The Genius of Black People

Created by Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III, TheHub.news presents its Black History Month series celebrating the genius of Black people—stories of courage, faith and creativity forged in struggle. Inspired by ancestors like Walter Francis White, this series honors sacred memory and lifts up the divine brilliance shaping justice and resilience today.

Nnedi Okorafor is a defining force in contemporary speculative storytelling, reshaping the arts by centering African knowledge systems, science, and imagination. A Nigerian American writer born to Igbo parents, Okorafor draws from African folklore, spirituality, and futurist thinking to create worlds that feel both ancestral and boldly new. Her work has altered the trajectory of modern literature by insisting that African-centered stories belong at the forefront of global imagination.

Okorafor’s influences are deeply personal and cultural. A childhood spinal surgery and long recovery period nurtured her inner life as a storyteller, while frequent trips to Nigeria immersed her in oral traditions and mythic structures. Rather than adopting Western science-fiction conventions, she built narratives rooted in African cosmologies—where technology, spirit, gender and ecology intersect. This approach culminated in her articulation of African futurism, a framework that centers Africa itself—not the diaspora—as the origin point of speculative futures.

Her novels and novellas, including Who Fears Death, Akata Witch, and the award-winning Binti trilogy, expanded who gets to imagine the future and how. These works opened doors for new writers and challenged publishers to recognize African and African-descended voices as innovators of genre, not exceptions to it.

Okorafor’s influence extends powerfully into popular culture through her work with Marvel Comics. She authored Black Panther: Long Live the King and reimagined Shuri as a cosmic, intellectually formidable hero—blending African philosophy, advanced science, and metaphysical inquiry. Her Marvel stories brought literary depth and Africanfuturist vision to mainstream comics, influencing how Black intellect and innovation are portrayed at scale.

Across books and comics alike, Nnedi Okorafor exemplifies Black genius in the arts—proving that African imagination is not peripheral to the future, but foundational to it.

Sources: www.penguinrandomhouse.com; www.britannica.com; Photo credit: Mark Peterman

Rev. Dr. Otis Moss III is Senior Pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago and a leading voice in Black theology, social justice, and prophetic preaching. His ministry addresses mass incarceration, environmental justice, and economic inequality through faith-centered activism. A graduate of Morehouse College, Yale Divinity School, and Chicago Theological Seminary, he is the author of Blue Note Preaching in a Post-Soul World. Dr. Moss is a nationally recognized speaker and Root 100 honoree, known for engaging audiences across generations.

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