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Barnard Professors Caryl Phillips and Serge Gavronsky Organize Conference on the Caribbean Sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, Aug. 27- Sept. 1, in Bellagio, Italy



Caryl Phillips


Serge Gavronsky

New York, NY— Barnard faculty members Caryl Phillips and Serge Gavronsky are co-directing a major conference on the Caribbean writing and culture, titled The Caribbean in New York and Paris, in Bellagio, Italy, sponsored by the Rockefeller Foundation, August 25- September 1.

The conference, initiated by Phillips who was asked to develop it by the Rockefeller Foundation, will bring together over 20 academics, writers, and cultural experts from the Caribbean, Europe and Asia to examine the rich cultural heritage, writing, and historic background of the French and English Caribbean. In addition to Phillips and Gavronsky, Elizabeth Schmidt, associate in the Barnard English Department, will attend.

"It is a bit like living in Brooklyn and wanting to know what is happening in Queens. They are a bit different it seems, but the truth is, they are the same," said Phillips, renowned author and Henry R. Luce Professor of Migration and Social Order. "The conference will examine writing and culture on both the French and English sides of the Caribbean, as well as shed light on the new wave of writers. People in one island look across another and are aware that similar things are happening, but just in a different language. The long-term goal of the conference is to develop academic programs that will teach Caribbean cultures and writing by way of including all sides and backgrounds - French, English and Spanish. This also fits into the goals of the Rockefeller Foundation’s program for the Caribbean," Phillips concluded.

The conference in Bellagio will consist of academics and writers, who will work on bridging the cultural and language gaps and develop curricula through an intensive five-day program, including morning, afternoon, and evening lectures and readings. Among the topics to be discussed are the African literary heritage, the impact of colonialism, and European ideological and literary movements and how they have influenced the Negritude movement and Harlem Renaissance.

Gavronsky, Professor of French, an accomplished poet and translator of French poetry, who will chair sessions on historic background in the Caribbean and the new developments in writing and culture, said " We believe that the Bellagio conference will set the stage for greater coordination of Caribbean literature, arts, and music, and will at the same time ensure the respect for individual production and the finding of commonalities."

The conference will be attended by prominent writers, academics, and cultural experts from the West Indies, England, the U.S., France, Italy, Germany, Japan, Belgium, and Spain. Among the conference speakers are: Ernest Pepin, Conseil General de la Guadeloupe (New Development in the Writing of the French Antilles); James Walvin, Uinversity of York, UK (Blowing Hot and Cold: Europe and the Caribbean Context); Evelyn O’Callaghan, University of the West Indies (Encountering the Caribbean in the Nineteenth Century); Alessandra DiMaio, University of Palermo, Italy (Cristina Garcia’s Cuban Dream in New York); Elizabeth Schmidt, Barnard College (Disguise and Disclosure in Claude McKay’s Harlem Poems); Robert Stewart, Trinity School, New York (Voices of Caribbean Identity in the Metropole: London and New York City Compared), and Louis-Philippe Dalembert, L’Institut Italo-Latino American, Paris (A Many-Tongued Literature: Caribbean Writing in Dutch, French, Spanish, and English), among others.

Contact: Petra Tuomi, Barnard Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7907, Ptuomi@barnard.edu

 

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