Shockley began as an instructor at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.[2] In 2002, she started her career as an assistant professor at Rutgers University-New Brunswick in New Jersey.[1]
Her work toured South Africa in 2007 as part of Biko 30/30, an exhibit dedicated to activist Steve Biko.[3]
She published the book Renegade Poetics: Black Aesthetics and Formal Innovation in African American Poetry in 2011.[4] The book explores the poetics of the Black Arts Movement.[4]
the new black, published in 2011 was lauded by poet Le Hinton and he also said Shockley was the "present and future of poetry."[5] In this book her poetry draws connections within our culture, for instance a poem that cites statistics and black lives through poetry.[6]
In 2017 Shockley released her book of poetry, semiautomatic. Her work includes a kind of collage style that mixes more tradition forms with quizzes or labels and compares historical figures and contemporary cultural icons with scenes of civil rights movements and atrocities of the twenty first century. The title plays with the same kind of pun referring to the gun and also her take on a cycle of contemporary reactions to violence. She dedicated this book to Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi who founded Black Lives Matter.[7]
Awards
In 2012 she was awarded The Holmes National Poetry Prize.[8][9] She was a MacDowell Colony Fellow in 2013.[10] Shockley's book, the new black, won the 2012 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award. semiautomatic was a 2017 finalist for The Believer Poetry Award and the LA Times Book Prize.[11]
^ ab"Evie Shockley." Gale Literature: Contemporary Authors, Gale, 2012. Gale Literature Resource Center, link.gale.com/apps/doc/H1000206812/LitRC?u=clic_stthomas&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=56e3ca4e. Accessed 5 Oct. 2023.