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Skidmore College
The McCormack Endowed Visiting Artist-Scholar Residency

Fall 2017

Caryl Phillips, novelist, playwright and essayist

Caryl Phillips

 

“Darker Than Blue: Curtis Mayfield”

Film screening followed by conversation with Don McCormack

October 24, 5 p.m.
Payne Room, Tang Teaching Museum

 

Caryl Phillips Public Reading and Book Signing

October 25, 8 p.m.
Davis Auditorium

 

"The Postcolonial Writer and the Historical Imaginary"

A Panel Discussion with Professors Bina Gogineni, Saleema Waraich, and Tillman Nechtman

October 26, 4 p.m.
Davis Auditorium

 

All events are free and open to the public

 

About Caryl Phillips

Caryl Phillips was born in St. Kitts and came to Britain at the age of four months. He grew up in Leeds and studied English Literature at Oxford University.

He began writing for the theater, and his plays include Strange Fruit (1980), Where There is Darkness (1982) and The Shelter (1983). He won the BBC Giles Cooper Award for Best Radio Play of the year with The Wasted Years (1984). He has written many dramas and documentaries for radio and television, including, in 1996, the three-hour film of his own novel The Final Passage. He wrote the screenplay for the film Playing Away (1986) and his screenplay for the Merchant Ivory adaptation of V.S. Naipaul's The Mystic Masseur (2001) won the Silver Ombu for best screenplay at the Mar Del Plata film festival in Argentina.

His novels are: The Final Passage (1985), A State of Independence (1986), Higher Ground (1989), Cambridge (1991), Crossing the River (1993), The Nature of Blood (1997), A Distant Shore (2003), Dancing in the Dark (2005), Foreigners (2007), In the Falling Snow (2009) and The Lost Child (2015). His nonfiction: The European Tribe (1987), The Atlantic Sound (2000), A New World Order (2001) and Colour Me English (2011). He is the editor of two anthologies, Extravagant Strangers: A Literature of Belonging (1997) and The Right Set: An Anthology of Writing on Tennis (1999). His work has been translated into more than a dozen languages.

He was named Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year in 1992 and was on the 1993 Granta list of Best of Young British Writers. His literary awards include the Martin Luther King Memorial Prize, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a British Council Fellowship, a Lannan Foundation Fellowship and Britain's oldest literary award, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, for Crossing the River, which was also shortlisted for the 1993 Booker Prize. A Distant Shore was longlisted for the 2003 Booker Prize and won the 2004 Commonwealth Writers Prize; Dancing in the Dark won the 2006 PEN/Open Book Award. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Society of the Arts and a recipient of the 2013 Anthony N. Sabga Caribbean Award for Excellence.

He has taught at universities in Ghana, Sweden, Singapore, Barbados, India and the United States and in 1999 was the University of the West Indies Humanities Scholar of the Year. In 2002–03 he was a fellow at the Centre for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library. Formerly Henry R. Luce Professor of Migration and Social Order at Columbia University, he is presently a professor of English at Yale University. He is an honorary fellow of Queen's College, Oxford University.