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Ghost Season

KHM

Reading with novelist Fatin Abbas & conversation with Kwame Anthony Appiah and donna Kukama, Professor  of Contemporary Art / Global South at KHM. A programme of stimmen afrikas in cooperation with KHM. 

Promoted and supported by Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung/bpb, Kunststiftung NRW and Stadt Köln.

Lecture in English.

Mittwoch, 26. Juni 2024, 19 Uhr, Aula
Filzengraben 2, 50676 Köln
Tickets: 12/10/8 Euro
Free admission for KHM members with KHM access card.

Fatin Abbas, born in Khartoum/ Sudan and raised in New York, earned her PhD in Comparative Literature from Harvard University, and her MFA in Creative Writing from Hunter College, New York. She will read from her debut novel Ghost Season followed by a discussion with Prof. Kwame Anthony Appiah and the South African artist donna Kukama (Professor of Contemporary Art / Global South at KHM) who will also moderate the programme.

The five central characters in Abbas' novel, set in current Sudan, reveal intimate and unexpected experiences of personal belongings and boundaries. How do the panelists view these dynamic identities, also with regard to their specific backgrounds and personal "Wings with Roots".


Promoted and supported by Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung/bpb, Kunststiftung NRW and Stadt Köln.


There will be a book table with the following publications by the authors:

Fatin Abbas: Zeit der Geister (Rowohlt Verlag)

Fatin Abbas: Ghost Season (W. W. Norton & Company)

Kwame Anthony Appiah: Identitäten. Die Fiktionen der Zugehörigkeit (Hanser Literatur)

Kwame Anthony Appiah : The Lies that Bind. Rethinking Identity (W. W. Norton & Company)

Fatin Abbas  is an international writer and journalist. Born in Khartoum, Sudan, and raised in New York City, she gained her BA in English from the University of Cambridge, her PhD in Comparative Literature from Harvard University, and her MFA in Creative Writing from Hunter College, the City University of New York, where she was awarded both the Bernard Cohen Short Story Prize and the Miriam Weinberg Richter Award for her writing. She has published essays and reports in The Nation, Le Monde diplomatique and Die Zeit, among others, and short prose in the magazines Granta and Freeman's. She has taught fiction writing at MIT and the Pratt Institute in New York and comparative literature at Bard College Berlin. Dave Eggers commented on Ghostseason, her first novel: "Absolutely fascinating ... an extremely important novel." Fatin Abbas currently lives in Berlin.


Kwame Anthony Appiah is a renowned international philosopher and writer, who has written about political philosophy, race, ethics, the philosophy of language and mind, African intellectual history and Identity. He grew up in Ghana and England and received his doctorate at Cambridge University. He has taught at Yale, Cornell, Duke, and Harvard universities and lectured at many other institutions in the US, Germany, Ghana, South Africa, and Paris. Besides his academic work, Appiah has also published several works of fiction. His first novel, Avenging Angel, set at the University of Cambridge, involved a murder among the Cambridge Apostles. Appiah's second and third novels are Nobody Likes Letitia and Another Death in Venice. Appiah has been nominated for, and received, several awards. He was the 2009 finalist in the arts and humanities for the Eugene R. Gannon Award for the Continued Pursuit of Human Advancement. In 2010, he was named by Foreign Policy magazine on its list of top global thinkers. In 2013 he received the National Humanities Medal.  Currently, he is a professor of philosophy and law at New York University.

Editor — Juliane Kuhn
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