Sci-Fi, Afrofuturism Expert, Author Named Newest University Professor
Syracuse University鈥檚 newest University Professor takes a 鈥淩enaissance Man鈥 approach to scholarship. , an expert in the field of 20th-century literature, science fiction and Afrofuturism, says his work is informed by everything from his personal experiences as a child in Buffalo, New York, to 18th- and 19th-century African American poets and writers, to contemporary filmmakers, musicians and artists.
He is internationally known for his significant contributions to the field of Afrofuturism鈥攁n artistic and cultural movement that blends science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction and speculative fiction. Afrofuturist works feature Black characters and communities making technical and societal advancements and use futuristic themes and elements of Black history and culture to examine and critique the past, present and future. The term comes from cultural essayist Mark Dery鈥檚 1993 interviews with Black scholars in 鈥,鈥 published in the South Atlantic Quarterly. The contemporary movies 鈥淏lack Panther鈥 and 鈥淕et Out鈥 are Afrofuturist examples, Lavender says. 鈥淏ut there is no set definition. You know it when you see it.鈥
Lavender鈥檚 work challenges the view of Afrofuturism as a contemporary movement tied to modern technology and science fiction. He says it has existed for centuries in Black literature, as far back as the early 18th-century works of writer and abolitionist whose works contain science-fictional language in their exploration of Black alienation, estrangement and dislocation.
He uses an approach he calls 鈥渇uture past鈥濃攅xpressing the idea of a future event from a past viewpoint鈥攖o examine 鈥渟cience fictional Blackness,鈥 a concept that explores how Black identity, culture and history intersect with speculative futures, alternate realities and imaginative technologies.
鈥淪cience fiction forecasts, if not anticipates, the potential consequences of such a happening and how we can prevent or survive it by thinking through the ramifications of such a future, derived from the past,鈥 Lavender says. 鈥淪cience fiction is always in dialogue with the present in which it is written. You can play out聽these kinds of thought experiments with race, gender, sexuality, religion, ethnicity, technology and so on.鈥
Lavender has authored several books and numerous articles. His books include the notable 鈥溾 (2019), 鈥溾 (co-edited, 2020) and 鈥溾 (co-edited, 2023). His newest book, 鈥,鈥 is due out in June 2026. He also serves as an editor for , an academic journal covering speculative fiction.
While he finishes his new book, Lavender plans to teach a spring semester class on race in science fiction and is working with of the University of Liverpool on another book, 鈥淪urvival Mode: Anticipating Social Problems through Science Fiction.鈥澛燞e is also exploring the at the . Williams, a Syracuse University graduate, is a former journalist, author and teacher who wrote about his experiences as a Black man in America. Lavender also hopes to create a science fiction working group with the .
As University Professor, Lavender has a tenured appointment in the and is an affiliate faculty member in the .