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Bingham
Visiting Artist, Edwidge Danticat, Speaks With Students |
| February 2007 |
Edwidge
Danticat, award-winning author of several collections of stories
and novels, visited campus on February 28 as the 2007 Bingham Visiting
Artist. Ms. Danticat read two short stories from her collection
entitled Krik? Krak! and answered students' questions in
the Athletic and Convocation Center. The story “New York Day
Women,” she explained, came from her observations of women
like her own mother, whose day work was caring for other people’s
children. Woven within the story were themes based in the Haitian
proverb “Shame is heavier than 100 bags of salt.” Ms.
Danticat’s writing often reflects her experiences as a Haitian
immigrant growing up in Brooklyn, New York.
The second selection Ms. Danticat shared was the epilogue from Krik?
Krak! entitled “Women Like Us,” which talks about
her decision to become a writer in spite of her family’s discouraging
her from that work. As she explained to students, “In Haiti,
where my family and I were living during the dictatorship, many
writers were sent to jail for their writing and their points of
view. My family’s idea of being a writer had a very dangerous
connotation associated with it.”
Ms. Danticat says that her first real exposure to writing was in
hearing stories told—through oral tradition. The title Krik?
Krak! comes from the phrase that would begin any story-telling
in her native country: the speaker would ask “Krik?”
to which the audience would respond “Krak!” and that,
as she explains, “was how you knew the story was beginning.”
Having attended Barnard College in New York, Ms. Danticat’s
formal writing training began with her enrolling “hesitantly”
in a few creative writing classes where she worked with fiction
and personal narrative. While visiting Milton, Ms. Danticat worked
with students in several creative writing classes and held discussions
with students in Straus Library. Her next book, Brother, I’m
Dying, will be published this fall.

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