Associate Professor of English
University of California - Berkeley

Nadia Ellis is Associate Professor of English at the University of California, Berkeley. She researches the trajectories of literary and expressive cultures from the Caribbean to Britain to the United States and she is most intellectually at home at various intersections: between the diasporic and the queer; imperial identification and colonial resistance; performance and theory; migrancy and domesticity. She teaches classes on postcolonial literature and the city, black diasporic culture, queer theory, and US immigrant literature.

Her book, Territories of the Soul: Queered Belonging in the Black Diaspora (Duke, 2015), explores structures of black belonging at the intersection of queer utopianism and diasporic aesthetics of desire, disavowal, and elusiveness. Published and forthcoming essays are on such topics as sexuality and the archive in postwar London, electronic musics and political disaster in Kingston and New Orleans, and performance cultures in contemporary and Emancipation-era Jamaica. She is at work on a new book project about diasporic cities.

All Articles by Nadia Ellis