For individual consultation or group workshops,
Using my writing guide, I work with scholars in the humanities, social sciences, STEM, and authors in areas of race and gender studies. I work with select projects in creative nonfiction as well as memoir or autobiography. Schedule a 15 minute consultation to see if my expertise can help with your academic book project.
Thirty minute lecture on academic book publishing followed by 30 minute Q & A.
(ONLINE ONLY)
Panel participation, hosted by university centers for faculty fellows. Discussion with 2-3 other senior faculty to offer detailed feedback about completed book draft.
(ONLINE ONLY)
One-hour lecture on academic book publishing, followed by one-hour Q & A.
(ONLINE OR IN PERSON)
4 HOURS
(1 day)
One-hour lecture on academic writing and book publishing.
One-hour Q & A.
Two-hour discussion about publishing work plans. (Limit 10 people)
8 HOURS
(2 DAYS @ 4 HOURS EACH)
Day one: one-hour lecture on academic book publishing followed by two-hour Q & A. One-hour discussion about publishing work plans.
Day two: one-hour discussion about follow up questions. Three-hour round robin discussion about individual publishing work plans. (Limit 10 people)
This 60-minute webinar recording is for scholars who want to learn how to write in ways that center mental health and wellness. Stephanie Evans, author of Black Feminist Writing and Laura Portwood-Stacer of Manuscript Works share insights about academic writing and publishing. Professor Evans speaks from the perspective of an experienced author and university press series editor.
This discussion highlights how best to use resources like Black Feminist Writing and Portwood-Stacer’s Book Proposal Book to write in ways that build critical community.
Recorded Webinar YouTube
Manuscript Works Resources manuscriptworks.com
I am in conversation with professional academic editors, including members of the Editorial Freelancers Association (EFA). In February 2025 the academic editing book club, run by the Academic Editing Special Interest Group, a collaboration of Editors Canada and the EFA, will host a 60-minute Q&A about Black Feminist Writing.
In addition to publishing books with University Press of Florida, SUNY Press, and Wayne State University Press, I have reviewed books and served on faculty review panels for more than a dozen university and trade presses.
I have served as a volume editor and series editor and I remain in conversation with several editors who are members of the Association of University Presses. My work with various types of editors (acquisitions, copy, publishing, journal, and developmental) allows me to offer insight into the various stages of writing. Publishing with a range of institutions has shown me the type of support authors need at each stage to develop a complete, clear, and clean manuscript.
"Black Feminist Writing: A Practical Guide to Publishing Academic Books encourages scholars to write books that will change the world — while also prioritizing joy, wellness and rigor in the writing process. ... Combining portraits from Evans’ research in Black women’s intellectual history with lessons drawn from her experiences as a faculty member, department chair and academic author, each chapter meditates on a different facet of academic writing practice."
~ Kate Vacek, Editorial Freelancers Association (EFA), Academic Editing Book Club
Learn how to write in ways that center mental health and wellness.
Learn about academic publishing from an experienced author and university press (UP) series editor.
I am a writing consultant specializing in one-on-one developmental editing and one-time workshops for academic faculty who are interested in publishing books for scholarly presses. I do not work with individual graduate students (outside of my own) for developmental editing, but do offer one-time group workshops for doctoral students who form small dissertation writing groups (4-10 people). I am also available for consultation with authors writing memoir or autobiography.
I do not do individual coaching, ghost writing, copy editing, or fiction. For these and other professional services, visit my resource website: https://blackfeministwriting.net/resources
BLACK FEMINIST WRITING WORK
Sankofa means carrying a tradition forward. I started this regenerative writing and workshop project as the result of a series of dialogues with colleagues in race and gender studies. Within one year, between February 2022 and 2023, a dozen universities and university presses invited me to review twelve book drafts in Black women's studies. Topics ranged from intellectual and educational history to biography and wellness traditions—all within the scope of my research. In addition to reviewing this large body of new research, I worked as a thesis and dissertation advisor, provided informal periodic mentoring for a few new faculty authors, reviewed several full professor tenure and promotion dossiers, and assessed multiple submissions in my role as a series editor for SUNY Press.
During this time, I was invited by three faculty fellowship writing programs to serve on book manuscript review panels (University of Notre Dame, Pennsylvania State University, and Syracuse University) in addition to a request from Spain to sit on a dissertation committee (which I could not accommodate due to scheduling).
After two decades of writing, publishing, and reviewing, I hoped that my intensive year of peer review and developmental editing with authors eased their pathway to publication in some small way. That hope was the motivation for me to write the book BLACK FEMINIST WRITING: A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO PUBLSIHING ACADEMIC BOOKS.
