Thursday, October 24 | 5:00 PM
12th Annual Sedgwick Lecture: “Who Is A Queer Ancestor?” by Professor Tavia Nyong’o

This lecture explores the idea of queer ancestry and the prospects of being a “good ancestor.” It reflects upon the process of memorializing the dead and the risks of secular sainthood. The lecture discusses re-staging a famous encounter between Audre Lorde and James Baldwin, and suggests that ancestor reverence might obscure the productive aspects of conflict in shaping queer history Drawing on the irreverent stance of the late Kenyan writer Binyavanga Wainaina, the lecture proposes a model for decolonizing the ancestral, particularly relevant in the digital era.

Co-sponsored by The Boston University Center for the Humanities, The Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick Foundation, The Departments of English, History, Religion, Romance Studies, Sociology, and World Languages & Literature, and the Programs in African American Studies and Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies, The LGBTQIA+ Center for Faculty & Staff

Location: Howard Thurman Center (808 Commonwealth Avenue)