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Dr. Henry Louis Gates Visits Milton as 2007 Martin Luther
King Speaker |
| January 2007 |
Dr.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. of Harvard University talked with students
on Wednesday as the 2007 Martin Luther King Speaker. After addressing
students in the Fitzgibbons Convocation Center he met with them
for questions and further discussion in Straus Library during third
period.
One of the most influential American cultural critics, Dr. Gates
is the W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the Humanities and the Director
of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American
Research at Harvard. He is widely acknowledged for moving African
American studies from the ideological positioning of the 1970s and
'80s to a scholarly sphere. Dr. Gates has authored and edited several
books and written numerous articles for The New Yorker,
Time Magazine, The New Republic and The New
York Times. He is also the editor of Transition magazine,
an international review of African, Caribbean, and African American
politics.
Through scholarly efforts such as publishing bibliographies of noted
writers—Nigeria's Wole Soyinka, for example—and republishing
historical texts like Harriet Wilson's Our Nig; or Sketches
from the Life of a Free Black, written in 1854, Dr. Gates has
defined an African American literary and cultural tradition. He
also authenticated and facilitated the publication of The Bondwoman's
Narrative by Hannah Crafts, the only known novel by a female
African American slave and possibly the first novel by an African
American woman.
In 2006, he wrote and produced the PBS documentary, African
American Lives, the first documentary series to use genealogy
and science to understand African American history. Forthcoming
is the documentary Finding Oprah's Roots, which expands
on one of the most popular portions of African American Lives.
A member of the American Philosophical Society, the Academy of Arts
and Sciences, the African Literature Association, and the Association
for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, Dr. Gates also
serves on numerous academic and civic boards and committees. In
1997 he was named one of Time Magazine's most influential
Americans. His honors and grants include a MacArthur Foundation
"genius grant,” the George Polk Award for Social Commentary,
a National Humanities Medal, and election to the American Academy
of Arts.

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