Lena Hill
Lena Michelle Hill is an American academic administrator serving as the provost of Washington and Lee University since 2021. She has worked as a professor of English and Africana studies and is an expert on Ralph Ellison. LifeHill was born to Carl and Gloria Moore.[1] She earned a B.A. in English, summa cum laude, from Howard University in 1997.[2] During her undergraduate studies, she attended Williams College in 1995 and Richmond College in Florence in 1996.[2] She completed a Ph.D. in English from Yale University in 2005.[2] Her dissertation was titled, Frames of Consciousness: Visual Culture in Zora Neale Hurston, Tennessee Williams, and Ralph Ellison.[1] Vera Kutzinski and Joseph Roach were Hill's dissertation directors.[1] She was a postdoctoral fellow from 2004 to 2006 at Duke University.[2] Hill's scholarship focuses on African American literature and she is an expert on Ralph Ellison.[3][4] In 2006, she joined the University of Iowa as an assistant professor of English and African American studies.[2] Hill and her husband, Michael D. Hill, co-authored a reference guide on Ellison and co-edited a book about African Americans at the University of Iowa.[5] She was promoted to associate professor with tenure in 2013 and served as director of undergraduate studies from 2015 to 2016.[2][5] She was senior associate to the president from 2016 to 2018 an interim chief diversity officer and associate vice president from July 2017 to May 25, 2018.[2][5] She was succeeded by interim diversity officer Melissa Shivers.[5] Hill joined Washington and Lee University on July 1, 2018, as a professor of English and Africana studies and dean of the college of arts and sciences.[6][3] In 2020, she served on the steering committee of the Gettysburg College Consortium for Faculty Diversity.[3] Washington and Lee University joined the consortium that year.[3] She was promoted to provost on July 1, 2021.[3][7] Hill succeeded interim provost Elizabeth Oliver.[8] Selected works
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