LAURA ALEXANDRA HARRIS
Associate Professor in English, World Literature, and Black Studies
Pitzer College
1050 North Mills Avenue
Claremont, California 91711
909-607-3633 or lharris@pitzer.edu
EDUCATION
Ph.D. Literatures in English, 1997 Literature Department, University of California San Diego
B.A. Comparative Literature, San Diego State University, 1990 summa cum laude
RESEARCH INTERESTS
20th century African American and American literature and culture, Black Feminist and Queer Studies, Harlem Renaissance Studies, African Diaspora Studies, Culture and Performance Studies
WRITING AWARDS
Notes From A Welfare Queen In the Ivory Tower: poetry, fiction, letters, and essays. Nominated for the American Library Association Stonewall Book Award, 2002.
PUBLICATIONS
French translation and reprint of, “Queer Black Feminism: The Pleasure Principle,” (Feminist Review #54 1996), la Bibliothèque du Féminisme, codirectrice Hélène Rouch, Editions L’Hartmattan: Paris, Forthcoming.
“Hybrid Italians, Diasporic Africans: Who’s/Whose Meticcio?” Callaloo: A Journal of African Diaspora Arts & Letters. Editor Charles H. Rowell. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, Forthcoming.
“Confessions of the Pillow Queen: Sexual Receptivity & Queer Femininities.” Tribades, Tommies, and Transgressives: Lesbian Histories, Volume I Editors Mary MCauliffe and Sonja Tiernan. University College Dublin: Cambridge Scholars Press, Forthcoming.
“On Teaching A Black Queer Harlem Renaissance.” Teaching the Harlem Renaissance: Course Design and Classroom Strategies. Editor Michael Soto. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, African American Literature and Culture Series, Forthcoming.
“My Boy.” Voices Rising: Celebrating Twenty Years of Black Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Writing. Editor G. Winston James, Other Countries. Washington D.C.: RedBone Press. Spring 2007.
“Reflections on Nobody Knows My Name and An Interview With The Director Rachel Raimist: A Female Hip Hop Film Maker.” co-authored essay with Dipannita Basu. The Vinyl Ain’t Final: The Local and Global in Hip-Hop. Editors Dipannita Basu and Sidney Lemelle. London, Ann Arbor: Pluto Press, University of Michigan. Spring 2006.
“Harlem Renaissance.” Encyclopedia of American Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and Culture. Editor-in-Chief Marc Stein. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. 2004.
“Lorraine Hansberry.” Encyclopedia of American Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History and Culture. Editor-in-Chief Marc Stein New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons. 2004.
“Mae V. Cowdery (1909-1953),” Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance. Editorial Director Paul E. Schellinger. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. 2004.
“A’Lelia Walker (1885-1931),” Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance. Editorial Director Paul E. Schellinger. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. 2004.
“My Blackness,” “American Heritage,” “The Wastrel,” and “Downtown Morning Hours.” Maryland Review. Editor Nathaniel Staicer. Prince Anne, Maryland: University of Maryland Eastern Shore. Fall 2004.
Notes from a Welfare Queen in The Ivory Tower: poetry, fiction, letters, and essays. New York: Face to Face Press. Fall 2002.
“Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower.” Published presentation. This Bridge We Call Home: Radical Visions for Transformation. Eds. Gloria Anzaldúa and AnaLouise Keating. New York: Routledge. Fall 2002.
“Femme/Butch Family Romances: A Queer Dyke Spin on Compulsory Heterosexuality,” Journal of Lesbian Studies. Editors Deborah Meem and Michelle Gibson, The Haworth Press, Inc.. Summer 2002.
“Black Feminism and Queer Families: A Conversation with Thomas Allen Harris,” African American Review. vol. 36, no. 2. Editor Joe Weixlmann. Indiana State University Press. Summer 2002.
