Janis Mayes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dr. Janis Alene Mayes is an American author, literary critic and translator and a professor in Africana literature.[1][2][3]
Mayes gained her undergraduate degree in French literature at Fisk University. She was a Fulbright Scholar.[4] She had additional study as a scholar at the University of Paris-Sorbonne. In the 1980s she moved to Syracuse, New York, where she began teaching at Syracuse University in the Department of African American Studies; she is currently a professor there.[5] She teaches in the Department of African American Studies at Syracuse University.
Mayes contributed to French and English literature in the African diaspora. Her specialties are in French translation literary practices. She has translated anthologies and books in francophone literatures. Her translation of A Rain of Words is an anthology of francophone poetry.[6] She is the director of a US study abroad program that examines the historical connections between African Americans and "Black Paris", entitled Paris Noir. The Syracuse University program claims to have shaped Africana-focused cultural programs at leading museums in Paris such as the Louvre.[7][citation needed] Nina Simone, Archie Shepp, Barbara Chase-Riboud, Sonia Sanchez and Toni Morrison were involved.[7] She was a board member of the Toni Morrison Society. In 2004, she conversed with Morrison at the Theatre de la Madeleine after the unveiling of a bench commemorating the end of slavery in France.[8] She has also organized cultural literary conferences, including an event with Discover Paris! that celebrated Morrison's literary contribution to the African diaspora.[9]
Mayes is a Fulbright Scholar and became President of the African Literature Association in 2003.
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