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Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature, University of South Carolina

Alyssa Collins is an Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature and African American Studies at the University of South Carolina.

She is the recipient of a yearlong Octavia E. Butler Fellowship for the study of the renowned science fiction writer. Collins’ project is titled “Cellular Blackness: Octavia E. Butler’s Posthuman Ontologies.” Her project treats Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy of novels as a central touchstone and explores Butler’s interest in genetics, evolution, and cellularity. Collins uses “cellularity” to refer to Butler’s engagement with the story of Henrietta Lacks, a Black woman whose cancer cells were harvested without consent in 1951 for medical research and became known as the HeLa immortal cell line, and Butler’s representation of cellular replication as a mode of Black feminist survival.

Experience

  • –present
    Assistant Professor of English Language and Literature, University of South Carolina