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Camisha, a Black, cisgender woman with brown skin and hair styled in two-strand twists. She is smiling and wearing makeup, glasses, dangling earrings decorated with jewel-toned stones, a necklace, and a V-neck purple dress. She is in a park and there are trees behind her.

Photo by Brandon Woods.

Artists

Camisha L. Jones

She // Her // Hers

Poet

Herndon, Virginia

Camisha L. Jones is the author of Flare, a poetry chapbook published by Finishing Line Press in 2017 focused on her experiences with hearing loss and chronic pain. Her poems have been published in The New York Times, Poets.org, Button Poetry, The Deaf Poets Society, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Typo, The Quarry, and elsewhere. Other writing can be found at VIDA: Women in Literary Arts’ website and Class Lives: Stories From Across Our Economic Divide, published by ILR Press in 2014.

Jones is Franklin & Marshall College’s 2017 Lapine Poetry Fellow and one of the Loft Literary Center’s 2017 Spoken Word Immersion Fellows. She competed at the 2013 National Poetry Slam on behalf of Slam Richmond. She is a co-editor for a forthcoming anthology of disability poetry with Travis Chi Wing Lau, Naomi Ortiz, and Michael Northen.

As a facilitator, Jones has cofounded and led an annual college-level anti-bias retreat, developed and implemented a social justice book discussion series, supported youth leadership trainings, and conducted writing workshops. She has close to 30 years’ experience organizing and leading programs, gatherings, and people at nonprofits and institutions of higher education.

Since 2013, Jones has served as managing director at Split This Rock, a national nonprofit that cultivates, teaches, and celebrates poetry that bears witness to injustice and provokes social change. She has also organized the nonprofit’s biennial poetry festival, served as an editor for the “Poem of the Week” series, and worked diligently to expand the organization's commitment to accessibility and disability justice.

Donor -Disability Futures is supported by Ford Foundation and Mellon Foundation.

This artist page was last updated on: 08.20.2024