bell hooks to speak as part of MLK symposium
ANN ARBOR, Mich.Cultural critic,
 |
hooks |
author and feminist theorist bell hooks will speak
on Jan. 15 as part of the University of Michigan's 16th annual Martin
Luther King, Jr., symposium.
Celebrated as one of the nation's leading public
intellectuals by The Atlantic Monthly, and named one of Utne Reader's
"100 Visionaries Who Could Change Your Life," hooks divides
her time among teaching, writing and lecturing around the world.
hooks, who signs her name in lower-case letters,
has served as a professor in the English departments at Yale University
and Oberlin College, and most recently as a Distinguished Professor
of English at City College and the Graduate Center of the City University
of New York. She is the author of more than 20 books, including:
"Rock My Soul," "Black Folk and Self-Esteem, Communion,"
" The Female Search for Love, Salvation," "Black
People and Love, All About Love," "New Visions, Remembered
Rapture," "The Writer at Work, Wounds of Passion,"
"A Writing Life, Bone Black," "Memories of Girlhood,
Killing Rage," "Ending Racism, Art on My Mind," "Visual
Politics," and with Cornell West, "Breaking Bread: Insurgent
Black Intellectual Life." Her latest book, "Communion:
The Female Search for Love," was released Dec. 24.
Co-sponsors of the program include the University
of Michigan's Information Technology Central Services, the Law Library,
the Office of Multicultural Affairs, School of Information, University
Housing and the University Library. The overall theme of this year's
MLK Symposium is: "We must be the change we wish to see in
the world," (taken from a quote by Mahatma Gandhi).
The free presentation will be in the Michigan
Union Ballroom at 4:30 p.m. with a book signing immediately following
the program. For more information about MLK events at U-M, visit
the symposium Web site at www.mlksymposium.org/
Contact: Wanda Monroe
Phone: (734) 936-3814
E-mail: wgm@umich.edu