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| Alice Walker |
Tuscaloosa, Ala. – Internationally known author Alice Walker,
winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for “The
Color Purple,” will present the opening keynote lecture for “The
Signs of Race Series: Women and Others, Racial and Gender Difference
in Anglo-American Literature and Culture” at The University
of Alabama.
Walker will speak March 17 at 7:30 p.m. in UA’s Morgan Auditorium.
Her lecture is free and open to the public. The 27th Alabama Symposium
-- The Signs of Race Series will continue March 17-19 in the Ferguson
Center Forum.
“Using historical, literary and philosophical approaches,
Walker will address how her own activism and social community have
been influenced by the power of nature, beauty and the human spirit,” said
Dr. Rhoda E. Johnson, associate professor of women’s studies. “She
will also discuss her latest novel, ‘Now is the Time to Open
Your Heart’.”
Walker is the author of seven novels and a new collection of poems.
Her books have been critically acclaimed and have been best sellers.
Her novel “The Color Purple” was made into an internationally
popular film directed by Steven Spielberg. Her books have sold
over 10 million copies and have been translated into over two dozen
languages.
The symposium will explore the complicated calculus of race, class
and gender in the work of theorists, writers, historians and critics
of Anglo-American and African-American literature.
“Original presentations from international scholars who
have published influential work on issues of race and gender will
be the focus of the symposium,” said Dr. Celia R. Daileader,
associate professor of English.
Topics will include “Race, Gender and Sexuality in the Christian
Right,” by Andrea Smith from the University of Michigan; “Writing,
Home and Difference in Gloria Naylor’s Linden Hills” by
Maxine Montgomery of Florida State University; “The Future
of Feminism” by Vron Ware of Yale University; “Englishwomen
in the Raj” by Indira Ghose of Free University of Berlin;
and “African-American Women as Leaders” by Patricia
S. Parker of the University of North Carolina.
Additional presenters include Carolyn Cooper from the University
of the West Indies, Jamaica; Trudier Harris from the University
of North Carolina; W. Lawrence Hogue from University of Houston;
and Joyce Green MacDonald from the University of Kentucky.
The symposium will also feature a poetry reading by Harryette
Mullen, winner of the Gertrude Stein Award in Innovative American
Poetry, in conjunction with the Bankhead Visiting Writers Series.
The reading will be March 18 at noon in the Ferguson Center Forum.
It is free and open to the public.
The Alabama Symposium conveners are members of the UA faculty:
Daileader, Johnson, and Dr. Amilcar Shabazz, associate professor
and director of the African-American studies program.
Sponsors of the symposium include: the Alabama Humanities Foundation,
the Bankhead Visiting Writers Series, Capstone International Center,
Ferguson Center, the Hudson Strode Program in Renaissance Studies,
the Martin Luther King, Jr. Distinguished Lecture Series, UA’s
Office of the Dean of Students, UA’s College of Arts and
Sciences, and the Women’s Resource Center.
Pre-registration for the symposium is encouraged. For a complete
schedule and a downloadable registration form, go to www.as.ua.edu/english/symposium/series.htm or
call 205/348-7950. Onsite registration begins at 8 a.m. on March
18 and 19. Fees are $20 for the general public and $5 for students.
Both Walker’s opening lecture and Harryette Mullen’s
poetry reading are free.
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