November 28, 2023

 "Black Male Feminism and the Evolution of Du Boisian Thought, 1903-1920" in Palimpsest: A Journal on Women, Gender, and the Black International.

Dr. Nneka D. Dennie is an Assistant Professor of History and affiliate faculty in Africana Studies at Washington and Lee University. She is a black feminist scholar with specializations in nineteenth- and twentieth-century black women’s intellectual thought. Previously, Dr. Dennie held appointments as a Consortium for Faculty Diversity Postdoctoral Fellow in Africana Studies at Davidson College and as a Visiting Scholar in Women’s and Gender Studies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She completed her PhD in African American Studies at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and completed her BA at Williams College. Dr. Dennie’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in Palimpsest: A Journal on Women, Gender, and the Black International; Atlantic Studies: Global Currents; and The Routledge Companion to Black Women's Cultural Histories: Across the Diaspora, From Ancient Times to the Present. Her first monograph, Re-defining Radicalism: The Rise of Black Feminism and the Politics of Respectability in the Nineteenth Century, is under contract with the University of Pennsylvania Press. Dennie is the co-founder and president of the Black Women’s Studies Association.