Professor
Gates is coeditor with K. Anthony Appiah of the encyclopedia
Encarta Africana published on CD-ROM by Microsoft (1999),
and in book form by Basic Civitas Books under the title Africana:
The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience
(1999). He is the author of Wonders of the African World (1999),
the book companion to the six-hour BBC/PBS television series
of the same name.
Professor
Gates is the author of several works of literary criticism,
including Figures in Black: Words, Signs and the ‘Racial’
Self (Oxford University Press, 1987); The Signifying Monkey:
A Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism (Oxford, 1988),
1989 winner of the American Book Award: and Loose Canons:
Notes on the Culture Wars (Oxford, 1992.) He has also authored
Colored People: A Memoir (Knopf, 1994), which traces his childhood
experiences in a small West Virginia town in the 1950s and
1960s; The Future of the Race (Knopf, 1996), co-authored with
Cornel West; and Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man (Random
House, 1997). Professor Gates has edited several anthologies,
including The Norton Anthology of African American Literature
(WW Norton, 1996); and The Oxford-Schomburg Library of Nineteenth
Century Black Women Writers (Oxford, 1991). In addition, Professor
Gates is coeditor of Transition magazine. An influential cultural
critic, Professor Gates’ publications include a 1994
cover story for Time magazine on the new black Renaissance
in art, as well as numerous articles for The New Yorker.
Professor
Gates earned his MA and Ph.D. in English Literature from Clare
College at the University of Cambridge. He received a BA summa
cum laude from Yale University in 1973 in English Language
and Literature. Before joining the faculty of Harvard in 1991,
he taught at Yale, Cornell, and Duke Universities. His honors
and grants include a MacArthur Foundation “genius grant”
(1981), the George Polk Award for Social Commentary (1993),
Chicago Tribune Heartland Award (1994), the Golden Plate Achievement
Award (1995), Time magazine’s “25 Most Influential
Americans” list (1997), a National Humanities Medal
(1998), and election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters
(1999).