Caryn Cossé Bell

Caryn Cossé Bell
Historian, University lecturer, Researcher
Principal country concerned : Column : Cinema/tv, History/society

Caryn Cossé Bell is associate professor of history at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. She is an internationally recognized authority on Creole New Orleans and her award-winning book, Revolution, Romanticism, and the Afro-Creole Protest Tradition in Louisiana, 1718-1868, was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. Her latest work for the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture for the African American Migration Experience chronicles Haitian immigration to Louisiana and will appear in a National Geographic publication. She has worked on documentaries for PBS, A&E, and Xavier University on A House Divided, a study of the New Orleans Civil Rights movement narrated by James Earl Jones. She is also a John E. Sawyer Fellow at Harvard University's Longfellow Institute.

Partenaires

  • Arterial network
  • Media, Sports and Entertainment Group (MSE)
  • Gens de la Caraïbe
  • Groupe 30 Afrique
  • Alliance Française VANUATU
  • PACIFIC ARTS ALLIANCE
  • FURTHER ARTS
  • Zimbabwe : Culture Fund Of Zimbabwe Trust
  • RDC : Groupe TACCEMS
  • Rwanda : Positive Production
  • Togo : Kadam Kadam
  • Niger : ONG Culture Art Humanité
  • Collectif 2004 Images
  • Africultures Burkina-Faso
  • Bénincultures / Editions Plurielles
  • Africiné
  • Afrilivres

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