ABSTRACT

This is the story of Dr. Geneva Smitherman, aka "Dr. G," the pioneering linguist often referred to as the "Queen of Black Language." In a series of narrative essays, Dr. G writes eloquently and powerfully about the role of language in social transformation and the academic, intellectual, linguistic, and societal debates that shaped her groundbreaking work as a Black Studies O.G. and a Womanist scholar-activist of African American Language.

These eleven essays narrate the development of Dr. G’s race, gender, class, and linguistic consciousness as a member of the Black Power Generation of the 1960s and 70s. In My Soul Look Back In Wonder, Dr. G links the personal to the professional and the political, situating the struggles, and successes, of a Black woman in the Academy within the historical experiences and development of her people.

As Dr. G enters her eighth decade, in this Black Lives Matter historical moment, she seeks to share the meaning and purpose of a life of study and struggle and its significance for all those who seek racial and social justice today.

chapter 1|17 pages

Steppin out on faith

chapter 3|24 pages

Quest for knowledge and liberation

chapter 4|18 pages

Who we be

The language wars in and outside of the Academy

chapter 5|11 pages

Doin battle in the language wars (I)

Black Language and the Academy

chapter 6|17 pages

Doin battle in the language wars (II)

Black Language and the law

chapter 7|8 pages

Maintaining my authentic self

chapter 8|17 pages

The good, the bad, the ugly

Reparations and Affirmative Action

chapter 10|28 pages

“What is Africa to me?”

Longing and looking for home

chapter |6 pages

Epilogue

The rhyming tonal semantics of history