Fatou Sow: Art, Poetry, and Prose

Spread the love

Fatou Sow is a creative writer, poet, and professor with Senegalese and African American roots from  Detroit, MI. Her work focuses on familial connection, self-reflection, and humanistic experiences  shared across the African diaspora. As a multi-hyphenate, she finds herself questioning the meaning  of life, from grief to love and religion to language.  

Fatou is an Adjunct Professor at Howard University in the Cathy Hughes School of  Communications Annenberg Honors Program. A world-traveler, life-learner, and communicator:  Fatou enjoys sharing stories of Black elders and seeks to understand the power of generational  confluence through storytelling, family photography, and Black history. Her writings have been  published in Vogue, The SAIS Observer, and the Passion Planner, and showcased in safe spaces like  BasBlue in Detroit, MI. Fatou earned a BA in Strategic, Legal, and Management Communications  from Howard University and an MA in International Relations with a focus on International  Economics and African Studies from Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International  Studies.