About this Event
*This program will take place at the Harriet Beecher Stowe House, with a Zoom option.*
On the day after the 2024 elections, we’ll discuss a fictional account of a real event: the only successful coup d’etat in US history, the Wilmington Massacre of 1898. Although born in Cleveland, Ohio, African American author Charles Chesnutt had lived in North Carolina for sixteen years before returning to the North, so he was well prepared to write The Marrow of Tradition (1901), a book he hoped would do for his time what Uncle Tom’s Cabin had done a half-century before.
Suggested reading:
- , Chapters 3, 28-29, and 35
About the Facilitators:
- Dr. John Getz is Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at Xavier University and has been volunteering for the Friends of Harriet Beecher Stowe House for many years.
- Dr. Keturah Nix is Assistant Professor of English at Xavier University. Dr. Nix earned her Ph.D. and M.A. in American studies from Purdue University after earning a B.A. in English at Tuskegee University. Her research and teaching focus on 19th and 20th century African American literature and culture, Booker T. Washington, Black women writers, activism & social movements, Black popular culture, and Black intellectual thought. She is the co-editor of Milestone Documents in African American History (2nd ed., Greyhouse, 2017).
About the series
2024 Discussion Series Theme: Voices for Truth
In 2024 our monthly discussion series will have a new name, Voices for Truth, and will feature all-new discussion topics.
We'll continue to focus on moments in American history when eloquent voices arose, often from the margins, to address important issues, usually related to social justice, in culture and society.
We’ll study the writings of many authors from the 19th and 20th centuries to determine
- how they discovered their voices,
- the forms they chose for expressing their voices,
- the needs both personal and societal to which they put those expressions,
- the effects their work had,
- how we can develop and enlist our own voices in service of our own values.
Harriet Beecher Stowe is our exemplar voice for truth. During her eighteen years in Cincinnati as a young adult (1832-1850), she discovered her voice as a writer, and in 1851, she decided to devote it to the anti-slavery cause. Horrified by the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, she wrote to editor Gamaliel Bailey: "Up to this year I have always felt that I had no particular call to meddle with this subject [slavery], and I dreaded to expose even my own mind to the full force of its exciting power. But now I feel that the time has come when even a woman or a child who can speak a word for freedom and humanity is bound to speak."
The result, of course, was Uncle Tom's Cabin, the blockbuster novel that awakened many Northerners to the horrors of slavery and helped create the change of heart that would allow the Union to stand firm when the South ceded over slavery.
This series is sponsored by School Outfitters.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Harriet Beecher Stowe House, 2950 Gilbert Avenue, Cincinnati, United States
USD 0.00