Faculty

Kim Pearson, MA, Chair 2011-14

Kim Pearson is an Associate Professor of Journalism and Interactive Multimedia. Her research on computing diversity and civic engagement has garnered support from Microsoft and the National Science Foundation. Pearson teaches various courses on writing for interactive multimedia, news games and race, gender and the news. Pearson holds an MA in journalism from New York University.

Phone: 609-771-2692Email:kpearson@tcnj.edu

Winnifred Brown-Glaude, Ph. D.

Professor Brown-Glaude’s research and teaching focuses on the Anglophone Caribbean. Her book, Higgler’s in Kingston: Women’s Informal Work in Jamaica was published by Vanderbilt University Press in 2011.

Phone: 609-771-2149 Email:wbrown@tcnj.edu
 Terrence Epperson, TCNJ Social Science Librarian

Terrence Epperson, Ph.D.

Dr. Epperson is the TCNJ Social Sciences Librarian and an adjunct instructor. He holds an MS Degree in Library and Information Science from Drexel University and a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Temple University, where his dissertation topic was “To Fix a Perpetual Brand”: The Social Construction of Race in Virginia, 1675-1750. His publications include: “The Contested Commons: Archaeologies of Race, Repression and Resistance in New York City,” in Historical Archaeologies of Capitalism, edited by Mark P. Leone and Parker B. Potter, Jr., Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, The Politics of Empiricism and the Construction of Race as an Analytical Category, Transforming Anthropology 5(1&2):15-19, and Toward a Critical Ethnography of Librarian-Supported Collaborative Learning, Library Philosophy and Practice 9(1). His current research interests include the ethnographic analysis of cyberspace and collaborative learning

Phone: 609-771-3352Email: epperson@tcnj.edu
Manisha Ford-Thomas

Manisha Ford-Thomas, M.Ed

Manisha Ford-Thomas received a Bachelor’s of Arts Degree in African American Studies and a Master’s of Education Degree in Educational Administration and Supervision both from Seton Hall University. She is committed to empowering students attending  institutions of higher education and works to create agents of change in areas of leadership, critical thought, diversity, cultural competence and inclusion.  Ford-Thomas has worked professionally as an educational administrator for several organizations, after school programs, extracurricular initiatives and higher education institutions and currently works as the Complex Coordinator in the Department of Residential Education at The College of New Jersey.

Phone: 609-771-2525Email: thomasm@tcnj.edu

Christopher T. Fisher, Ph.D.

Professor Fisher teaches various classes on topics in the twentieth century, American diplomatic, and African-American history. He received his doctorate from Rutgers University’s History Department.

Phone: 609-771-2717 Email:fisherc@tcnj.edu
Dr. Trina Gipson Jones

Trina Gipson-Jones Ph.D.

Professor Gipson-Jones is an assistant professor of Nursing at The College of New Jersey and an affiliate member of its African American Studies Department.She conducts research with African American women and men in regard to the relationship between depression and HIV risk behavior. She also specializes in work related stress, work-family conflict and work-family balance.

Phone: 609-771-2591Email: gipson@tcnj.edu

James Graham, Ph. D.

Dr. James Graham is a professor in the Psychology Department and an affiliate faculty member of the African American Studies Department. He teaches graduate and undergraduate courses that focus on child development, research methods, and racial and ethnic diversity. He is the co-author of two books, Developmental Science: An Introductory Approach (Harris and Graham, 2009); and The African American Child: Development and Challenges (Harris and Graham, 2007). He is also a co-editor of Children of Incarcerated Parents: Theoretical, Developmental, and Clinical Issues (Harris, Graham, and Oliver Carpenter, 2010).

Phone: 609-771-3113Email:jgraham@tcnj.edu
Cassandra Jackson

Cassandra Jackson, Ph.D

Cassandra Jackson received her Ph.D. in English from Emory University in 2000. Her research and teaching interests are in American literature with emphasis on African-American literature. Her book Barriers Between Us: Interracial Sex in Nineteenth-Century American Literature was published by Indiana University Press in 2004. Her second book, Violence, Visual Culture, and the Black Male Body was published by Routledge in 2010.

