Alma Jean Billingslea Explained

Alma Jean Billingslea
Birth Place:Albany, Georgia
Discipline:African diaspora
Workplaces:Spelman College

Alma Jean Billingslea (born 1946) is an American scholar and teacher, and a veteran of the civil rights movement.

Billingslea was born in Albany, Georgia, but grew up in Orange, New Jersey, where she was one of the first African American students to desegregate the Orange public school system. From 1967 to 1971, she worked as a field staff member for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), the organization founded by Martin Luther King, Jr. She is professor emerita and co-founder of the program in African Diaspora Studies at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia.[1] She received the A.B. degree from Rutgers University, the M.A. degree from Atlanta University, and the PhD from the University of Texas at Dallas.[2]

Billingslea is the author of Crossing Borders through Folklore: African American Women's Fiction and Art (University of Missouri Press, 1999).[3] [4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Whitt, Margaret Earley. Short Stories of the Civil Rights Movement: An Anthology. 2006. U of Georgia P. 9780820327990. 156.
  2. Web site: Alma Billingslea-Brown, Ph.D.. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20151220155114/http://www.spelman.edu/academics/majors-and-programs/english/faculty/alma-billingslea-brown . 2015-12-20 . January 13, 2021.
  3. Sherman. Sarah Way. 2000. Crossing Borders through Folklore (review). American Literature. 72. 3. 655–56. 10.1215/00029831-72-3-655 . 161523048 .
  4. Sherrard. Cherene M.. Review: Conjuring the Folk Aesthetic. Novel: A Forum on Fiction. 33. 1. 1999. 150–52. 10.2307/1346039 . 1346039 .