Collection

National Black Writers Conference (#NBWC2024)

More than 50 Award-Winning and Best-Selling Writers Will Gather To Address The Relevancy of Black Literature, The Dangers of Book Bans, DEI Blowback, and Much More. THIS IS A PUBLIC EVENT AND ALL ARE WELCOME!

Events in this collection

No upcoming events

Follow Center for Black Literature | Medgar Evers College to never miss a moment

Here’s what you may have missed

  • Percival Everett in Conversation with E. Ethelbert Miller  #NBWC2024 primary image

    Percival Everett in Conversation with E. Ethelbert Miller #NBWC2024

    Wed, May 1, 6:30 PM EDT

    Free

  • Talkshops at the National Black Writers Conference (March 23, 2024) primary image

    Talkshops at the National Black Writers Conference (March 23, 2024)

    Sat, Mar 23, 11:00 AM

    From $0.00

  • Day 4: Edwidge Danticat, Kwame Dawes, Karen Hunter, Awards, and Much More! primary image

    Day 4: Edwidge Danticat, Kwame Dawes, Karen Hunter, Awards, and Much More!

    Sat, Mar 23, 11:00 AM

    From $0.00

Share

Organizer of National Black Writers Conference (#NBWC2024)
Founded in 2002, the mission of theCenter for Black Literatureat Medgar Evers College, CUNY (CBL) is to expand, broaden, and enrich the public’s knowledge and aesthetic appreciation of Black literature. The Center is a nationally respected resource for Black writers and the general public to study the literature of people from the African diaspora. The Center was also established to institutionalize the National Black Writers Conference (NBWC), founded by John Oliver Killens in 1986 at Medgar Evers College.To achieve its core mission, CBL partners with local high schools, Medgar Evers College, as well as with literary, community, and cultural arts organizations nationwide. With our partners, we present public and academic programs to youth, high school students, college students, and the public. Our offerings include author readings, literary workshops, writer retreats, conferences, symposia, and a biennial journal.Dr. Brenda M. Greene is the founder and executive director of the Center for Black Literature.