Chiyuma Elliott

Chiyuma Elliott served as the interim Arts Research Center's Director in Fall 2021, and as an Affiliate Faculty member for many years.

At Berkeley, Elliott was an Associate Professor of African American Studies with a particular focus on poetry and poetics and African American intellectual history from the 1920s to the present. A former ARC fellow and an affiliated faculty member, Elliott led a semester-long program titled "coexsitence" during her time as interim director. The events had a spatial component, and implied the sharing of space or cohabitation within overlapping territories; it also had a temporal dimension, suggesting simultaneous presence with others in the same moment in time.  

Job title: 
Former ARC Director, Professor of African American Studies
Bio/CV: 

Chiyuma Elliott is Associate Professor of African American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Her scholarly work and teaching focus on poetry and poetics and African American intellectual history from the 1920s to the present. Elliott was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford, and Assistant Professor of English, Creative Writing, and African American Studies at the University of Mississippi. A Cave Canem Alumni Fellow, she has also received fellowships from the American Philosophical Society, the James Irvine Foundation, and the Vermont Studio Center. She earned her M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Warren Wilson College and her Ph.D. in American Studies from the University of Texas at Austin. Elliott was an Associate Professor of African American Studies at the University of California, Berkeley, and now is a professor in the Department of English at Case Western Reserve University.

Elliott is the author of The Rural Harlem Renaissance (forthcoming, Oxford University Press), and has published four books of poetry: Blue in Green (2021), At Most (2020), Vigil (2017), and California Winter League (2015). Her creative work has appeared in the African American ReviewCallaloo, the Collagist, the Notre Dame Review, the PN Review, and other journals. She is the co-editor of several poetry chapbooks, including African American Poetic Responses to Faulkner (2015 / U Press of Mississippi), and Of Rivers (2016 /Southern Humanities Review). She is currently at work on a book of poems called Hemland and co-hosts a podcast called Old-School (on the intersections of African American Studies and the classics).