Chijioke Onah

Overview

Chijioke K. Onah is a Ph.D. candidate in the Literatures in English Department, at Cornell University. He specializes in African and African Diaspora Literature, Anglophone Postcolonial Literature, and Environmental Humanities. He earned his Bachelor’s degree in Combined English and History at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. For his Masters degree, he studied at the Goethe University of Frankfurt, with an Erasmus-funded exchange at Utrecht University, the Netherlands. Before coming to Cornell in 2020, he spent a year at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

His dissertation, which won the inaugural 2023 Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Innovation Fellowship, focuses on the politics of toxic waste disposability in Africa and the global Black diaspora. It interrogates the environmental and existential implications of toxic waste and pollutants for the various lifeforms in the ecosystem. Drawing on close and comparative analyses of contemporary African and Black diasporic cultural materials such as literary texts, films, photographs, ethnography, and the media; it employs insights from Black feminist environmental humanities and postcolonial literary criticism to read toxic sites in Africa as a contrast to the idealized progress of the high-tech economy. The project imagines new forms of living that promote a shared vision of a sustainable future for humans and non-human beings in a toxic saturated world. His research has won numerous other prizes, including the Zhu Family Fellowship from Cornell’s College of Arts and Sciences.

Chijioke’s publications have appeared in several journals such as ASAP/J, African Studies Review, African Literature Today, Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry, etc. He recently co-edited a special issue of Matatu journal on “Civic Dissent in Nigerian literature and films” (vol. 54, issue 2, 2023), and is also currently editing a special issue of the The Global South journal focused on the toxic ecologies of the Global South

Research Focus

  • African and African Diaspora Literature
  • Environmental Humanities
  • Global Black Atlantic Ecologies
  • Anglophone Postcolonial Literature
  • Trauma/Memory Studies
  • New Media Studies
  • Terrorism Studies

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