Namwali Serpell

The professor of English is also a novelist and a critic.

Namwali Serpell

Photograph by Liz Hafalia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

Namwali Serpell is professor of English and an award-winning novelist, essayist, and critic. Although born in Zambia, her economist mother’s home country, her earliest memory, at age two, is of seeing horses for the first time on a misty day in her father’s native England. In Zambia, to which her family returned two and half years later, her first memory is of her fifth birthday party, when her father, a psychologist, threw a snake onto the roof to dispose of it without frightening the other children. At nine, the family moved again, to Baltimore. She recalls being startled to see deer along the highway from the airport—in Zambia, large animals are confined to game parks. She considers each country home, her experiences “syncretic.” After four years at Yale, where she sang a cappella, then six at Harvard as a doctoral student, Serpell in 2008 began teaching at UC Berkeley. She became a U.S. citizen in 2017, when she discovered that by protesting President Donald Trump’s travel ban (which singled out Muslim countries) at the San Francisco airport (federal land), she risked deportation. “Not being able to protest,” she says, “was too much.” In October 2020, when her first novel, The Old Drift, won the Arthur C. Clarke Award for science fiction, that news arrived in the same hour as reports that the police officers who shot Breonna Taylor in her own home wouldn’t be charged with murder. Serpell donated her prize money to provide bail for protesters. Her logic bridged fiction and reality: the novel, which includes narration by an Aeneid-inspired choir of mosquitoes, is an ambitious, unflinching, and deeply allusive “philosophy of error” that she says speaks to this moment in history. Says Serpell, “I’m attuned to justice.”

Read more articles by Jonathan Shaw

You might also like

Readers Respond to Our ‘Grade Inflation’ Survey

A sampling of thoughts about the many A’s at Harvard

Harvard Faculty Debate Plan to Cap A Grades

At a lively meeting, faculty members weighed a grade inflation plan that most agreed is imperfect.

Harvard Graduates Can Donate Directly to Their Houses on Housing Day

A new initiative encourages small-dollar donations for improving student life.

Most popular

Lady Godiva: The Naked Truth

Staggering beneath the yoke of oppressive taxes, the medieval residents of Coventry, England, pleaded in vain for relief. Ironically...

Harvard’s Class of 2029 Reflects Shifts in Racial Makeup After Affirmative Action Ends

International students continue to enroll amid political uncertainty; mandatory SATs lead to a drop in applications.

Harvard Class of 2028 Demographics Disclosed

A decline in African American enrollment after the Supreme Court ruling

Explore More From Current Issue

Firefighters battling flames at a red building, surrounded by smoke and onlookers.

Yesterday’s News

How a book on fighting the “Devill World” survived Harvard’s historic fire.

Purple violet flower with vibrant petals surrounded by green foliage.

Bees and Flowers Are Falling Out of Sync

Scientists are revisiting an old way of thinking about extinction.

A black primate hanging lazily on a branch in a lush green forest.

What Bonobos Teach Us About Female Power and Cooperation

A Harvard scientist expands our understanding of our closest living relatives.