Express ( Trinidad and Tobago ) 06 March 2024 ( Page 32 )
Author Merle Collins shares ' Oceanic Journeys' at UWI GRENADIAN Merle Collins will be the featured author at The University of the West Indies (The UWI), St Augustine's 2024 Campus Literature Week later this month. Currently writer in residence on campus, Collins will give a feature address at the Campus Literature Week's closing gala on March 15, from 5 p.m., at the Centre for Language Learning Auditorium. The event, free and open to all, is hosted by the Faculty of Humanities and Education, in partnership with the NGC Bocas Lit Fest. Collins is the author of numerous books of fiction and poetry, most recently, the cross-genre book Ocean Stirrings. Subtitled 'A Work of Fiction in Tribute to Louise Langdon Norton Little, Working Mother and Activist, Mother of Malcolm X and Seven Siblings', and published in late 2023, the book explores 'the almost hidden life' of the Grenada-born mother of the famed civil rights activist. Drawing on the title and themes of Ocean Stirrings and her wide-ranging readings of other Caribbean authors, at the Campus Literature Week event, Collins will speak on 'Oceanic Journeys in the Voices of Caribbean Literature'. Born in Aruba in 1950 to Grenadian parents, Collins was taken to Grenada shortly after her birth and grew up there. She did a degree in English and Spanish at The UWI, Mona, Jamaica, before returning to Grenada as a teacher. She has also taught in St Lucia. In 1980, she was awarded a master's in Latin American Studies from Georgetown University, USA. She holds a PhD in government from the London School of Economics, University of London. During the period of the Grenada Revolution, she served as a co-ordinator for research on Latin America and the Caribbean for the government of Grenada. She left Grenada in 1983 and taught for many years at the University of Maryland, College Park, where she is now professor emerita. Her novels include Angel (1987) and The Colour of Forgetting (1995), and Collins has also published three collections of poems, a biography of Grenada governor-general Dame Hilda Bynoe, and several critical essays. 'Rare opportunity' During her time as writer in residence at The UWI, by the Department of Literary, Cultural and Communication Studies, Collins has worked closely with students in the creative writing MFA programme. 'Merle Collins is an excellent choice for writer in residence,' says author and lecturer Muli Amaye, head of the MFA programme. 'As a writer of poetry and fiction and an exceptional academic, the knowledge and creativity she brings are invaluable for our students. She slipped seamlessly into the department, and her insights into students and their work are offered in a way that encourages them to continue and to stretch themselves further.' 'Merle Collins was a headline writer at our first festival in 2011,' says Nicholas Laughlin, festival and programme director of the Bocas Lit Fest. 'We are happy to welcome her back and delighted that readers here in Trinidad will have the rare opportunity to see and hear her in person on March 15, thanks to Campus Literature Week-an important fixture in our cultural calendar and a warm-up for the NGC Bocas Lit Fest at the end of April.' Copies of Ocean Stirrings will be available for purchase at the event from Paper Based Bookshop. Campus Literature Week starts on Monday, March 11, and you can access the schedule of daily lunchtime readings and interviews with Paul Keens Douglas, Tony Deyal, Jasmine Sealy and Machel Montano by visiting www.sta.uwi.edu/fhe/ dlcc/news-events. / WRITER: Merle Collins - Photo / CROSS-GENRE: The novel Ocean Stirrings by Merle Collins. - Photo /