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Zakiyyah Iman Jackson

Associate Professor of Literature
Literature

Overview


Zakiyyah Iman Jackson is Associate Professor of Theory in the Department of Literature at Duke University. She is the author of Becoming Human: Matter and Meaning in an Antiblack World, winner of the Harry Levin First Book Prize from the American Comparative Literature Association, the Gloria Anzaldúa Book Award from the National Women’s Studies Association, and the Lambda Literary Award in LGBT Studies.

Jackson’s research examines how black diasporic literature, moving image, and visual art engage—and transform—the historical concerns, epistemologies, and rhetoric of Western science and philosophy. Her work reveals the disavowed literary and aesthetic dimensions of these disciplines while clarifying the constitutive role of antiblackness in their metaphysical frameworks. She approaches black diasporic speculative and experimental practices as modes of theory and philosophy in their own right and investigates their formal strategies for what they afford in (dis)ordering the reigning operations of perception, sense, and thought. Jackson’s research situates and critically interrogates authoritative conceptualizations of being and existence, demonstrating that literature and visual art—as well as their study—play a vital role in shaping philosophy and scientific thought.

Jackson’s work has appeared in journals including Feminist Studies, e-flux, GLQ, Qui Parle, South Atlantic Quarterly, e-flux, and Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, and Technoscience, as well as in exhibition catalogues for the Hammer Museum, the Whitney Biennial, the Venice Architecture Biennale, the Whitechapel Gallery, and Studio Museum in Harlem. Her articles are available at zakiyyahimanjackson.com.

Current Appointments & Affiliations


Associate Professor of Literature · 2024 - Present Literature, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
Associate Professor of African and African American Studies · 2026 - Present African & African American Studies, Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

In the News


Published July 15, 2025
Summer Reading Picks from Trinity College Faculty
Published September 26, 2024
Thomas Langford Lectureship Award
Published September 23, 2024
Literature’s Newest Professor Challenges Notions of Race, Gender and What It Means to Be Human

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Recent Publications


Black Light: On the Origin and Materiality of the Image

Journal Article Topia · March 1, 2023 Aesthesis is a political matter, such that black folk have often sought to challenge a mode of representation that mythologizes blackness as mere absence or lack. There is artmaking that seeks to transfigure both the void blackness is thought to represent ... Full text Cite

Ontologized Plasticity

Chapter · January 1, 2022 Cite

“Theorizing in a Void”: Sublimity, Matter, and Physics in Black Feminist Poetics

Chapter · January 1, 2022 “Theorizing in a void” names the process of imagining possibilities for becoming otherwise from a seeming nothingness filled with generative yet unrealized potential. Black feminist analysis has worked on dual registers with respect to representation(alism ... Full text Cite
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