DR KHADIJAH ALI-COLEMAN on Black Poetry, The Power of Homeschooling and Creative Presence
Description
ABOUT THE GUEST | Dr. Khadijah Z. Ali-Coleman (http://khadijahali-coleman.com/), is a cultural curator, community organizer, nationally recognized speaker, and writer. Her work centers the social and political life experiences, history, and culture of the people of the African diaspora. A playwright, she has had more than a dozen of her plays presented publicly in venues throughout the country.
She is the author of the children’s book Mariah’s Maracas and co-editor of the book Homeschooling Black Children in the US: Theory, Practice and Popular Culture. Her work is featured in the anthology The Fire Inside: Collected Stories and Poems from Zora’s Den (ZD, 2020) and the book Afro-Futurism in Black Panther: Gender, Identity and the Remaking of Blackness (Rowan & Littlefield, 2021).
She is the founder of the multidisciplinary arts group Liberated Muse, co-founder of the education research group Black Family Homeschool Educators and Scholars (BFHES) and currently serving as the executive director of the nonprofit Hurston/Wright Foundation.
HER BOOK, Homeschooling Black Children in the US: Theory, Practice and Popular Culture: https://www.amazon.com/Homeschooling-Black-Children-U-S-Contemporary/dp/1648027822
ABOUT MY BOOK
My debut memoir, WHEN THEY TELL YOU TO BE GOOD, comes out October 4, 2022. To preorder: https://bookshop.org/a/23229/9781953534422
"Prince Shakurk’s debut memoir brilliantly mines his many eras of radicalization and self-realization through examinations of place, childhood, queer identity, and a history of uprisings."





















