Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf

Interim Co-CEO and Chief Program Officer, Literary Programming

Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf joined PEN America in 2015 and currently serves as the chief program officer of Literary Programming. Beginning in Nov 2024, she is also serving as interim co-CEO of PEN America. She oversees curation, production, audience building, and strategy for a range of programs and initiatives honoring literary excellence, lifting writers whose voices need to be heard, and curating public programs featuring American and international authors and artists. Formerly, as the manager of public programs at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, The New York Public Library, she produced a year-round schedule of panel discussions, performances, film screening, and symposia spanning the history and culture of the global Black experience. She oversaw audience development, public engagement strategies, and cultural community partnerships. She launched the Center’s innovative digital programming strategy with groundbreaking conversations on contemporary social justice issues with leading edge writers, artists, and scholars. She held prior appointments at Justice and Sustainability Associates, Washington, and Bates College, Maine. She holds an MA in Social Sciences from the University of Chicago and an MA in English Civilization from the University of the French West Indies.


Articles by Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf

Organizational
Friday March 14

Reaffirming Commitment to Writers & Announcing 2025 Literary Events

We come together because we believe writers and literature can play a critical role in upholding truth, challenging oppression, inspiring action, and driving social change.

U.S. Free Expression
Wednesday January 29

The Word Police: Making a Stand for Truth

It’s no exaggeration to call President Donald Trump’s actions in his first week in office Orwellian. In just the first few days of the Trump administration, the White House issued a torrent of executive orders that engaged in doublespeak–paying lip service to free speech but in fact enacting a full frontal assault against it. An executive order on “restoring freedom of speech and ending federal censorship” was less about restoring free speech than about giving free rein to disinformation on social media.