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Black History Month Lecture: From black squares to full circles: Did the 2020 scramble for Black writers make a difference? by Patrice Lawrence

Patrice Lawrence, writer and journalist

Date/Time: Thursday 10 October 2024, 5.30pm

Venue: Curtis Auditorium, Herschel Building, Newcastle University

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All our events remain free and open to all, but pre-booking is required. Bookings for this lecture will open at 10.00am on 3 October.

To reserve your place click the booking link below or telephone our booking voicemail line 0191 208 6136.

This lecture is supported by the Black History Month Steering Group.

Chaired by Professor Judith Rankin, Dean of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion


The 2023 film American Fiction probably garnered the longest, loudest laughs from Black writers. Based on the book Erasure by Percy Everett, it tells the tale of a disenchanted African-American literary writer who inadvertently writes a bestseller incorporating every conceivable African-American stereotype. Could this happen here?

Biography

Patrice Lawrence MBE is a writer and mentor. She has been shortlisted for the Carnegie Award and Costa Children's Award and won the Waterstones Prize for Older Children's Fiction, the Jhalak Prize for Children's Books, the Little Rebels Award and the Crime Fest YA Award twice, among other awards. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Patrice Lawrence