• Skip to Content
  • Skip to Main Navigation
  • Skip to Search

Indiana University Indiana University IU

Open Search
  • About
  • People
    • Organizers
    • Collaborators
    • Presenters
    • Discussants and Moderators
    • Postdoctoral Fellow
    • Dissertation Fellows
    • Performers
  • Exhibitions
    • Lilly Library Exhibition
      • Additional Resources
    • Performances by Javier Cardona Otero
    • Process Gallery
    • Archive: Lilly Library Exhibition
  • Dialogues, Workshops & Lectures
    • Dialogues
      • Fall: Dialogue 1
      • Spring: Dialogue 2
    • Workshops
      • Fall: Workshop 1
      • Spring: Workshop 2
    • Lectures
      • Fall: Dr. Jeff Eden
      • Spring: Dr. Ana Lucia Araujo
  • Reading Group
    • Fall Schedule & Readings
    • Spring Schedule & Readings
  • Contact

Global Slaveries, Fugitivity, and the Afterlives of Unfreedom

  • Home
  • About
  • People
    • Organizers
    • Collaborators
    • Presenters
    • Discussants and Moderators
    • Postdoctoral Fellow
    • Dissertation Fellows
    • Performers
  • Exhibitions
    • Lilly Library Exhibition
    • Performances by Javier Cardona Otero
    • Process Gallery
    • Archive: Lilly Library Exhibition
  • Dialogues, Workshops & Lectures
    • Dialogues
    • Workshops
    • Lectures
  • Reading Group
    • Fall Schedule & Readings
    • Spring Schedule & Readings
  • Search
  • Contact
  • Home
  • People
  • Discussants and Moderators
  • Maria Hamilton Abegunde

Maria Hamilton Abegunde

Assistant Professor

Department:
African American and African Diaspora Studies
Campus:
IU Bloomington
Maria Hamilton Abegunde is a Memory Keeper, poet, ancestral priest in the Yoruba Orisa tradition, healing facilitator, doula, and a Reiki Master. Her research and creative work are grounded in contemplative and ritual practices and respectfully approach the Earth and human bodies as sites of memory, and always with the understanding that memory never dies, is subversive, and can be recovered to transform transgenerational trauma and pain into peace and power. She is the inaugural recipient of the Ph.D. in African American and African Diaspora Studies at Indiana University. Dr. Abegunde is the author of three poetry chapbooks, including Wishful Thinking about the 2001 disappearance of Tionda and Diamond Bradley in Chicago. Anthologized poems are included in Gathering Ground, Beyond the Frontier: African American Poetry for the 21st Century, and Catch the Fire. Her poetry has also been published in Tupelo Quarterly, The Massachusetts Review, Cogzine, and Rhino.
  • Organizers
  • Collaborators
  • Presenters
  • Discussants and Moderators
  • Postdoctoral Fellow
  • Dissertation Fellows
  • Performers

Indiana University

Accessibility | College Scorecard | Privacy Notice | Copyright © 2025 The Trustees of Indiana University