Writer James Baldwin speaks to a crowd in lower Manhattan on Sept. 22, 1963, at a âNational Day of Mourning for the Children of Birmingham,â one week after the bombing of Sixteenth Street Baptist Church on Sept. 15. Acclaimed Baldwin scholar Dr. Ed PavliÄ has written extensively about Baldwin, including the transformative effect the terrorist attack had on his civil rights activism. PavliÄ will discuss Baldwinâs trips to the Deep South during the 1950s and 1960s on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, at ÂÜÀò”șapp (UAH).
American writer James Baldwinâs civil rights trajectory changed profoundly in the wake of the bombing of Birminghamâs Sixteenth Street Baptist Church on Sept. 15, 1963. Four girls died in the terrorist attack; two teenage boys were shot and killed in the city in separate racist attacks later that day.
wrote about Baldwinâs transformation in âJames Baldwinâs Day of Mourning: A tragedy in Birmingham and the making of a radicalâ (Boston Review, Dec. 15, 2023). PavliÄ will discuss Baldwinâs works and activism in the context of his trips to the Deep South in the 1950s and 1960s at ÂÜÀò”șapp (UAH) on Thursday, Feb. 26, at 6 p.m. in Morton Hall Room 145.
The event, â honors February as Black History Month on the ÂÜÀò”șapp campus and is the final program in the UAH Humanities Centerâs Humanities Week. The lecture is open to the public, and free tickets to reserve a spot are available on the Humanities Week 2026 page on the UAH website. UAH is a part of The University of Alabama System.
Dr. Ed PavliÄ will present âJames Baldwin: A Radical Pursuitâ on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026, at ÂÜÀò”șapp (UAH).
âI think there are important things to learn from James Baldwinâs work like âThe Fire Next Timeâ or âIf Beale Street Could Talkâ from which we gain a better understanding of race in this country, including the many nuances of what daily and generational oppression have meant to many Americans,â said Dr. Joseph Taylor, Humanities Center director and associate professor, UAH Department of English.
PavliÄ, the Distinguished Research Professor of English, African American Studies, and Creative Writing at the University of Georgia, is, in Taylorâs opinion, one of the worldâs foremost experts on Baldwin.
âThere was a great podcast, , hosted by Cree Myles, to mark Baldwinâs 100th birth year in 2024,â Taylor said. âThe podcast features different scholars, but every episode ends with Ed PavliÄ, and thereâs a whole episode about his own coming into Baldwin.â
Taylor is excited that a scholar of PavliÄâs stature is coming to UAH.
âHeâs an encyclopedia of Baldwin. He has worked with the Baldwin estate and Baldwinâs sister Gloria Baldwin Karefa-Smart and was one of very few people to have access to unarchived Baldwin letters and other material. Heâs had a great relationship with the family. So, he has a kind of knowledge that most of us donât have because heâs seen things that a lot of us havenât seen. He has such a grasp of Baldwin where he can move between texts and show you profound correlations.â
Taylor also noted that PavliÄ consulted on Barry Jenkinsâ 2018 film âIf Beale Street Could Talk,â an adaptation of Baldwinâs novel.
PavliÄ, Taylor added, is âa dynamic, creative writer with an impressive array of books in his own right.â
PavliÄâs work includes more than a dozen books and articles in more than 60 magazines. His website biography describes him as âan American writer whose work travels across â often blurring â genres: poetry, fiction, non-fiction, and scholarship. Centered in African American and diasporic life and culture, most of his work explores racial dynamics in the experiences of persons â fictive, actual, historical and contemporary â whose placement and perspectives arenât neatly classifiable in contemporary vocabularies, theirs or ours.â
He is the recipient of The American Poetry Review / Honickman First Book Award (2001), The National Poetry Series Open Competition (2012, 2014), The Author of the Year Award from the Georgia Writersâ Association (2009, 2023), and the Darwin Turner Memorial Award from African American Review (1997), among others. He and his family live in Athens, Ga.
Contact
Julie Jansen
256.824.6926
julie.jansen@uah.edu
Ann Marie Martin
(256) 824-5294âŹ
annmarie.martin@uah.edu
