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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama department
of modern languages and classics and the UA Academy Classics Club are presenting
guest speaker Dr. Michele Ronnick of Wayne State University who will discuss “Classica
Africana: The Origins of Black Classicism,” Monday, March 15, at 5 p.m. in 340
Bidgood Hall.
Admission is free and the event is open to the public.
Ronnick has uncovered a rich body of evidence concerning African-Americans and the
study of the classics. This material covers the educational and vocational history,
as well as the creative adaptation and response found in works of art and literature.
Both areas offer many research opportunities.
This lecture will introduce the audience to a group of men and women who learned classical
languages in a time of great prejudice. Some of them, if not slaves themselves, were
the sons and daughters of slaves. With resolve they became the ‘founding
fathers and mothers’ of African-American work in philology. All those who
study language today from Swahili and French to English and Sanskrit are indebted
to these pioneers.
For more information, contact Dr. Kirk M. Summers, UA associate professor of classics
at 205/348-2503 or ksummers@ML.AS.UA.EDU.
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