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  • Literature symposium deals with genocide

    Lubbock On line
    March 19 2004

    Literature symposium deals with genocide
    By RAY WESTBROOK
    AVALANCHE-JOURNAL
    http://www.lubbockonline.com/stories/031904/lif_03190 4042.shtml

    The 37th annual Comparative Literature Symposium, scheduled Thursday
    through March 27 at Texas Tech, will offer sessions for the general
    public.

    A theme of "Memory and History: Cultural Representations of Genocide
    and Displacement," will deal with atrocities of the 20th century.

    "This is the first time for this topic and the first time that we've
    had public events specifically designed to go along with the more
    academic events," co-director Ingrid Fry said.

    For the academic side, more than 60 presenters from around the world
    - including Canada, Israel, France, Germany and the United States -
    will discuss topics ranging from the Holocaust and displacement of
    people in Europe during World War II, to the African and Armenian
    genocides.

    Details of the academic program are available on the symposium's Web
    site, www.languages.ttu/events/symposium37/.

    Events will be free, except for theater productions, which will cost
    $2.

    A highlight for the public will be exhibit of the paintings of Samuel
    Bak that will be introduced formally at 10 a.m. March 27 in the third
    floor conference room of the main library at Tech. It will open with
    a lecture by Lawrence L. Langer, widely known scholar of Holocaust
    representation.

    The exhibit, titled "Landscapes of Jewish Experience," will be in
    place Thursday through April 13. Display hours will be 9 a.m. to 8
    p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekends.

    Bak's paintings in the exhibit depict symbols of people amid ruins,
    inanimate objects in a tragic world.

    "Probably religious groups - synagogues and churches - would be
    interested in seeing this exhibit and going to the main lecture," Fry
    said.

    A public reading will be presented at 5 p.m. Thursday in Room 1 of
    the English building by Stephen Graham Jones, English professor at
    Tech. And at 7 p.m., a theater production of "America Shows Her
    Colors" will be in the International Cultural Center.

    Fry plans to introduce a session at 2 p.m. Friday called
    "Representing a Vanished People: Samuel Bak's Landscapes of Jewish
    Experience" by Langer in English building Room 1.

    A repeat of "America Shows Her Colors" will be at 7 p.m. Friday in
    the International Cultural Center.

    Fry said the symposium's purpose is an exchange of ideas.

    "It's important for us to reflect upon our own world and the way we
    interact with the world."

    Literature symposium

    Thursday - 5 p.m., English building Room 1, public reading by Stephen
    Graham Jones. Free. 742-0564.

    - 7 p.m., International Cultural Center, "America Shows Her Colors."
    $2. 742-0564.

    - Friday - 2 p.m., English Building Room 1, "Representing a Vanished
    People: Samuel Bak's Landscapes of Jewish Experience." Free.
    742-0564. 3:15 p.m., English building Room 1, excerpts from the drama
    "Anne Frank." Free. 742-0564. 7 p.m., International Cultural Center,
    "America Shows Her Colors." $2. 742-0564.

    - Saturday - 10 a.m., Texas Tech Library Gallery, opening of Samuel
    Bak Exhibition. Free. 742-0564.

    [email protected] 766-8711
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