Department faculty
Greg Thomas
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Greg Thomas

Associate Professor

Ph.D. (Rhetoric) 1999, University of California at Berkeley

Office: 408 Hall of Lanuages, 315-443-9472
Email: gthomas@syr.edu

Interests: Pan-African Studies; Black Radical Tradition; Uses of the Erotic; Race, Sex & Empire; Black Popular Culture; Colonialism.

THESIS SUPERVISIONS

Books
Selected Articles & Book Chapters
Editorial Work
Encyclopedia Entries & Art Catalogue Essays
Works in Progress
Selected Presentations
Awards & Honors
Courses Taught

Books

Hip-Hop Revolution in the Flesh: Lil' Kim's Recreation of Power, Knowledge & Pleasure in Lyricism (Forthcoming, Palgrave Macmillan).

The Sexual Demon of Colonial Power: Pan-African Embodiment and the Erotic Schemes of Empire ( Indiana University Press, 2007).

Selected Articles and Book Chapters

“Psycho-Sexual Racism & Pan-African Revolt: FANON & Chester Himes.” Human Architecture: Journal of the Sociology of Self-Knowledge V (Forthcoming in Summer 2007): 219-30.

“The FBI, Pseudo-Declassification and George Lester Jackson.” The Abolitionist 6 [Bilingual in English and Spanish Translation] (May 2007): 4, 8.

“Queens of Consciousness & Sex-Radicalism in Hip-Hop: On Erykah Badu and The Notorious K.I.M.” Journal of Pan-African Studies 1:7 (March 2007) – Special Issue: “Engendering the Diaspora: Gender, Culture, Race and Identity in the Contemporary African World” (Guest Edited by Yaba Amgborale Blay and Kaila Adia Story): 23-37.

“Man & Woman, Sex & Empire: ‘Reconstructing [Gender] in ‘ Plantation America '.” jENdA: A Journal of Culture and African Women's Studies No. 5 (2005). 1-27.

“The ‘S' Word: Sex, Empire & Black Radical Tradition (After Sylvia). After Man, Toward the Human: Critical Essays on Sylvia Wynter . Ed. Anthony Bogues and Brian Meeks.” Kingston , JA: Ian Randle Press (2005): 76-99.

“Notes On ‘Sexuality' After COINTELPRO?: In Struggle Against the Neo-Colonial Western Millennium,” Decolonizing the Academy: African-New World Studies . Edited by Carole Boyce Davies (Trenton , NJ : Africa World Press, 2003): 93-103.

“Re-Reading Frantz Fanon and E. Franklin Frazier: On the Erotic Politics of Racist Assimilation by Class.” Présence Africaine 159 (1st Semester, 1999): 71-87.

Editorial Work

Guest Editor, CR: The New Centennial Review 3:3 – Special Issue: “Coloniality's Persistence” (Fall 2003): 343pp; Introduction: “Coloniality's Persistence”: 1-4.

Founder & Editor, PROUD FLESH: New Afrikan Journal of Culture, Politics & Consciousness – An e-journal published on-line by Africa Resource Center, Inc., at http://proudfleshjournal.com From 2002 to present).

Encyclopedia Entries & Art Catalogue Essays

“Hip-Hop Culture in the African Diaspora,” “Lil' Kim,” “Elaine Brown,” “George Jackson” & “COINTELPRO” in The Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora: A Historical Encyclopedia . Edited by Carole E. Boyce Davies. Santa Barbara , CA : ABC-CLIO (July 2008).

“Hayti, the Art of Resistance and the Idea of Modernity: Toward an African Diasporic Literacy of Black Revolutions – Here & There.” Roots: The Idea of Modernity in Contemporary Haitian Art . Edited by Babacar M'Bow (Broward County African-American Research Library and Cultural Center: Summer 2008).

Works in Progress

“The Erotics of ‘Under/Development' in Walter Rodney: On Sexual or Body Politics and Political Economy – for ‘Guerilla Intellectualism.'” – Under Consideration at The C.L.R. James Journal.

Literary Hustler of Hood: Critical Essays and Reflections on the Works of Donald Goines – Co-Editor L.H. Stallings.

Selected Presentations

“The ‘Sound Clash' of Her Naked Truth : The Notorious K.I.M. on COINTELPRO's Counter-Revolution – in Africa 's Dancehall Diaspora.” 32 nd Conference of the Caribbean Studies Association , Salvador da Bahia , Brazil : May 28 – June 1, 2007.

“On Psycho-Sexual Racism & Pan-African Revolt: FANON & Chester Himes.” The Violences of Colonialism and Racism, Inner and Global: Conversations with Frantz Fanon on the Meaning of Human Emancipation , University of Massachusetts (Boston): March 27-28, 2007.

Keynote Address – “On Erotic Maroonage: Sex, Empire & Black Radical Tradition(s).” Black Cultural Interventions into Gender and Sexuality Studies , University of Florida (Gainesville): March 23-24, 2007.

“Hearing Malcolm X in Amharic – or Harvest 3000 Years : Haile Gerima's ‘Message to the Grassroots.'” Sankofa Video, Film and Book Store – Washington DC : December 15, 2006 / African Literature Association: Pan-Africanism in the 21 st Century (32 Annual Meeting & Conference), Accra, Ghana : May 17-21, 2006.

“Fire and Damnation: Hip-Hop (‘Youth Culture') and 1956 in Focus.” 50 th Anniversary of the 1 st International Congress of Black Writers and Artists: Tributes, Assessments, Perspectives (1956-2006). UNESCO Headquarters - Paris , France . September 19-22, 2006.

“Sylvia Wynter and Sexual Revolution: From ‘Reluctant Matriarchy' to ‘QUEEN B@#$H' Lyricism.” The Caribbean Woman Writer as Scholar: Imagining, Creating, Theorizing (10 th Anniversary Conference), Miami , FL. May 30 - June 3, 2006.

Guest Lecture – “Imaging … Hip-Hop … Uprising.” Howard University, School of Communications, Department of Radio, Television and Film: April 23, 2006.

Awards & Honors

Undergraduate Teaching Award
Syracuse University English Department, 2005-2006

National Endowment for the Humanities
Summer Institute on African Cinema in Dakar , Senegal , 2005

African American Studies Outstanding Community Service Award Syracuse University , 2002-2003

Carolina Minority Post-Doctoral Fellowship
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1999-2001

Courses Taught

Graduate:
Psycho-Sexual Racism & Pan-African Revolt: Fanon & Himes (Spring 2007)
Hip-Hop's QUEEN B@#$H Writings (Fall 2006)
Black Prison Writing , USA (Spring 2005)
Black Radical Tradition (Spring 2002)

Undergraduate:
African Cinema of Liberation (Spring 2008)
Black Revolutionary Texts (Spring 2007)
Malcolm X (Fall 2006, Fall 2007)
Race Traitors (Fall 2006)
Hip-Hop Eshu: QUEEN B@#$H 101 (Fall 2004, Fall 2006)
Slave & Neo-Slave/Letters of Liberation (Fall 2002-Spring 2003) Race, Writing & Empire (Fall 2002).

 
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