Black Women’s Literature and Jazz: Tracing the History of Black Feminism
Exhibition Overview
Art has been a powerful medium for Black women breaking silence, illuminating the soul within, and defining themselves in their own terms.
This exhibition presents literary works and jazz records created by Black women in the United States and beyond, offering an opportunity to trace the intellectual history of Black feminism. Visitors are invited to engage with voices that resonate through novels, poetry, songs, and musical compositions.
(Click the image to enlarge.Download the flyer here)
- November 13,2025 – April 19,2026
- Opening hours: 10:00-17:00
- Closed: Wednesdays and other days (Please see website for details)
- The Waseda International House of Literature, 2F Exhibition Room
- Organized by The Waseda International House of Literature
Selected Examples of Featured Literary and Musical Works:
- Literary works by African American women writers that have been translated into Japanese—including Zora Neale Hurston, Toni Morrison, and Alice Walker—as well as by Black women writers from other parts of the world
- Records by women blues and jazz singers, including Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday, and pioneering instrumentalists such as Mary Lou Williams, Esperanza Spalding and Terri Lyne Carrington: artists who transcend the boundaries of both genre and gender
