May 25th, 2010
On Friday and Saturday, October 8-9, 2010, the Auburn University College of Liberal Arts’ Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts & Humanities and Department of English will host the first annual Auburn Writers Conference. The inaugural theme, The Child on the Page: Writing For and About Children, will focus on writing for and about children and young adults. With topics ranging from character and plot development, the future of books, and agent queries, this conference will bring together local and national authors and aspiring writers.
The Auburn Writers Conference 2010 will feature keynote speaker Julianna Baggott; publishing agent Holly Root; writer and illustrator Elizabeth Dulemba; and young adult authors Rachel Hawkins and Irene Latham. Auburn University’s very own Chantel Acevedo, Judy Troy, Peter Campion and Peter Huggins of the College of Liberal Arts’ English faculty will participate.
Small-group workshops, panel discussions, and readings will give established and emerging writers perspective, skills, and community.
For a full list of speakers, registration, agenda and more information, please visit The Auburn Writers Conference website at www.auburnwritersconference.org.

Tags: auburn writers conference
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May 3rd, 2010
Jim Buford, author of the just released The House Across the Road, will read from and talk about his new work on Thursday, May 6, at 3 pm in the Special Collections and Archives Department of the Auburn University Library.
The House Across the Road is a departure for the former nonfiction writer, whose previous works include the essay collections The Kindness of Strangers, The Best of Times, Pie in the Sky, and a social history, When the Lights Came On.

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Tags: book talk, jim buford
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April 13th, 2010
Come out Saturday, April 17 to the Alabama Book Festival at Old Alabama Town, Montgomery. We will have a booth with information about the 2010 Auburn Writers Conference!

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April 5th, 2010
Thursday, April 8, 3:00 pm
Book Talk: Kathryn Braund, Fields of Vision: Essays on the Travels of William Bartram, 1739-1823. Special Collections and Archives Department, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
Thursday, April 15, 3:00 pm
Book Talk: John Sledge, The Pillared City: Greek Revival Mobile. Special Collections and Archives Department, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
Thursday, April 22, 3:00 pm
Book Talk: Richard Penaskovic, Bobby Brown & Richie Blue: A Spiritual Memoir. Special Collections and Archives Department, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
Thursday, April 29, 3:00 pm
Discover Auburn: Joe Yeager and Gene Stevenson, “Comer Hall’s 100th Anniversary.” Special Collections and Archives, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
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March 22nd, 2010
On Monday, March 29th two authors will be on hand to talk about Scottsboro Boys and the trials that followed their conviction. Dr. James Miller, Professor of English and American Studies and Chair of American Studies Department at George Washington University, and Dr. Susan Pennybacker, a modern British and European specialist on the faculty of Trinity College in Connecticut, will speak at 4 p.m. at the University Chapel.
The story of the Scottsboro Boys and subsequent trials began in 1931, when nine black youths were charged with raping two white women. Despite little and contradictory evidence, all nine were found guilty and eight of the defendants were sentenced to death. The trail and the fate of the young men became an international cause and influenced not only the legal system but also American culture at large.
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Tags: college of liberal arts, scottsboro
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March 16th, 2010
Art & Law: An Interdisciplinary Investigation
Thursday, March 25 | 3 pm to 4:45 pm
Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art Auditorium
The panel will feature speakers who are artists and lawyers. They will discuss the role of creativity and critical thinking, drawn from their arts and humanities backgrounds, in their professional careers.
Speakers include Janet St. Denis, a visual artist and lawyer who served as council for Auburn University, Trey Granger, director of the Montgomery Elections Center, and Emil Wright, an Auburn lawyer, physician and musician. A student member on the panel will represent Auburn University’s Pre-Law Scholars Program.
The panel discussion is part of an ongoing program this spring and fall to showcase the role of the arts and humanities in university, professional and community life. It is developed under the auspices of the Draughon Center’s Breeden Scholar in Residence, Professor Barb Bondy.
“Art and Law: An Interdisciplinary Investigation” is sponsored by the Caroline Marshall Draughon Center for the Arts & Humanities in the College of Liberal Arts, the Association of Visual Artists, the Pre-Law Scholars Program and the College of Liberal Arts Student Council.
Tags: barb bondy, breeden scholar, interdisciplinary, jule collins smith museum of fine art
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March 3rd, 2010
March 2 (Tuesday), 4 pm. New Perspectives: Alabama and the WPA: Nick Taylor, author of American-Made: The Enduring Legacy of the WPA. University Chapel. Press Release (PDF).
March 11 (Thursday), 3 pm. Discover Auburn: Giovanna Summerfield, “Images of Sicilian Women.” Special Collections and Archives Department, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
March 25 (Thursday), 3 pm to 4:45 pm. Panel Discussion: Art & Law: An Interdisciplinary Investigation. Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art. Press Release (PDF).
March 25 (Thursday), 3 pm. Book Talk: Virginia Van der Veer Hamilton, Teddy’s Child: Growing Up in the Anxious Southern Gentry between the Great Wars. Special Collections and Archives Department, Ralph Brown Draughon Library.
March 26 (Friday), 8:30 am to 5 pm. Symposium: Celebrating a Century of Flight: The Wright Brothers in Alabama, 1910-2010. Alabama Department of Archives and History. Press Release (PDF). For more information, visit www.auburn.edu/wrightbrothers.
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February 1st, 2010
February 11 (Thursday), 3 pm. Alabama Big Read: Alan Gribben, “The Importance of Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer.” Special Collections and Archives, RBD Library.
February 18 (Thursday), 3 pm. Discover Auburn: James Brown, “Growing Vegetables Organically.” Special Collections and Archives, RBD Library.
February 20 (Saturday), 9 am–Noon. Workshop: “Five Useful Things You Can Learn About Writing in 180 Minutes,” with Richard Goodman, Author of The Soul of Creative Writing. Co-Sponsored by OLLI at Auburn. Lexington Hotel. To register, call 334-844-5100 or click here (PDF).
February 25 (Thursday), 4 pm. Book Talk: Susan Youngblood Ashmore, Carry It On: The War on Poverty and the Civil Rights Movement in Alabama, 1964-1972. Special Collections and Archives, RBD Library.

Tags: book talk, discover auburn
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January 21st, 2010
Join us on Thursday, January 28 at 3:00 p.m. at the Jule Collins Smith Museum of Fine Art for a panel presentation by Syracuse University Humanities Center founding Director Gregg Lambert and Humanities Research & Grants Consultant Corri Zoli.
Lambert and Zoli will look at how to create concrete strategies that address the key issues involved in current challenges while addressing how and why the historical humanities and the traditional disciplines have changed. They will also discuss how to address the real concerns for the humanities today, including plausible and sustainable solutions.
| For more information, read the press release here (PDF) or call 334.844.4946. |
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