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Henry Louis
Gates, Jr.
"I've
always thought of myself as both a literary historian and a literary
critic," says Henry Louis Gates, Jr., "someone who loves archives
and someone who Henry Louis Gates, Jr.is dedicated to resurrecting
texts that have dropped out of sight."
Gates,
this year's Jefferson Lecturer in the Humanities, has been untiring
in his quest. He has unearthed old periodicals, edited dictionaries
and anthologies, and written a dozen books. For twenty years he
and his colleagues have gathered fragments of a culture, amassing
more than forty thousand texts for the Black Periodical Literature
Project and enough material for fifty-two volumes on African American
Women Writers of the Nineteenth Century for the Schomburg Center
in New York.
Gates's
latest effort is a multimedia digital encyclopedia of African culture,
Encarta Africana. His projects travel with him in many instances.
They are the corollary of a teaching career that has taken him from
Yale to Cornell to Duke to Harvard. Through all the work runs the
dichotomy of race. "I rebel at the notion that I can't be part of
other groups, that I can't construct identities through elective
affinity, that race must be the most important thing about me,"
he once wrote in an open letter to his daughters.
"Is
that what I want on my gravestone: Here lies an African American?
So I'm divided. I want to be black, to know black, to luxuriate
in whatever I might be calling blackness at any particular time--but
to do so in order to come out the other side, to experience a humanity
that is neither colorless nor reducible to color." It has been a
remarkable journey from the mill town of Piedmont, West Virginia,
where Gates grew up.
After
attending junior college in Piedmont, he studied at Yale and spent
a year overseas working at a hospital in Africa. He was graduated
summa cum laude in history in 1973 and went to Clare College at
Cambridge University on a Mellon Fellowship. Gates earned a Ph.D.
in English from Cambridge and became an assistant professor at Yale
with a joint appointment in the English department and Afro-American
studies. He is now the W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of Humanities at
Harvard and director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American
Research.
In
1981, when the MacArthur Foundation gave its first fellowships,
Gates was among the recipients. He capped that achievement a year
later with the rediscovery of the first novel in the United States
written by a black person, Harriet E. Wilson's 1859 book Our Nig.
He has recently acquired another long-lost manuscript from that
period, The Bondwoman's Narrative, which will be published this
spring.
In Gates's view, until stories like these are part of the American
fabric, the country's literary heritage is not whole. "It is clear
that every black American text must confess to a complex ancestry,
one high and one low (literary and vernacular), but also one white
and one black," he writes in Loose Canons.
"There
can be no doubt that white texts inform and influence black texts
(and vice versa), so that a thoroughly integrated canon of American
literature is not only politically sound, it is intellectually sound
as well." He sees the challenge in broad terms: "Our generation
must record, codify, and disseminate the assembled data about African
and African American culture, thereby institutionalizing the received
knowledge about African Americans that has been gathered for the
past century, and that we continue to gather, as we chart heretofore
unexplored continents of ignorance. For our generation of scholars
in African-American studies, to map the splendid diversity of human
life in culture is the charge of the scholar of African American
Studies."
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Mary Lou Beatty
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