WEATHER ALERT
Remembering an icon: How did Nikki Giovanni, renowned poet and VT professor, impact you?
Read full article: Remembering an icon: How did Nikki Giovanni, renowned poet and VT professor, impact you?The community is shaken after the passing of Nikki Giovanni, an acclaimed poet, Black Arts Movement icon and esteemed Virginia Tech professor.
Nikki Giovanni, poet and well-known Virginia Tech Professor, dies at 81
Read full article: Nikki Giovanni, poet and well-known Virginia Tech Professor, dies at 81Nikki Giovanni, the acclaimed poet, Virginia Tech Professor and Black Arts movement Icon passed away at the age of 81 on Monday, she passed away peacefully with her lifelong partner, Virginia Fowler by her side.
Nikki Giovanni honored with emerita status
Read full article: Nikki Giovanni honored with emerita statusNikki Giovanni, who recently retired from her role as a professor of English at Virginia Tech, has been honored with the title of University Distinguished Professor Emerita by the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors.
The end of an era: World-renowned poet, Virginia Tech professor retires
Read full article: The end of an era: World-renowned poet, Virginia Tech professor retiresNikki Giovanni is hanging her hat up after 35 years. The world renowned poet and activist has been an icon in the Virginia Tech community as both a professor and inspiration.
Famous, local poet Nikki Giovanni reacts to Amanda Gorman’s Inauguration Day poem
Read full article: Famous, local poet Nikki Giovanni reacts to Amanda Gorman’s Inauguration Day poemBLACKSBURG, Va. – Amanda Gorman, the first-ever National Youth Poet Laureate, delivered a moving message on Wednesday during the Inauguration of President Joe Biden. “It really just choked me up,” said Nikki Giovanni about the young woman’s words. Giovanni, a world-renowned poet and a university distinguished professor at Virginia Tech, said that Gorman’s poem is what the nation needed to hear. With the world’s eyes watching, Giovanni said that Gorman delivered the poem with grace. She did wish that the late poet Gwendolyn Brooks, the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize in 1950, could have been around to hear Gorman’s poem.