Winner of the Pulitzer Prize

Portrait of Viet Thanh Nguyen

Harvard University Norton Lectures | To Save and to Destroy: On Writing as an Other, Lecture 5 | On Being Minor

SPEAKER: VIET THANH NGUYEN

Norton Lecture Five: On Being Minor

What does it mean to be a “minor” writer? From a minority, from a small nation, from the conquered, from the displaced, from spaces that are inevitably politicized or forgotten or overlooked? Art and politics explicitly overlap for the writer who is forced to be minor or who chooses to be minor, and whose aesthetic strategies and archives can and must be eclectic.

“On Being Minor” is the fifth of six Norton Lectures with Viet Thanh Nguyen. For all Lecture dates and information, click here.

Ticketing info for Lecture 5 will be announced in the spring.

Free parking is available at the Broadway Garage, located at 7 Felton Street, between Broadway and Cambridge Streets.

About the Speaker

Viet Thanh Nguyen’s novel The Sympathizer won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and numerous other awards. His most recent publication is A Man of Two Faces: A Memoir, A History, A Memorial. His other books are the sequel to The Sympathizer, The Committed; a short story collection, The Refugees; Nothing Ever Dies: Vietnam and the Memory of War (a finalist for the National Book Award in nonfiction and the National Book Critics Circle Award in General Nonfiction); and Race and Resistance: Literature and Politics in Asian America. He has also published Chicken of the Sea, a children’s book written in collaboration with his son, Ellison. He is a University Professor at the University of Southern California. A recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim and MacArthur Foundations, he is also the editor of The Displaced: Refugee Writers on Refugee Lives.

Introductions By:

Bruno Carvalho, Interim Director of the Mahindra Humanities Center.

Ju Yon Kim, Patsy Takemoto Mink Professor of English and Harvard College Professor.

About the Norton Lectures

The Charles Eliot Norton Professorship in Poetry was endowed in 1925. Harvard’s preeminent lecture series in the arts and humanities, the Norton Lectures recognize individuals of extraordinary talent who, in addition to their particular expertise, have the gift of wide dissemination and wise expression. The term “poetry” is interpreted in the broadest sense to encompass all poetic expression in language, music, or the fine arts.

Harvard University Norton Lectures | To Save and to Destroy: On Writing as an Other, Lecture 4 | On Being Minor

Date

Mar 20 2024
Event ended

Time

EST
6:00 pm

Location

Sanders Theatre
45 Quincy Street Cambridge, MA 02138