
Dr. Newtona (Tina) Johnson
Professor
Director of Women's Studies
Member, Doctoral Faculty
Honors Faculty
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B.A., 1979, Fourah Bay College, University of Sierra Leone; M.A., 1982, Dalhousie University; M.A., 1986, Concordia University; Ph.D., 1997, Emory University. (1998)
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Office: JUB 308; Phone/Voice Mail: 898-2705
Dr. Johnson teaches courses in postcolonial literature and critical theory, contemporary British literature, the African diaspora, contemporary diasporas in the US , and women's literature (particularly Black women's writings,) among others. She has published and/or presented scholarly papers in these areas. She is former chair of the MTSU President’s Commission on the Status of Women and is currently Director of Women's Studies.
See Publications
Recent scholarly presentations
- “Gender and Nation in Literary Narratives of Migration” 6 th Annual Multi-Ethnic Studies: Europe and the Americas (MESEA) Conference. The Netherlands , June 2008.
- “Postcolonial Diasporas & the Teaching of US Multi-Ethnic Literature,” 16 th Annual British Commonwealth and Conference, Savannah , GA , February 2007.
- “Bearing Witness, Writing the Self into Postcolonial Histories,” MESEA (Multi-Ethnic Studies: Europe and the Americas ) Pamplona , Spain , May 2006.
- “The Illusion of Diasporic Elusion: Escape, Recovery and Diasporic Space,” 15 th Annual British Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies Conference, Savannah , GA , February 2006.
- “A New Belonging? Narratives of Sierra Leone Diaspora in America ,” Collegium for African American Research (CAAR), Tours , France , April 2005.
- “Memory and Healing in Edwidge Danticat's The Dew Breaker, ” Conference on Caribbean Literature and Culture, Lugano , Switzerland , April 2005.
- “The Foreign as Home: Migration and Memory in New Black Diasporic Literature,” 14 th Annual British Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies Conference, Savannah , GA February 2005