Mari N. Crabtree is an associate professor of African American and Africana Studies and History in the Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies. An interdisciplinary scholar, her research blends Black studies, cultural studies, history, and literature. She seeks to excavate Black life beyond the binary of suffering or resistance by exploring how culture provides a lens for understanding the struggle for Black liberation but also Black ingenuity, joy, and love.
Her book, My Soul Is a Witness: The Traumatic Afterlife of Lynching, was published by Yale University Press as part of the New Directions in Narrative History series. She also has published essays in Raritan, Rethinking History, Contemporaries, Chronicle of Higher Education, and elsewhere. Currently, she is working on a book of essays titled “Co-Opted: Essays on Black Studies and Ethical Praxis in the Age of Neoliberalism” and a monograph on the pleasures and political utility of guile, deception, and humor in the African American cultural tradition titled “Guile: The Pleasures and Political Utility of Subversion in the African American Cultural Tradition.”
Before joining the faculty at Emerson College, she taught African American Studies at the College of Charleston and was a visiting research scholar with Princeton University’s Department of African American Studies. She received her AB from Amherst College and her MA and PhD from Cornell University.
About
- Department Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts & Interdisciplinary Studies
- Since 2024
Education
M.A., Cornell University
Ph.D., Cornell University
Areas of Expertise
- American Studies
- Cultural Studies
- Culture & Race
- History
- Liberal Arts