“L’Abbandono: Who’s Meticcio//Whose Meticcio in the Eritrea-Italy Diaspora?” (abridged version in English translation). ItaliAfrica: Bridging Continents and Cultures. Editor Sante Matteo. Stony Brook, New York: Forum Italicum Press, FILibrary Series. Fall 2001.
"Gladys Bentley (1907-1960): Classic Lesbian Blues," Encyclopedia of Homosexuality: Volume I Lesbian Histories and Cultures. Editor Bonnie Zimmerman. New York: Garland Publishing. Fall 2000.
“L’Abbandono: chi e meticcio, e di chi, nella diaspora eritreo-italiana?” (abridged version in Italian translation). Africa Italia: Due continenti si avvicinano. Editor Sante Matteo. Milano, Italy: Fara Editore. Spring 2000.
Femme: Feminists, Lesbians, and Bad Girls. Edited and Introduced by Laura Harris and Liz Crocker. New York: Routledge. Summer 1997.
“Fish Tales: Revisiting A Study of a Public Lesbian Community.” Femme. Essay by Harris and Crocker.
Mysteries, Mothers, and Cops: An Interview with Mabel Maney.” Femme. Interview by Harris and Crocker.
“Bad Girls: Sex, Class, and Feminist Agency.” Femme. Essay by Harris and Crocker.
“Gladys Bentley (1907-1960): Classic Blues Singer.” St. James Press Gay and Lesbian Biography. Editor Michael Tyrkus. Detroit: St. James Press. Spring 1997.
"Queer Black Feminism: The Pleasure Principle." Feminist Review 54. Editor Merl Storr. London: Routledge. 1996.
"A Brief Introduction to African American Social and Cultural Dance Development." dance: body & soul. School of Dance: California Institute of the Arts. Spring 1996.
PROFESSIONAL/PUBLIC PRESENTATIONS
“Confessions of the Pillow Queen: Representing Queer Femininities & Sexuality,” Invited Plenary Speaker for Queering Femininity Conference, Seattle, May 2005
Reading/Performance of “why i write version II: (reader/audience interactive)” and “critical karaoke: rosanna/marina,” Ditch: a queer feminist collective, April 2005
Respondent/Moderator for Versus Desire/Identity a queer wo/men of color visual arts exhibit at ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives, Opening
Reception Panel Featuring Artists: Laura Aguilar, Alma Lopez, and YK Hong, Fall 2004
“Hybrid Italians, Diasporic Africans: Who’s Metticcio/Whose Meticcio in the Eritrea-Italy Diaspora?” essay presentation by invitation from the Huntington Library Women’s Studies Seminar, San Marino, May 2004
“Teaching A Queer Harlem Renaissance.” essay presentation by invitation, American Literature Association 15th Annual Conference on American Literature, San Francisco, May 2004.
“Solutions.” panel discussant, Making Change: Women’s Experiences With Work Conference, Cal-State University Long Beach, April 2004.
“Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower.” A reading at Smith College by invitation from the journal Meridians: feminism, race, transnationalism. April 2004.
“Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower.” A reading for Pitzer College Marching & Chowder Faculty Speakers Series. November 2003.
Los Angeles Readings from “Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower,” Midnight Special Bookstore, November 2002 and Espresso Mi Cultura Café, February, 2003.
New York Readings from “Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower,” Nuyorican Poets Café, Asian-American Writer’s Workshop and Audre Lorde Project Center, October 2002.
“Hybrid Italians, Diasporic Africans: Who’s Metticcio/Whose Meticcio in the Eritrea-Italy Diaspora?” essay presentation, The Society for Multi-Ethnic Studies: Europe and the Americas Conference, University of Padua, Italy June 2002.
This Bridge We Call Home: Radical Visions for Transformation, Keynote Panel Roundtable Discussant for The Society for Multi-Ethnic Studies: Europe and the Americas Conference, University of Padua, Italy June 2002.
“Everyday Outlaws,” Invited Keynote Speaker, Cal Poly Pomona Lavender Graduation Celebration, Kellogg House, June 2001.
