Zoom Events: Artist, Mentor, Friend, Activist: Andrew Salkey a Man of Many Hats

Zoom Event: Artist, Mentor, Friend, Activist: Andrew Salkey a Man of Many Hats
Date and time: Friday 5 November 1.30pm GMT and Saturday 6 November 1.30pm GMT
Book online.

This online conference, held over two afternoons, will celebrate the legacy of Jamaican writer and broadcaster Andrew Salkey (1928-1995). We have republished Salkey in the Caribbean Modern Classics series. This includes the Salkey Quartet of children's books (Hurricane, Earthquake, Drought and Riot) and Escape to an Autumn Pavement, one of the earliest Caribbean novels that explores LGBT+ themes.

You can attend the conference online and it will be recorded.

About this event

This online conference held over two afternoons will celebrate the legacy of Jamaican writer and broadcaster Andrew Salkey (1928-1995) by exploring the variety of his writing, and his contributions to the Caribbean literary community through his involvement with the Caribbean Artists Movement, and black publishing in Britain. The programme will include a keynote by Professor Robert A. Hill, ‘in conversation’ and panel sessions, guided readings of Salkey’s work, and a chance to see the items from the Salkey archive, which is held at the British Library.

Andrew Salkey was a co-founder of the Caribbean Artists Movement and lynchpin of the BBC’s Caribbean Service. He embodied the Black Radical Tradition in his writing, his politics, and in his support for other creative individuals. Twenty-six years after his death, this conference seeks to reclaim his legacy and amplify his voice. 

Keynote speaker: Professor Robert A. Hill is a leading scholar on Marcus Garvey and Research Professor at the Department of History at the University of California, Los Angeles. He was also a collaborator and friend of Salkey’s.

A British Library conference in collaboration with Goldsmiths Centre for Caribbean and Diaspora Studies, MA Black British Literature (Goldsmiths) and The Eccles Centre for American Studies at the British Library.

Hosted by Eleanor Casson, member of the Contemporary Archives Team at the British Library.

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