Overview
Riché Richardson, who was born and raised in Montgomery, Alabama, is a professor of African American literature and chair in the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University, whose faculty she joined in 2008. Her other areas of interest include American literature, American studies, black feminism, gender studies, Southern studies, cultural studies and critical theory. She was the 2019-20 Olive B. O’Connor Visiting Distinguished Chair in English at Colgate University. She graduated from Spelman College with a major in English and minors in philosophy and women’s studies in 1993. She received her doctorate in American Literature from the English Department at Duke University in 1998, along with a Certificate in African and African American Studies. She taught at the University of California, Davis from 1998-2008. In 2001, she received a Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship and spent the 2001-02 year in residence at the Johns Hopkins University. She is a 2002 recipient of a Davis Humanities Institute Fellowship. She served as the UC Davis campus representative for the President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (PPFP) from 2006-08 and received an award from the university for Diversity and the Principles of Community in 2008. She is the 2016 recipient of the “Educator of the Year Award” from St. Jude Alumni & Friends, and in 2023, was among alumni featured on the first poster released in Montgomery artist Bill Ford’s series of drawings of important people and events in the history and legacy of The City of St. Jude. She is a 2017 Public Voices Thought Leadership Fellow with the Op-Ed Project whose pieces have appeared in the New York Times, Public Books and Huff Post. Her interviews have been highlighted in news media such as NBC’s The Today Show and Nightly News, CNN, Al Jazeera’s Newshour, On Point Talk, Let’s Go There, the AP, NPR, the New York Times, Time, the BBC, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, Forbes, Business Insider, Elle and French Elle, Good Housekeeping, Town and County, Insider, USA Today, Essence, the Oprah Magazine, Black Press USA's Let It Be Known, the Montgomery Advertiser and WSFA TV News. She served as the educator and collaborated with TED–Ed on the short animation “The Hidden Life of Rosa Parks”(2020). In 2017, Course Hero selected Richardson's "Beyoncé Nation" course as #8 among "14 Fun College Classes You Wish You Could Take." In 2021, Richardson was selected as #8 on Dismantle magazine's list of "8 Thinkers Who Influenced (How We Understand) Black History," for "being a groundbreaking, brilliant scholar" who does "beautifully interdisciplinary" work, as well as for her pivotal contributions to dialogues in the media advocating for the removal of the Aunt Jemima stereotype, which PepsiCo dropped in 2020 in the wake of the loss of George Floyd.
She has produced over 40 essays published in journals such as American Literature, Mississippi Quarterly, Forum for Modern Language Studies, Black Renaissance/Renaissance Noire, TransAtlantica, the Southern Quarterly, Black Camera, NKA, Phillis, Technoculture, Labrys and The Faulkner Journal, Early American Literature, and Studies in the Fantastic, along with edited collections. Her first books focus primarily on examining twentieth and twenty-first century texts in literature and culture and incorporate archival research materials. Her first book, Black Masculinity and the U.S. South: From Uncle Tom to Gangsta (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2007), was selected by Choice Books among the "Outstanding Academic Titles of 2008," and by Eastern Book Company among the "Outstanding Academic Titles, Humanities, 2008." Her new book, Emancipation's Daughters: Reimagining Black Femininity and the National Body, was published by Duke University Press in 2021, and is the winner of the 2022 C. Hugh Holman Award from the Society for the Study of Southern Literature (SSSL). She authored a new foreword for the 2018 edition of William Bradford Huie’s He Slew the Dreamer: My Search for the Truth about James Earl Ray and the Murder of Martin Luther King published by the University Press of Mississippi. She is now working on a new monograph, “Womanist Worlds: New Southern Voices and Visions in African American Literature,” and a critical memoir. With Philathia Bolton, she is editor of the Routledge Companion to Contemporary African American Literature, which is under contract at Routledge. She edited the New Southern Studies Series at the University of Georgia Press from 2018-2022, a book series that has published 25 titles, and for which she has served as the co-editor since 2005. She now edits the series alongside Maurice Hobson. She serves on the External Advisory Board of the Black Men’s Research Institute at Morehouse College.
