Arts & Lectures
2001-2002 Season Lecture Series News Release
For Immediate Release

March 12, 2002
Contact: George Yatchisin
(805) 893-3494
e-mail: yatchisin-g@sa.ucsb.edu

Noted writer Richard Rodriguez delivers the lecture
“Brown: An Erotic History of the Americas”
at UCSB Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall

Summary Facts:

Richard Rodriguez, one of our most perceptive commentators about ethnicity, race and class, will present the lecture Brown: An Erotic History of the Americas, based upon his latest nonfiction work of the same name, on Tuesday, April 16 at 4 pm in UCSB Lotte Lehmann Concert Hall. This is a free event. With the publication of Brown Rodriguez completes his trilogy on American public life that he began with the highly acclaimed memoirs Hunger of Memory (1982) and Days of Obligation: An Argument with My Mexican Father (1992). In Brown Rodriguez observes that Hispanics are becoming Americanized at the same rate that the United States is becoming Latinized. He argues that Hispanics are coloring an American identity that traditionally has chosen to describe itself as black and white. The New Yorker praises his work, calling him “a writer of unusual grace and clarity, eloquent in all his reflections...He speaks with authority, in a voice of true clarity, and it is impossible to doubt him.”

The son of Mexican immigrants, Rodriguez was born in 1944 in San Francisco. He primarily spoke Spanish until he entered school at the age of six and his memoir Hunger of Memory describes how English language instruction distanced him from his parents’ native culture. The book is assigned widely in high school and college courses, and has achieved contemporary classic status despite its opposition to two programs many educators usually hold dear—affirmative action and bilingual education.

Rodriguez went on to earn his Bachelor’s Degree from Stanford University and his Ph.D. in English Renaissance Literature from UC Berkeley. His second book, Days of Obligation, was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 1993. In a series of essays it examines what it means to be Mexican/American, beginning with the 16th century meetings of the conquistadors and Aztecs and moving forward to modern San Francisco as it confronts the plague of AIDS.

In addition to his writing, Rodriguez works as an editor at Pacific News Service. His insightful commentaries on the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer won him a Peabody Award. He is a contributing editor for both Harper’s Magazine and the “Opinion” section of the Los Angeles Times. The Village Voice names Rodriguez “the best American essayist...[He] doesn’t kowtow to political correctness. He shuns the pack, rides alone. He writes a lonely line of individualism, the grandeur and grief of the American soul.”

This lecture by Richard Rodriguez is presented by UCSB Arts & Lectures and the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center. Courtesy of the UCSB Bookstore, books by Richard Rodriguez will be available for purchase and signing.

For tickets or more information,
call UCSB Arts & Lectures at (805) 893-3535.

Editor: For photos, please call
George Yatchisin at (805) 893-3494.