“Neither love nor terror makes one blind: indifference makes one blind.” – James Baldwin
On the 60th anniversary of the publication of Giovanni’s Room, James Baldwin’s seminal novel about sexuality, race and myth in America, Booker Prize-winning writer Ben Okri joins us to reflect on the life, literature and enduring legacy of one of the world’s most loved writers.
Baldwin’s work reshaped the literary and political landscape. Many of our greatest writers today credit his influence on their work. As an author and activist, his writing fearlessly tackled race, sexuality, love, masculinity and belonging with radical intimacy.
Published in 1956, Giovanni’s Room was groundbreaking for its explicit homoeroticism. Its honesty and courage characterised Baldwin’s work as a whole. His poetry, essays, speeches, novels and plays, were pivotal to both the civil rights movement and the gay liberation movement in mid-twentieth century America, and continue to speak urgently to the present moment.
On May 12, Okri will bring his own artistic vision to an exploration of Baldwin’s work live from the Kiln Theatre, the same venue as Anton Philips’ production of Baldwin’s The Amen Corner, the first black-produced and directed play to transfer to the West End of London.
Join us at the Kiln Theatre to discuss Baldwin’s lasting influence and relevance in the world today, and have your questions answered in the audience Q&A.
Madame Sosostris & the Festival for the Broken-Hearted (Paperback)
by Ben Okri
Speakers are subject to change.