Sophia's research engages how Blackness and Black identity is variously translated, mobilized, and circulated by African American, African, and Afro-Arab cultural figures in North Africa and Europe in the twentieth century. She is particularly interested in how variable and contested articulations and translations of Blackness and Black identity from across the Atlantic, Sahara, and Mediterranean are imagined, lived, and debated in Anglophone, Francophone, and Arabophone cultural spheres –primarily literature, music, and African cultural festivals -before and during the Cold War and Non-Aligned era. In her current book project, Another Country: Constellations of Blackness in Afro-Arab Cultural Expression, she reads canonical texts on Blackness, pan-African, and pan-Arab identity by such figures as Claude McKay, Youssef el-Sebai, Frantz Fanon, and Shirley and David Graham Du Bois alongside heretofore untranslated or mistranslated cultural archives thatreveal the extent to which conceptions of Arabness and Blackness have long been entangled in the cultural and political constellations of the African diaspora. Read more about Sophia here.