{"id":63706,"date":"2024-12-20T11:56:30","date_gmt":"2024-12-20T16:56:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/krieger.jhu.edu\/humanities-institute\/?post_type=tribe_events&p=63706"},"modified":"2025-01-16T11:48:12","modified_gmt":"2025-01-16T16:48:12","slug":"collaboration-creative-citizenship-and-the-collective-lyric-i","status":"publish","type":"tribe_events","link":"https:\/\/krieger.jhu.edu\/humanities-institute\/event\/collaboration-creative-citizenship-and-the-collective-lyric-i\/","title":{"rendered":"Collaboration, Creative Citizenship, and the Collective Lyric \u201cI\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"
We are thrilled to announce that we will be joined by\u00a0Naomi Shihab Nye<\/strong>, a renowned Palestinian American poet, and\u00a0Marion Winik<\/strong>, a celebrated author and professor at the University of Baltimore.<\/p>\n On January 31, 2025, Marion and Naomi will be in conversation with Emma Snyder at Bird in Hand.<\/p>\n This event is organized by\u00a0Jennifer Stager<\/strong>\u00a0and\u00a0Dora Malech<\/strong>, JHU and co-sponsored by the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute<\/p>\n This volume is both a work of high intellect and a work of deep love, created in memory of a shared correspondent: Ann Alejandro. Struggling for 30 years with chronic illness at her ranch outside Uvalde, Texas, Ann Alejandro was a writer of transporting natural talent and prolificity. Though she would have loved to be widely read and appreciated, she was too modest to scale the walls of the publishing world. Thus her chosen form was the letter and her audience close friends and family, including Naomi Nye and Marion Winik. For decades, her often lengthy missives continued to delight her correspondents, blending observation, storytelling, humor, praise, and accounts of her deep attachment to the land and animals that surrounded her in the rural Southwest.<\/p>\n Before Ann\u2019s death in 2019 at the age of 64, Naomi and Marion promised her they would pull together a book from thousands of pages left in their care. They selected the very best of Ann Alejandro, added commentary, and organized the material into chapters with titles like Faith, Motherhood, Land, Snakes, Pain, and Love.<\/p>\n The volume is an extraordinary collection of writing put together by two longtime literary friends in tribute to a third. It includes an introduction by Nye and and an afterword by Winik, as well as a photo gallery of Ann\u2019s life. Emma Snyder, owner of Bird in Hand Coffee & Books and the Ivy Bookshop, will join the co-editors in conversation.<\/p>\n Purchase\u00a0I Know About a Thousand Things\u00a0<\/em>here!<\/a><\/p>\n
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