. Of course I know you're one of his former students."
We laughed.
Griffin, Dana A. Williams, Brent Hayes Edwards, Saidiya Hartman, Mark Anthony Neal represent a generational cohort of literary and cultural scholars who made notable contributions to African American literary studies over the decades. We also have to add Alondra Nelson to that mix. While she's not a literary scholar, her work on Afrofuturism affected so many of us. And obviously, there are dozens more than the ones I've just named.
It is worth thinking about a figure like Griffin for multiple reasons. She has produced outstanding work, for one. She also offers a clear sense of what a long, noteworthy career can look like. More than that, she stands as a testament to the possibilities of working across multiple disciplines, distinguishing herself through scholarship on jazz as well as Black literary and cultural history.
You trying to get a sense of what's possible as a literary scholar or an intellectual in general? Then, you likely want to think of Farah Jasmine Griffin.







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