Quraysh Ali Lansana (born Ron Myles September 13, 1964, Enid, Oklahoma) is an American poet, book editor, civil rights historian, professor, and 2022 Emmy Award winner. He has authored 20 books in poetry, nonfiction and childrenâÂÂs literature. Since 2023, he has worked as an Associate Professor of English at The University of Tulsa. Lansana is co-creator and executive producer of "Focus: Black Oklahoma," a monthly radio program on the public radio station KOSU.
Born Ron Myles in Enid, Oklahoma, on September 13, 1964, he graduated Enid High School in 1982. Prior to focusing on poetry, in the 1980s he studied broadcast journalism at the University of Oklahoma. After getting a job as an assignment editor at KWTV, Lansana dropped out of college. He was fired from the station a year later for tardiness. After spending a year living in Medicine Park, Oklahoma, Lansana decided to move to Chicago in 1988. There he worked as an editor for Glencoe/McGraw-Hill, and founded Nappyhead Press.
Lansana grew up in the African Methodist Episcopal Church, but changed his name to Quraysh Ali after converting to Islam in 1993, and adopted the last name Lansana upon marriage to now ex-wife Emily Hooper in 1996. He practiced Islam until 1999, later also turning to African faiths such as Yoruba and attending Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago.
He returned to school in 1996, earning his B.A. in African American Studies at Chicago State University where Gwendolyn Brooks was his mentor. Lansana holds an M.F.A. in creative writing from New York University.
Lansana has taught at the Juilliard School, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Oklahoma City University, and was the director of the Gwendolyn Brooks Center for Black Literature and Creative Writing at Chicago State University. He previously worked as the acting director for the Center for Truth, Racial Healing and Transformation, Writer in Residence for the Center for Poets & Writers, and as a professor of Africana Studies and English at Oklahoma State University-Tulsa. Since 2023, Lansana has worked at the University of Tulsa, where he is an Applied Associate Professor of English & Creative Writing, and of Media and Communication. Since 2025, he has served as Executive Producer and Faculty Advisor for the student-run weekly live news program TUTV.
As a historian Lansana has extensively researched the 1921 Tulsa race massacre. For the centennial of the tragedy, he helped create an exhibit at Tulsa's Philbrook Museum of Art, taught workshops at OSU-Tulsa, worked with the History Channel, WYNC Studios, and KOSU to create Blindspot: Tulsa Burning podcast, and hosted the documentary Tulsa Race Massacre: 100 Years Later which broadcast on OETA. Lansana also wrote a children's book about the Greenwood District with Najah-Amatullah Hylton and illustrator Skip Hill entitled OpalâÂÂs Greenwood Oasis.
In 1999 he won the Wallace W. Douglas Distinguished Service Award and the Henry Blakely Award, was nominated for the NAACP Image Award in 2012, and was named the Chicago Black Book Fair's Poet of the Year in 2000. He also received a Tulsa Artist Fellowship to create Focus: Black Oklahoma for NPR affiliate KWGS, where he serves as Executive Producer. Focus: Black Oklahoma is a recipient of a 2022 duPont-Columbia Award, a 2022 NAACP Image Award and a 2022 Oklahoma Society of Professional Journalists Award and was a Peabody Award nominee. Lansana also received a 2022 Emmy Award, a 2022 Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters Award and a 2022 National Educational Telecommunications Association Public Media Award for his roles as host and consultant for the OETA (PBS) documentary film âÂÂTulsa Race Massacre: 100 Years Later.â Lansana is a three-time International Regional Magazine Award-winning contributing editor for Oklahoma Today magazine.