| "Three Engagments with Elie Wiesel" - Oct. 15th, 22nd & 29th
(view .PDF file)
Nobel
Peace Prize winner and BU Professor Elie Wiesel has worked on behalf
of oppressed people for much of his adult life. His personal experience
of the Holocaust has led him to use his talents as an author, teacher
and storyteller to defend human rights and peace throughout the
world.
His more than
forty books have won numerous awards, including the Prix Médicis
for A Beggar in Jerusalem, the Prix Livre Inter for The
Testament, and the Grand Prize for Literature from the City
of Paris for The Fifth Son. He has written two volumes of
memoirs, All Rivers Run to the Sea and And the Sea is
Never Full, in addition to his accounts of the Holocaust. After
the war, Wiesel had studied in Paris and later became a journalist
in that city, yet he had remained silent about what he had endured
in the death camps. During an interview with the French writer François
Mauriac, Wiesel was persuaded to end that silence. He subsequently
wrote La Nuit (Night), which has been translated into thirty
languages and has sold millions of copies since its 1958 publication.
Since 1976,
Wiesel has been the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities
at BU, where he also holds the title of University Professor. He
is a member of the faculty in the Department of Philosophy as well
as the Department of Religion.
Courses
RN 583: Literature of Memory V: Hidden Literature and Banned Books
RN 584: Literature of Memory VI: Hasidic Portraits: Rebbe Nachman
of Bratzlav |