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Up Home: One Girl’s Journey

October 12, 2023 @ 6:00 pm

 |  $10 – $32

Details

Date:
October 12, 2023
Time:
6:00 pm
Cost:
$10 – $32
Event Category:
Website:
https://www.harvard.com/event/ruth_j._simmons_at_the_brattle_theatre/

Venue

Brattle Theatre
40 Brattle Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 United States

Organizer

Harvard Book Store
Phone:
(617) 661-1515
Website:
http://harvard.com/
About
Ruth J. Simmons at the Brattle Theatre
presenting
Up Home:
One Girl’s Journey
in conversation with HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR.

 

Up Home: One Girl’s Journey

 

Harvard Book Store welcomes RUTH J. SIMMONS— former president of Smith College, Brown University, and Prairie View A&M University— for a discussion of her new memoir Up Home: One Girl’s Journey. She will be joined in conversation by HENRY LOUIS GATES, JR., Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and founding Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University.

 

Ticketing

There are two ticket options available for this event.

Book-Included Ticket: Includes admission for one and one hardcover copy of Up Home: One Girl’s Journey pre-signed by the author.

Admission-Only Ticket: Includes admission for one.

About Up Home

Born in 1945, Ruth J. Simmons grew up the twelfth child of sharecroppers. Her first home had no running water, no electricity to light the two crowded rooms, no books to read. Yet despite this—or, in her words, because of it—Simmons would become one of America’s preeminent educators. The former president of Smith College and Brown University, and now the outgoing president of Prairie View A&M, Texas’s oldest HBCU, for decades Simmons has inspired generations of students as she herself made history.

In Up Home, Simmons takes us back to Grapeland to show how the people who love us when we are young shape who we become: We meet her caring, tireless mother who managed to feed her large family with an often empty pantry; her father, who refused to let racial and economic injustice crush his youngest daughter’s dreams; the doting brothers and sisters; and the attentive teachers who welcomed Ruth into the classroom, guiding her to a future she could hardly imagine as a child.

From the farmland of East Texas to Houston’s Fifth Ward to New Orleans at the dawn of the civil rights movement, Simmons depicts an era long gone but whose legacies of inequality we still live with today. Written in clear and timeless prose, Up Home is both an origin story set in the segregated South and the uplifting chronicle of a girl whose intellect, grace, and curiosity guide her as she creates a place for herself in the world.

Praise for Up Home

“A story of dreaming and becoming, of breaking out of what is supposed to be and discovering what can be. Up Home is far more than a record of the path to success of one of the truly great college presidents in the history of American education; it is a riveting work of literature, destined to take its place in the canon of great African American autobiographies. Simmons’s best friend and confidante, Toni Morrison, would be proud!” —Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Harvard University

“A love letter to family, to the Black teachers and institutions that loved and inspired Ruth Simmons—people and places that urged her to dream beyond her circumstance and to imagine herself in the most expansive of terms. It is the story of the power of self-creation in community.” —Eddie S. Glaude Jr., New York Times bestselling author of Begin Again

“An ode to powerful mothers and teachers everywhere whose small acts of love and encouragement pave the way for individual success, community pride, and future greatness.” —Tiya Miles, New York Times bestselling author of All That She Carried, winner of the National Book Award