“Troubling Borders: Queer Culture in the Harlem Renaissance,” essay presentation, Homoeroticism and the Harlem Renaissance, the official panel of the Lesbian and Gay Caucus for the Northeastern Modern Language Association, Buffalo, New York, April 2000.
“Notes from a Welfare Queen in the Ivory Tower,” Invited Keynote Panelist for Re-Centering the Margins: Queer Women of Color Building Coalition in the Millennium, California State University Long Beach, April 2000.
“Notes on Africa-Italy Hybridity, Immigration and Displacement,” Invited essay presentation, Cultural Studies Department Lecture Series, Claremont Graduate University, November 1999.
Featured Speaker, African American Women’s Summit: Lifting As We Grow, Your Public Image Workshop, Claremont McKenna College, March 1999.
“L’Abbandono: Who’s Metticcio/Whose Meticcio in the Eritrea-Italy Diaspora?” essay presentation, Africa/Italy: An Interdisciplinary International Symposium, University of Miami, November 1998.
“Black Radical Media: Authenticity and Context,” a discussion panel presentation, Black Radical Congress, University of Illinois, Spring 1998.
“Consuming Villainous Mulattas: It’s Just a Sweet, Sweet Fantasy Baby,” essay presentation, Narratives of Resistance: Literature and Ethnicity in the United States and the Caribbean, Universidad de Castilla, Fall 1997.
“The Harlem Renaissance: Gender, Canons, and Class Conflicts,” essay presentation, The Diversity Education Program for Black History Month, University of California Santa Cruz, Spring 1997.
“Women Writers and the Harlem Renaissance Canon," essay presentation by invitation from Ann duCille for the Graduate Colloquium in the Literature Department at University of California San Diego, Fall 1996.
"Lesbian Studies in the 21st Century," a discussion panel organized by Bonnie Zimmerman, 25th Anniversary Symposium of Women's Studies, San Diego State University, Winter 1995.
"Rich, Rule, and Lorde: Disrupting Compulsory Heterosexuality," a paper delivered at the National Women's Studies Association Conference, Women's Movements: Cultural, Intellectual, Political (R)evolutions, University of Oklahoma, Spring 1995.
"Femme Image, Femme Identity," a paper delivered at the Fifth Annual National Gay, Lesbian, and Bisexual Graduate Student Conference, Queer Frontiers, University of Southern California, Fall 1995.
"Nella Larsen's Passing: (E)Racing the Family," a paper delivered at the Second Annual San Diego State University English Graduate Student Conference, The Crisis Carnival. Spring 1994.
"Feminist Encounters of the First Kind, " a paper delivered at the Ninth National Graduate Women's Studies Conference, Emerging Theories/Merging Practices in Gender Studies, University of California San Diego, Spring 1994.
RESEARCH LANGUAGES
Italian and Spanish
TEACHING POSITIONS
Associate Professor, English, World Literature, and Black Studies, Pitzer College, Fall 1997 to current
Visiting Professor, Claremont Graduate School of Religious Studies, Spring 2005
Cultural Studies Department, Claremont Graduate University, Summer 1998, Spring 2002 English and Comparative Literature Studies, Occidental College, Spring 1999
Service-Learning Teaching, Reading/Writing Autobiography, Prototypes Women’s Center through the Center for California Cultural and Social Issues of Pitzer College, Fall 2004 to current
Community Literacy Partnership of Camps Afflerbaugh-Paige and the Center for California Cultural and Social Issues of Pitzer College, Summer 2001 through Fall 2002
Contemporary American Fiction, Los Angeles Unified School District, Center High School Eagles Academy for LGBTQ/Homeless Students, Spring 2000
Lecturer, Women's Studies Department, California State University San Marcos, Spring 1995 through Spring 1996
Visiting Lecturer, Black Dance Criticism, School of Dance (Graduate Division), California Institute of the Arts, Fall 1995
Teaching Assistant, Creative Writing Program, Literature Department, University of California San Diego, Fall 1994 through Winter 1995