Book manuscript workshops are ideal for university writing centers, offices for research or faculty development, faculty retreats, book prize or fellowship programs, archive/research centers, staff at scholarly presses, and foundation programs. Writing/publishing workshops or lectures can be tailored for informal faculty writing groups as well as centers, departments, or colleges that host events for faculty development.
Workshops can be tailored for specific groups, including:
· Faculty in race & gender studies
· Humanities, social sciences, STEM or other disciplinary areas
· Colleges of arts & sciences, college of the arts or other divisions
· Department chairs, deans, and other administrators
· Non-tenure track faculty
· New faculty (dissertation to book projects)
· Tenured faculty working on promotion to full professor
· Fellowship awardees
Completing a book project requires that you set goals, clearly outline tasks, and set realistic deadlines. In Black Feminist Writing, I share how writing is an everyday practice to reach your writing goals.
In writing workshops I highlight lessons learned from authoring four books and co-editing five. I focus on ways to RISE above stress:
Regenerative writing means to LEARN, CREATE, AND TEACH writing in ways that center mental health and wellness.
I first began talking about Black women's writing as regenerative in 2013 and have published about regenerative writing in Black Passports (2014) and Black Women's Mental Health (2017). I have sustained a research interest in Black women's intellectual history for over two decades. My research is rooted in educational history but has evolved to include mental health and wellness as a way to address stress caused by being department chair. I have published four single-authored books and co-edited five books with university presses. In addition to extensive experience as a faculty advisor and manuscript reviewer, I am editor of the Black Women's Wellness book series at SUNY Press.
Sankofa, a Ghanaian term meaning "go back and get it," is a way to connect the past and present to the future. The term "regeneration" is a reference to Anna Julia Cooper that also reflects the principals embedded in Sankofa. Regeneration is the guiding principle that I have centered during my writing processes--a way to change and transform higher education. Thus, Sankofa writing allows us to study intellectual history and apply wisdom learned from elders in ways that benefit a new generation of scholars.
Anna Julia Cooper earned her PhD from the Sorbonne in 1925 and was an educator for over 70 years. I credit Dr. Cooper's notion of regeneration as the inspiration that shapes my "Sankofa" conceptualization of academic writing.
Cooper's essay, “Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and Progress of a Race” was published in her book of essays A Voice from the South, By a Black Woman of the South (1892). She argues that those who wish to advance society must look backward for wisdom (retrospection), look inward for strength (introspection), and look forward for hope and faith (prospection).
Anna Julia Cooper's concept of regeneration places us in a continuum with both ancestors and descendants. Like Sankofa, with regeneration, we go back and get wisdom in order to carry it forward to next generations.
University Works-in-Progress Book Workshops & Webinars
University of Notre Dame. Works-in-Progress Manuscript Review. Panelist. May 2022.
Georgia State University. Humanities Research Center Faculty Fellows. Participant. May 2022-2023.
Vanderbilt University. Callie House Works-in-Progress Manuscript Retreat. Participant. July 2022.
Manuscript Works, Developmental Editing Webinar. Attendee (recorded). December 2022.
Pennsylvania State University. Works-in-Progress Manuscript Review. Panelist. January 2023.
Syracuse University. Works-in-Progress Manuscript Review panelist. July 2023.
Manuscript Reviews for Presses & Published Reviews
Yale University Press. December 2024.
New York University Press. February 2023.
University of Rochester Press. February 2023.
University Press of Florida. Ongoing. Black Women’s Wellness book series editor. February 2019.
University of Mississippi Press. August 2022.
University Press of Florida. February 2022.
University of Illinois Press. September 2021.
Palimpsest: A Journal on Women, Gender, and the Black International. June 2020.
Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy. November 2015.
University of Illinois Press. January 2011.
SAGE Press. March 2009.
Alta Mira Press. June 2008.
Signs Journal. June 2008.
Review of Educational Research Journal. June 2008.
Oxford University Press. December 2007
Praeger Press. November 2007.
Black Women, Gender and Families. July 2007.
American Educational Review. June 2007.
Florida Historical Quarterly. October 2006.
Historical Higher Education in the South, Press of Florida. August 2006.
Association of Black Women Historians (ABWH) Leticia Woods Book or Article Prize Committee. 2004-06.
American Historical Association Wesley-Logan Book Prize, Committee member. 2004-05.
Florida Humanities Council Grant Program Evaluation. "Hidden Sagas: Stories of Florida's African American Experiences." Tallahassee, FL. March 26, 2005.
Reviewed one article for Sex Roles: A Journal of Research 2004.
Reviewed one special edition of the Journal of Social Issues: A Journal of The Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. 2001.
The African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS)
The Pauli Murray Center
PROUD SHOES First Book Fellowship
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