Phone: (609) 771-2687 Email:cjackson@tcnj.edu
Dr. Marla Jaksch

Marla Jaksch, Ph.D

Dr. Marla L. Jaksch is an Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies and an affiliate faculty of African American Studies. Jaksch, a Fulbright Scholar to Tanzania in 2009-2010, received her Ph.D. in Women’s Studies and Art Education from The Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests include: transnational feminisms, gender and development, indigenous rights and grassroots organizing, arts & culture of East Africa, cultural tourism, heritage, and preservation, and global experiential-learning.

Recent publications include:
Marla Jaksch & Endsley, C. (Forthcoming 2012). “The Troubadour: K’naan, East African Hip Hop and Social Justice,” in Hip Hop(e): The Cultural Practice and Critical Pedagogy of International Hip Hop and ”Feminist Ujamaa: Reflections on the Intersections of Family, Community, and Teaching in East Africa” in Toby Jenkins [ed] Family, Community, & Higher Education, Routledge.

She has taught courses on Race and Ethnic Relations, Racism & Sexism, Race, Gender, & Visual Culture, Gender Politics of Development in East Africa, Gender & Development in Tanzania, Transnational Feminisms, and African Women’s Movements & Grassroots Organizing. She has also lead summer experiential-learning programs to East Africa for more than 6 years, including a new program at TCNJ being offered in summer 2012.

Phone: (609) 771-2722 Email: jakschm@tcnj.edu
 Prof. Lorna A. Johnson

Lorna A. Johnson, MFA

Professor Johnson is an Associate Professor of Communications Studies and award-winning filmmaker who teaches a variety of courses, including Documentary, Television Production and African Americans in Film.

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Tel. 609-771-2450
Email: johnsonl@tcnj.edu

Rev. Todd McCrary, MS.Ed.

Rev. McCrary is a staff member in the EOF program, an adjunct professor in the office of Liberal Learning, and an affiliated faculty member in African American Studies. He teaches The Evolution of African American Gospel Music.

Phone: 609-771-2719 Email: mccrary@tcnj.edu

Ann Marie Nicolosi, Ph.D

Ann Marie Nicolosi, a specialist in women’s and gender history, received her Ph.D. from Rutgers University. In addition to teaching gender history courses, she teaches courses on feminist theories, sexual politics, and GBLT studies. Her current research focuses on a comparative account of women using media in the first and second feminist waves. Dr. Nicolosi is chair of the Department of Women and Gender Studies at TCNJ.

Phone: (609) 771-2276 Email: nicolosi@tcnj.edu

Moussa Sow, Ph.D.

Dr. Sow teaches Francophone African literatures, cultures and cinemas as well as the literatures of the Black Diaspora. His research interests include Islam in the West African novel, migrating texts, Senegalese women writers, postcolonialism and African literatures.

Phone: 609-771-3152Email: sow@tcnj.edu

Piper Kendrix Williams, Ph. D

Dr. Piper Kendrix Williams is an Assistant Professor in the African American Studies and English Departments. At the College she teaches various classes on topics in 19th and 20th Century African American Literature African Diaspora Literature and Multicultural Studies. Her book, Re-presenting Segregation: Toward and Esthetics of Living Jim Crow, co-edited with Brian Norma, was published by SUNY Press in 2010.

Phone: 609-771-3113Email: williamp@tcnj.edu

Derek Westbrook, MA.

Mr. Westbrook is executive director of Academic Support Programs at TCNJ.

Academic Support Programs

The College of New Jersey

P.O. Box 7718

Ewing, NJ 08628

P) 609.771.2820

 

Keisha Blain, MA

Professor Blain is an adjunct professor in the African-Amerrican Studies department. Professor Blain teaches U.S. History, African American History, Women’s History and the African Diaspora. Her research interests include gender and Black Nationalism, and Black women’s international activities during the early twentieth century. Her articles have appeared in Women and Social Movements, 1600-2000 and JENDA: A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies.

blaink@tcnj.edu

David McAllister, Ph.D.

Professor McAllister is an adjunct professor in the African-Amerrican Studies department. He teaches History of Race Relations, among other courses.

mcallist@tcnj.edu