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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Special to Feature Editors

 

Contact: Maēshay k. Lewis

E-mail: writers@mec.cuny.edu

Phone: 718-804-8882

 

Contact: Clarence V. Reynolds

E-mail: Clarenciov@msn.com

Phone: 718-804-8883

  

The Center for Black Literature Hotline: 718-270-4811

 

The Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College Celebrates Black History Month with Voices from the African Diaspora

 

NATIONAL –In celebration of Black History Month, on Thursday, February 21, 2013, the Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College, CUNY, will host Voices from the African Diaspora: A Literary Salon featuring Pamela Newkirk, author of Letters from Black America; novelist and journalist Christopher John Farley; poet Tony Medina, author of An Onion of Wars; and poet Khalil Almustafa. The evening will serve as a kick-off event for the Center for Black Literature’s Tenth Anniversary and the Center will also be celebrating the publication of the Killens Review of Arts & Letters. The evening will also reflect upon the civil rights leader Malcolm X, who was assassinated on this date in 1965.  The salon will also feature dramatic readings by Medgar Evers College students. Book signings will follow the event. 

 

As part of CBL’s John Oliver Killens Reading Series, the literary salon is a tribute to the late John Oliver Killens, author, activist, social critic, educator and former writer-in-residence at Medgar Evers College. Killens spent four decades writing and working to support black writers and their work.  His vision was to host a National Black Writers Conference every year and he was the visionary leader behind the hosting of the Conference at the college. 

 

The Killens Review of Arts & Letters, published by the Center for Black Literature, is a journal dedicated to supporting the mission and work of the John Oliver Killens Chair at Medgar Evers College. 

 

About the Writers

 

Pamela Newkirk is professor in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communications and director of the undergraduate studies program at New York University. She is the author of Within the Veil: Black Journalists, White Media (2000), which was awarded the National Press Club Award for Media Criticism and editor of A Love No Less: More Than Two Centuries of African American Love Letters (2003).  Her most recent book is Letters from Black America: Intimate Portraits of the African American Experience (2009), a collection of letters from a wide variety of African-Americans.

 

Christopher John Farley has worked as a music critic at Time magazine and is currently an editor at The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of two novels, My Favorite War (1996) and Kingston by Starlight (2005). His 2001 book Aaliyah: More Than a Woman was a national best seller. He is the coauthor of Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues, the companion volume to the PBS series.  Farley is also the author of Before the Legend: the Rise of Bob Marley, which was named one of best books of 2006 by Black Issues Book Review. His short story is featured in the anthology Kingston Noir (2012), edited by Colin Channer.

 

Kahlil Almustafa, known as the People’s Poet, is the 2002 Nuyorican Grand Slam Champion and the author of four books of poetry and his debut CD CounterIntelligence. His collection of 15 years of poetry, Growing Up Hip-Hop, is used in more than 40 classrooms nationally from the elementary to the university level. In 2009, almustafa completed the “100 Poems for 100 Days” project where he wrote 100 poems in the first 100 days of Barack Obama’s presidency published in a collection of poems entitled From Auction Block to Oval Office.

 

Tony Medina is the author/editor of sixteen books for adults and young readers, including DeShawn Days (Lee & Low Books, 2001), Bum Rush the Page: A Def Poetry Jam (Random House/Three Rivers Press, 2001), Love to Langston (Lee & Low Books, 2002), Role Call: A Generational Anthology of Social and Political Black Literature & Art (Third World Press, 2002). Medina is the first Professor of Creative Writing at Howard University in Washington, D.C., and his poetry, fiction, and essays appear in more than ninety publications and two CD compilations. His latest books are The President Looks Like Me and Other Poems (Just Us Books, 2013); An Onion of Wars (Third World Press, 2012); I and I, Bob Marley (Lee & Low Books, 2009),  and My Old Man Was Always on the Lam (NYQ Books, 2011).

About the Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College

 

The mission of the Center for Black Literature is to expand, broaden, and enrich the public’s knowledge and aesthetic appreciation of the value of black literature. Through a series of programs that build an audience for the reading, discussion, and critical analysis of contemporary black literature and that serve as a forum for the research and study of black literature, the Center convenes and supports various literary programs and events such as author signings, writing workshops, panel discussions, conferences, and symposia. 

 

The Center also collaborates with various organizations including public schools, the Brooklyn Public Library, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Brooklyn Museum, the PEN American Center, and the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.  In order to accomplish its mission and sustain its programming, the Center must raise funds through private and public organizations and foundations.  Funding for Center programs has been provided by organizations such as the National Endowment for the Arts, the Nathan Cummings Foundation, the New York Council on the Humanities, the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, Poets & Writers, and the Independence Community Foundation.

 

For more information about the Center for Black Literature, visit www.centerforblackliterature.org or call 718-804-8883.

 

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Medgar Evers College

 1650 Bedford Avenue

 Brooklyn, NY 11225

 writers@mec.cuny.edu

 www.centerforblackliterature.org

 

 Brenda M. Greene, Ph.D.

 Executive Director

 

CBL Advisory Board

Myrlie Evers-Williams

 Honorary Chair

 

Dale Allender

 Associate Executive Director

 National Council of Teachers

 of English

 

Patrick A. Buddington

 Chief Marketing Officer

 IMC Communications Group

 

Richard Jones Jr.

 Executive Dean

 Accreditation and Quality

 Assurance and Institutional

 Effectiveness

 Medgar Evers College, CUNY

 

Louise Mirrer

 President and CEO

 New-York Historical Society

 

Lawrence Schiller

President and  Co-Founder

The Norman Mailer Center

 

Richard Wesley

 Writer, Goldberg Chair,

 Department of Dramatic

 Writing

 New York University

 

John Edgar Wideman

 Writer, ASA Messer

 Professor of African

 American Studies &English

 Brown University

 

Marcia White

 President

 Personalized Skincare

 

Schawannah Wright

 Manager of Community

 Involvement

 Brooklyn Museum of Art

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