<Rice University appointed Houston native Bryan Washington of Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice.>

 



 


Washington is going to be the primary to occupy an ‘important and necessary’ position



Rice University has appointed Houston native and acclaimed writer Bryan Washington to the newly-


created a position of Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice.


Bryan Washington is the first Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice at Rice University. Long


Description
Bryan Washington is the first Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice at Rice University.


The two-year appointment is a joint initiative of the Office of the Provost, the School of Humanities, the


Task Force on Slavery, Segregation and Racial Injustice, the Center for African and African American


Studies (CAAAS) and the Department of English, with whom Washington will be working closely throughout his tenure.


“A lot of it is going to be finding different ways to see what they need, to see what I can do to help and to


see how we can best supplement each other for the students and create something that benefits the


students most of all because that’s the point at the end of the day.”


Washington’s debut collection of short stories, “Lot,” prominently featured Houston and was included


among President Barack Obama’s top 10 books of 2019. The book has won numerous honors since its


publication, including the Dylan Thomas Prize, the Lambda Literary Award and the Ernest J. Gaines Award for Literary Excellence.


He has also been a prolific contributor to the New Yorker, among many other publications, covering


everything from the grocers on Houston’s front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic to the George Floyd


protests downtown, illuminating the experience of living “in the shadow of total police impunity” as


someone “without the benefit of the doubt.”


Washington’s first novel, “Memorial,” will be published in October, halfway through what will be his first


semester as Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice. During his tenure, Washington — who will also


hold the title of George Guion Williams Writer-in-Residence — will offer courses in creative writing,


including a course titled “Writing Black Lives.”


This won’t, however, be his first semester teaching at Rice; Washington served as a visiting lecturer in


creative writing in fall 2019 and spring 2020.


As a teacher and mentor, Washington received high praise from Rice students, who described him in


their evaluations as a “great professor” who “makes everyone feel like their input matters”


"Working toward equity and inclusion is something every instructor should be doing already, implicitly,"


Washington said. Long Description
“Working toward equity and inclusion is something every instructor should be doing already, implicitly,”


Washington said.


It’s mutual admiration, to say the least.


“I was lucky to work with them,” Washington said of his students. “They were deeply receptive to talking


about form and structure and open to reading a lot of different stuff, which isn’t always the case within a


the creative writing program, irrespective of whether it’s an M.F.A. or an undergrad creative writing program,


so it was really heartening.”


As Scholar-in-Residence for Racial Justice, Washington will also work with CAAAS as it launches a new


undergraduate minor and graduate certificate this fall. He’ll also work with the Task Force on Slavery,


Segregation and Racial Injustice on creating campus events centered around the topic of racial justice.


 


“It’s going to be a position that’s going to be pretty ripe for a lot of stuff,” Washington said. “And working


with both (CAAAS and the English department) will be helpful for setting it up for the next person who


has it, so that they can continue to expand on it and provide a tangible benefit on campus.”


The creation of this new position at Rice, Washington said, is both “an act of good faith” and a vital


response to ongoing national and global discussions of such weighty matters as civil rights, racism and


the Black Lives Matter movement.


“I think it’s important because it’s one way of showing that the university cares about creating an


inclusive environment and is open to having the conversations that could be uncomfortable,” Washington


said. “And it shows that they’re game for it, which is really big of Rice.”


“I don’t think that it is surprising in a city like Houston to have a position like this,” he said. “It feels deeply


natural, given the city’s diversity and given that we have so many folks coming from so many different


places. Working toward equity and inclusion is something every instructor should be doing already,


implicitly. But this seems like a necessary position.”


Post a Comment

0 Comments