Richardson is also a visual artist. Her mixed-media appliqué art quilts were on public exhibition in solo shows at the Rosa Parks Museum in Montgomery in 2008 and 2015, and have been included in several national exhibitions, including “Quilts for Obama” curated by Roland Freeman at the Historical Society of Washington, D.C., in 2009. They are the subject of a chapter in Patricia A. Turner’s Crafted Lives: Stories and Studies of African American Quilters (2009), the short film A Portrait of the Artist (2008) by Anne Crémieux and Géraldine Chouard, and are featured in Lauren Cross’s film The Skin Quilt Project (2010) as well as in Carolyn Mazloomi’s And Still We Rise: Race, Culture and Visual Conversations (2015). Images of her art quilts have been published in catalogs and books and have illustrated articles in journals such as TransAtlantica and Transition. In January of 2009, Richardson was invited to Paris as a “Cultural Envoy” by the U.S. Embassy in France through a grant from the U.S. Department of State in tandem with the national exhibition “Un Patchwork de Cultures,” and honored with a talk, reception, exhibition and film screening at the U.S. Ambassador’s Residence in the city.
Research Focus
“I continue to expand my research project grounded in questions related to the status of the U.S. South in shaping formations related to gender, race and sexuality in the U.S, and in shaping categories such as the American and the African American. Since the publication of my first book, I have continued to develop my research on masculinity in some of my essays, while also examining such questions in relation to black femininity. My second book manuscript examines ways in which black women have expanded the prevailing white- and male-centered national narratives in the U.S., notwithstanding black exclusion from notions of citizenship and democracy. Though their national iconicity has been shadowed by stereotypes such as the ubiquitous example of Aunt Jemima, black women have challenged such images and helped to expand exclusionary definitions of the national body through their iconic political leadership models. This book examines figures such as Mary McLeod Bethune, Rosa Parks, Condoleezza Rice, and Michelle Obama across its four chapters, along with Beyoncé in the conclusion. Research from this book was foundational for developing the Op-Ed piece on Aunt Jemima that I was invited to write for the New York Times in 2015. In 2016, I also drew on research from this book in an interview with the Associated Press on the question of featuring Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill, which was cited in 375 media stories, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Chicago Tribune. In 2020, in the wake of the George Floyd protests, interviews on the Aunt Jemima brand’s removal by PepsiCo were featured in over 552 media outlets that reached over 1.5 billion, including NBC’s Today Show and Nightly News, Al Jazeera, and NPR, as well as the New York Times, the Washington Post, and various other outlets. My research has contributed to areas such as Oprah studies and Beyoncé studies. My new book projects build upon my research project by continuing to focus on black Southern women, while also contributing to the field of black girlhood studies. I frequently draw on my research in my teaching, as evident in courses that I have developed in recent years such as ‘The Oprah Book Club and African American Literature,’ ‘New Black Southern Women Writers,’ and ‘Beyoncé Nation.’ My courses such as ‘The Willard Straight Occupation and the Legacy of Black Student Movement’ have increasingly incorporated community engagement and outreach.”
Publications
Emancipation's Daughters: Reimagining Black Femininity and the National Body (Duke University Press 2021)
“From the 'Summer of Faulkner' to Oprah's Obama: What We Can Learn from Joe Christmas and Miss Jane Pittman." “The Summer of Faulkner: Oprah’s Book Club, William Faulkner, and 21st Century America.” Ed. Jaime Harker, Jay Watson, and Cecilia Konchar Farr. The Mississippi Quarterly 3(2013): 459-486.
“Oprah’s Faulkner.” Ed. Peter Lurie and Ann J. Abadie. Faulkner and Film (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2014), 120-145.
"'The Bed Intruder' - News Video Goes Viral: Antoine Dodson as Internet Celebrity and Commodity." “On Gender and Sexuality.” Ed. Amber Johnson. Technoculture: An Online Journal of Technology in Society 4(2014) (online)
“Monumentalizing Mary McLeod Bethune and Rosa Parks in the Post-Civil Rights Era.” “The Genius of Black Women: One Hundred Years of Triumph.” Ed. Darlene Clark Hine and Paula Giddings. Phillis: The Journal for Research on African American Women 2:1 (2014): 23-30.
“Framing Rosa Parks in Reel Time.” Southern Quarterly 4(2013): 54-65.
“Push, Precious and New Narratives of Slavery and Harlem.” Black Camera 4(2012): 161-180.
In the news
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- What to read in 2022? A&S faculty weigh in
- Final ‘Racism in America’ webinar on April 27 to focus on our economic system
- MIT prof. visits to talk about slavery, education
- Literary icon Toni Morrison, M.A. ’55, dies at 88