Kameisha Jerae Hodge is an African-American writer from Washington, D.C. Rising to prominence in 2007, her activity in the literary and media communities became promising. She became locally recognized and continued writing - delving mostly into journalism and creative writing. Yolonda Coleman discovered Hodge's talents in 2005 and placed her as the Editor-In-Chief for Friendship Collegiate Academy Public Charter School's Knight Vision Newspaper where, from there, her work appeared in national media including MTV, NPR, and Georgetown Journal of Law & Modern Critical Race Perspectives, just to name a few. In 2010, Kameisha's first collection of poetry, Atlas of Consciousness, was published. Four year later her second collection, Double Consciousness, topped Amazon's charts as a #1 Bestseller on Kindle. As of now, Kameisha is working on her newest book Unconsciousness which was set to be released in November 2015.
Biography
Kameisha is the first-born child to an eighteen-year-old couple who had just graduated from District of Columbiapublic high schools. Their names are Sabrina Hodge and Aron Cunningham. While her father was inactive in her life, it did not seem to bother her that her mother single-handedly raised her and two of her siblings, but it did bother her that her father took a minimal role in her life, and the lives of a few of the older children that Aron helped conceive. Living in Washington, D.C. up until the eighth grade, Kameisha moved with her fraternal grandparents and sister, where she became a volunteer for the Columbia Park / Kentland Community Center. Moving back with her mother a year later, she signed up with the Department of Employment Services' Youth Employment Program and worked at the Office of the Attorney General as a File Clerk, with Friendship Collegiate Academy Public Charter School as an Advanced Placement Literature and Composition Intern, and finally as an Editor and Reporter for Rated-T Magazine. While at Lafayette, Hodge has been dedicated to youth advocacy by working at the DC Public Library as a journalism instructor, and volunteer reading buddy for 6- to 10-year-olds for the Book Buddies program. She also had been skilled enough to work at MTV in the department that catered specifically to shows on the N network. She also was the founder and president of Lafayette College's Precision Step Team, first president of the African and Caribbean Interest Floor on the executive boards for the Association of Black Collegians, W.O.R.D.S., and a member of NIA. She also had co-hosted a show with DJ Spyda Da Don on the college's radio station, WJRH 104.9, and worked as a student employee. Because of her drive and passion for creating an environment that catered to the Arts, passion for writing, and Black solidarity, Hodge was featured on Lafayette College's webpage several times, in addition to their YouTube channel, and McDonough Network Publications.