A MITH Digital Dialogue

Tuesday, February 3, 12:30-1:45

MITH Conference Room, McKeldin Library B0135

“Saracca and Nation: African Memory and Re-creation in Grenada” (film screening)

by MERLE COLLINS

The video documentary Saracca and Nation, an exploration of the role of memory in the creation of contemporary culture, presents two cultural “performances” in the Caribbean island state of Grenada — the River Sallee saracca and the Carriacou Big Drum Nation Dance. It considers how these cultural performances owe their existence to African memory and re-creation.

MERLE COLLINS, MITH Fellow, is a professor in the English Department, teaching Caribbean Literature. The video documentary, Saracca and Nation: African Memory and Re-Creation in Grenada, is her most recent work, produced with a MITH Fellowship. A writer of poetry and fiction, her recent publications include creative non-fiction, “Tout Moun Ka Plewe” (Everybody Bawling). Small Axe. A Journal of Caribbean History and Culture. Indiana University Press, 2007 and “Shadowboxing,” short story in Elizabeth Nunez, ed., Stories from Blue Latitutes: Caribbean Women Writers at Home and Abroad.” Seattle: Seal Press, 2005

Coming up @MITH 2/10: Jeremy Boggs (George Mason University), “Managing Projects in the Digital Humanities”

View MITH’s complete Digital Dialogues schedule here:

http://web.archive.org/web/20100615144914/http://www.mith2.umd.edu/programs/mith_speakers_spring_2009.pdf

All talks free and open to the public!

Contact: Neil Fraistat, Director, MITH (www.mith.umd.edu, mith@umd.edu, 5-8927).