Race, Racial Justice, & Their Intersections with Art: A Conversation and Reading w/ Poet Terrance Hayes, Moderated by Po
Category: Event Calendar
Date and Time for this Past Event
- Tuesday, Sep 27, 2022 7pm - 8:15pm
Location
Hill Center at the Old Naval Hospital
921 Pennsylvania Ave SE
Details
Sponsored by National Capital Bank
In collaboration with Folger Shakespeare Library, Mosaic Theatre Company, and Hill Center’s Benjamin Drummond Emancipation Day Celebration.
Hill Center is honored to welcome MacArthur “Genius” Award recipient Terrance Hayes and Folger Shakespeare Library Poetry Programs manager Teri Ellen Cross Davis for an in-depth conversation about the intersection of racial justice and art and its power to illuminate America’s unresolved issues of race.
This program is in conjunction with Mosaic Theatre’s production of Ifa Bayeza’s epic The Till Trilogy, which will be produced this fall. The Till Trilogy shines a new light on one of the most pivotal moments in our collective American history – the murder of fourteen year-old Emmett Till in 1955 –and the ongoing fight for racial justice that it inspired. This conversation is part of The Till Trilogy Reflection Series.
About Terrance Hayes: One of the most compelling voices in American poetry, Terrance Hayes curated the collection Saying His Name: Poems on Emmett Till, which explores how Till has become a haunting, powerful figure in Black poetry – and Black public grief – through the work of 10 important poets.
Hayes is an elegant and adventurous writer with disarming humor, grace, tenderness, and brilliant turns of phrase, exploring what it means to be an artist and a Black man. He is the author of six poetry collections: American Sonnets for My Past And Future Assassin, a finalist for the National Book Award, National Book Critics Circle Award, and TS Eliot Prize; How to Be Drawn; Lighthead, winner of the 2010 National Book Award for poetry; Muscular Music, recipient of the Kate Tufts Discovery Award; Hip Logic, winner of the 2001 National Poetry Series; and Wind in a Box. His prose collection, To Float In The Space Between: Drawings and Essays in Conversation with Etheridge Knight, was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and winner of the Pegasus Award for Poetry Criticism. Hayes has received fellowships from the MacArthur Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation, and Whiting Foundation, and is a professor of English at New York University.
About Teri Ellen Cross Davis: Teri Ellen Cross Davis is the author of a more perfect Union — 2019 winner of The Journal/Charles B. Wheeler Poetry Prize — and Haint — winner of the 2017 Ohioana Book Award for Poetry. She is the recipient of the Poetry Society of America’s Robert H. Winner Memorial Prize, a Cave Canem fellow, and the O.B. Hardison Poetry Series Curator and Poetry Programs manager for the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.
We look forward to welcoming these two brilliant poets to Hill Center for what promises to be an enthralling and important discussion.
East City Bookshop will have books by Terrance Hayes and Teri Ellen Cross Davis available for sale and signing — purchase your advance copy here!
The event will be hybrid with options for in-person and virtual attendance — a Zoom link will be sent out upon purchase of ticket(s).
For in-person attendance, we require all attendees to be vaccinated against COVID-19.
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