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Marcyliena Morgan

Speaker; Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences, Professor of African and African American Studies; Executive Director, HipHop Archive and Research Institute, Harvard University

Marcyliena Morgan is the Ernest E. Monrad Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University and Founding Director of The Hiphop Archive and Research Institute (HARI) at the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research. She earned both her B.A. and her M.A. degrees at the University of Illinois in Chicago. She obtained an additional M.A. in linguistics at the University of Essex, England and her PhD through the Graduate School of Education at the University of Pennsylvania. She has written extensively on language and identity, education, linguistic philosophy, gender, feminism and sexuality and hiphop culture.  

She is the author of many works that focus on youth, gender, racism, language, culture, philosophy, identity, sociolinguistics, discourse and interaction. These include the Oxford Handbook of Language and Race (2020) publication “We Don’t Play: Black Women’s Linguistic Authority Across Race, Class, and Gender,” the Daedulus (2011) publication “Hiphop and the Global Imprint of a Black Cultural Form” (with Dionne Bennett), “The World is Yours: The Globalization of Hiphop Language” (2016), and her manuscripts: Language, Discourse and Power in African American Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2002), The Real Hiphop - Battling for Knowledge, Power, and Respect in the Underground (Duke University Press, 2008), Speech Communities (Cambridge University Press, 2014), and more.