Dr. Kiana T. Murphy is a scholar-artist whose work lies at the intersection of Black Studies, Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Black Girlhood Studies, Archive Studies, and Visual Culture. Her research broadly examines the significance of the speculative aesethetic to African American literary and cultural production in the 20th and 21st centuries. She is currently working on her first project "Speculative Black Girl Ethics: Reading Practices, Visual Culture, and the Urgency of the Present,” explores how 20th and 21st century Black women writers and artists, such as Toni Morrison, Gloria Naylor, Jaqueline Woodson, Deborah Roberts, and Eve L. Ewing, speculatively re-narrate girlhood. This interdiciplinary project examines various mediums such as novels, film, music, poetry, comics, graphic novels, and archival materials to illustrate the ways Black girls generate new ethical ways of reading cultural forms, and also complicate our understandings of care, relation, resistance, intimacy, friendship, and Black futures. Building on recent work in law, education, and social sciences that examines how Black girls are criminalized in school settings, this project focuses on the practices, dreams, and aspirations of Black girls that are misread as delinquent, and yet paradoxically makes room for alternative modes of Black survival. In these texts, Black women artists illustrate how centering the Black girl is key to imagining and creating intersectionally capacious Black worlds.
Her creative work, including short fiction and poetry, examines the effects of gentrification in Washington, D.C. on Black children’s imaginations. Her work is published or forthcoming in The Black Scholar, American Studies Quarterly, University of Mississippi Press, Call + Response Journal, and elsewhere.
For 2018-2021, Murphy proudly served as the co-organizer of the Black Cultural Studies Collective, a Black studies working and reading group based in Philadelphia. She also worked as an assistant curator for the Joanna Banks Collection and Exhibit in February 2020 at UPenn’s Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books, and Manuscripts, which included Black women’s fiction and poetry, periodicals, cookbooks, and children’s books published in the late 20th century.
She is also proud alumnae of the Posse Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Millennium Foundation, and the Ronald E. McNair Scholars programs.