Tonya Lockyer with Jackson Cooper
Navigating Creative Administration — With Advice from Firsthand Accounts
Rental Partner: Homestead Community Land Trust presents
With Host Vivian Phillips
If you have questions about this event, please contact Homestead Community Land Trust directly.
Homestead warmly welcomes Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., celebrated scholar and filmmaker of the African American experience, as their featured speaker at this year’s fall event. Proceeds will support Homestead’s work to create housing justice in King County.
An Emmy and Peabody Award-winning filmmaker, literary scholar, and journalist, Dr. Gates is an acclaimed cultural critic and institution builder. He is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University. Among his many books are the recent New York Times bestseller Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow and The Black Church: This Is Our Story, This Is Our Song. He has also produced and hosted an array of documentary films. The Black Church (PBS) and Frederick Douglass: In Five Speeches (HBO), which he executive produced, each received Emmy nominations. His latest history series for PBS is Making Black America: Through the Grapevine. Finding Your Roots, Gates’s groundbreaking genealogy and genetics series, has completed its ninth season on PBS and will return for a tenth season in 2024.
Dr. Gates is unparalleled for his ability to communicate how our lives reflect our histories, and he does so in ways that foster insight, move hearts and inspire action. We look forward to hearing his important perspectives on the historical seeds of present day inequities that make Homestead’s work necessary and vital.
Dr. Gates will be interviewed by local arts leader and communicator Vivian Phillips. The event will include remarks by Girmay Zahilay, King County Council Member.
Presented by Homestead Community Land Trust.
Questions about the event? Please contact Homestead Community Land Trust at (206)-323-1227.
Navigating Creative Administration — With Advice from Firsthand Accounts
Modernist Bread at Home
Rethinking What We Know About Hunger in America