Descriptive Summary
Acquisition Information
Preferred Citation
Biography
Publication Rights
Restrictions
Scope and Content of Collection
Descriptive Summary
Languages:
English
Contributing Institution:
Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego
9500 Gilman Drive
La Jolla 92093-0175
Title: Sherley Anne Williams Papers
Identifier/Call Number: MSS 0493
Physical Description:
6.8 Linear feet
(17 archives boxes and 1 oversize folder)
Date (inclusive): 1970-1999
Abstract: Papers of Sherley Anne Williams, distinguished novelist, poet, playwright, and professor in the Department of Literature at
the University of California, San Diego, where she taught creative writing and African-American literature.
Acquisition Information
Acquired 1999.
Preferred Citation
Sherley Anne Williams Papers, MSS 493. Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego.
Biography
Williams was born in Bakersfield, California in 1944. The daughter of migrant farm workers, her family picked cotton and fruit
in the San Joaquin Valley. When she was eight years old, her father died of tuberculosis and left the family destitute. While
attending high school at Thomas Alva Edison High in Fresno, Williams realized she had a passion for language and writing.
She graduated in 1962 and earned a Bachelor of Arts in English at California State University, Fresno in 1966. She later attended
Fisk and Howard Universities, and was accepted at Brown University where she received her Master's degree in American Literature
in 1972.
In 1973 Williams joined the University of California, San Diego as the first African-American woman hired in the Literature
Department. She became a tenured professor in 1975 and would later serve as the chair of the department from 1977 to 1980.
In addition to her 26-year teaching career at University of California, San Diego, Williams traveled to Ghana as a Senior
Fulbright Lecturer in 1984 and had visiting professorships at the University of Southern California, Cornell University, Stanford
University and Sweet Briar College. In 1987 Williams was named the Distinguished Professor of the Year by the UC San Diego
Alumni Association.
Williams' many acclaimed writings include her first published work, a non-fiction book
Give Birth to Brightness: A Thematic Study in Neo-Black Literature (1972); her first collection of poetry,
The Peacock Poems, published in 1975 which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and a National Book Award; her second collection,
Some One Sweet Angel Chile, published in 1982 was adapted into an Emmy Award winning television performance. Her most celebrated work,
Dessa Rose published in 1986, a historical novel about a female slave and the white plantation mistress who saves her from death, was
a
New York Times Notable Book and was also adapted into a screenplay. Her two children's books,
Working Cotton (1992), based on her own childhood was a Caldecott Honor Book and won the Coretta Scott King Book Award, and
Girls Together (1999), which was her last published book.
In addition to her published works, her full-length one-woman play,
Letters from a New England Negro was performed at the National Black Theatre Festival in 1991 and the Chicago International Theatre Festival in 1992. Williams
also served as the advisory editor for the
Langston Hughes Review from 1982 to 1992, and
Callaloo from 1984 to 1992.
In an interview with the publication
Black Women Writers, Williams said, "Writing for me is really a process of saying, 'Here, read this.' It reinforces the fact that I'm in touch
with somebody other than my own mind... I always wrote with the idea of being published not to just slip it away in a shoebox
somewhere. I do believe that writing is about communication."
Williams passed away July 6, 1999 and is survived by one son.
Publication Rights
Publications rights are held by the creator of the collection.
Restrictions
The recordings in the collection are restricted. Researchers must request user copies be produced.
Scope and Content of Collection
Papers of Sherley Anne Williams, prominent novelist, poet, playwright, and distinguished professor in the Department of Literature
at the University of California, San Diego where she taught creative writing and African-American literature. Her work was
a significant contribution to the African-American literary world and examined African-American folk culture. The collection
contains manuscript drafts of her writing, transcripts of her readings, correspondence, teaching materials, articles about
her work, publicity ephemera and a small selection of video recordings.
Arranged in ten series: 1) CORRESPONDENCE, 2) WRITINGS, 3) OTHER WRITINGS, 4) REVIEWS, 5) INTERVIEWS & SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS,
6) TEACHING MATERIALS, 7) BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIALS 8) EVENTS, 9) MISCELLANEOUS NOTES, and 10) VIDEO RECORDINGS.
Subjects and Indexing Terms
American literature -- African American authors
African Americans in literature
Williams, Sherley Anne, 1944-1999 -- Archives