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Amiri Baraka’s poetry topic of March 31 Abrams talk

Poet Amiri Baraka’s writing often served as social criticism and drew attention to the systemic oppression of Black Americans. As part of a semester-long residency as M.H. Abrams Distinguished Visiting Professor, poet and theorist Fred Moten will deliver a lecture on radical Black politics and the poetry of Baraka on Thursday, March 31 at 5 p.m. in the Kaufmann Auditorium in Goldwin Smith Hall. Moten’s talk, “Nothing In the Way of Things,” will focus on Baraka’s poem ““; the Abrams lecture is presented by the Department of Literatures in English in the College of Arts & Sciences.

Credit: Chris Funkhouser

Fred Moten

In a 2017 interview with , Moten, professor of performance studies and comparative literature at New York University, said that “Baraka was at the convergence of all these things that I had been interested in: music, experimental literature, radical black politics, philosophy and literary theory – he was there for all of it, so he was the model for me.”

The March 31 lecture will be open to in-person attendance for members of the Cornell community (with Cornell ID). Anyone can lecture. Attendance guidelines are subject to change; visit for current guidelines and more information.

Amanda Brockner is MFA Graduate Program Coordinator in the Department of Literatures in English.

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