News Americas, New York, NY, November 15, 2024: Caribbean immigrant author and lecturer, Elizabeth Nunez, whose works masterfully explored themes of family, colonialism’s lingering effects, and the immigrant experience, has died. According to the New York Times, she passed away at her home in Brooklyn. She was 80. Her son, Jason Harrell, told the Times the cause was complications from a stroke.
Dr. Nunez was celebrated for her ability to weave the complexities of identity, belonging, and history into her novels, often with sharp commentary on American academia and the New York publishing world.
Born on February 18, 1944, in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, Dr. Nunez grew up in a prominent family of Portuguese and African descent. Raised under the British colonial education system, she developed an early love for literature, devouring works by English authors like Enid Blyton and Jane Austen. This literary upbringing shaped her identity, even as she sought to move beyond the Eurocentric narratives of her childhood.
Her first novel, When Rocks Dance (1986), marked the beginning of her literary journey. Initially planning to write about a modern academic in America, she instead delved into the historical and cultural tensions of her Trinidadian heritage.
Dr. Nunez’s novels often reflected her personal journey as a Trinidadian navigating life in the United States. Beyond the Limbo Silence (1998) mirrored her own experience as a young student attending a small Catholic college in Wisconsin, where she confronted her ignorance of Caribbean history and colonialism’s harsh truths.
In Grace (2003), she portrayed the challenges of a Caribbean-born professor in Brooklyn, reflecting her own career at Medgar Evers College, where she encountered tensions with Black American colleagues.
Her critically acclaimed Prospero’s Daughter (2006) reimagined Shakespeare’s The Tempest in a Trinidadian setting, grappling with themes of xenophobia, power, and cultural clash.
Dr. Nunez earned her Ph.D. in literature from New York University and held leadership roles at Medgar Evers College, including chair of the English department and provost. She later joined Hunter College as a distinguished professor of English, retiring earlier this year.
A tireless advocate for Black literature, she co-founded the National Black Writers Conference, directing it for over a decade.
Despite her deep connection to the Caribbean, Dr. Nunez resisted being boxed in as a “Caribbean writer,” emphasizing her broader literary contributions. “I don’t mind being classified as a Caribbean writer,” she told The Miami Herald in 2006, “as long as it’s a subcategory in literary fiction.”
Nunez authored 11 novels, including Now Lila Knows (2022). Her memoir, Not for Everyday Use (2014), offered a poignant look at her upbringing and the intricate relationships within her family.
She is survived by her son, Jason Harrell; 10 siblings; and two granddaughters.
Nunez leaves behind a literary legacy that transcends borders, championing stories that resonate with the complexities of identity, history, and the human spirit.