Forms of Mobility: Genre, Language, and Media in African Literary Cultures ‒ Stephanie Bosch Santana

Speaker: Stephanie Bosch Santana
Introduced by: Moradewun Adejunmobi

Saturday, September 27, 2025 at 11:00 AM EST/ London, 4:00 PM/ Lagos, 4:00 PM/ Johannesburg, 5:00 PM/ Nairobi, 6:00 PM

On the ALA YouTube Channel

Stephanie Bosch Santana is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at UCLA. Her first monograph, Forms of Mobility: Genre, Language, and Media in African Literary Cultures was published by Northwestern University Press in 2024. Based on an unstudied archive of texts in English and Chichewa/Nyanja from Malawi, South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Zambia, Forms of Mobility proposes alternate categories of fiction—migrant forms, township tales, weekend stories, pan African time machines, and digital diaries—through which to examine how writers envisaged the region’s changing literary and political terrains. By reading these forms “in motion,” as they travel across space, time, genre, language, and between publications and platforms, this study limns multiple centers of literary influence and relation across the southern African and Black diasporas and reveals forms of literary mobility and space-making that are occluded by current models of world literature. 

Bosch Santana is the co-editor of Digital Africas, a special issue of Postcolonial Text (2020), and has contributed essays on digital and print literatures and reading cultures to the Routledge Handbook of African Literature (2019) and A Companion to African Literatures (Wiley-Blackwell, 2021). From 2006-2008, she assisted with South Africa’s BTA/Anglo Platinum short story competition and is co-founder of the Malawian Girls' Literary Competition, which celebrates young women’s writing in English and Chichewa.