Home Home Programs Grants Publications Calendar Gallery Donate People Links Mailing List Contact Search

Road Scholars Speakers Bureau

 

Booker T. Anthony, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of English at Fayetteville State University, ordained Baptist minister

Fayetteville, NC

W: (910) 672-1347

H: (910) 424-6836

banthony@uncfsu.edu 

Travel region: Statewide

About Booker T. Anthony:

Dr. Booker T. Anthony is Associate Professor of English at Fayetteville State University. He holds at BA in English at St. Augustine’s College in Raleigh, and MA and PhD degrees in English from Ohio State University. Anthony is also a graduate of the Harvard University Graduate School of Education Management Development Program, and the American Association of State Colleges and Universities’ Millennium Leadership Institute. In his profession, he has served as president of the College Language Association, Inc. An ordained Baptist minister and local pastor, he currently serves as the director of the Honors Program at FSU.

 

The African American Church in Works by Ernest J. Gaines

 

This lecture attempts to define the role of the black church in three works by Ernest J. Gaines: A Lesson Before Dying, A Gathering of Old Men, and The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. The church has traditionally been cast as the pillar of faith for African American communities. Gaines’ fiction challenges this belief in a society where the church does not intervene to combat the inequalities that are widespread in the South. What has the church accomplished in these communities? What has caused these communities to seek self-definition for survival? Dr. Booker T. Anthony invites the reader to revisit the role of the church to determine if it is merely a new myth designed to pacify the oppressed.

 

Program requirements: lectern, lapel or clip-on microphone

 

 

Biblical Images in Literature

 

Thomas Babington Macaulay asserts in the essay “On John Dryden” that the “English Bible, a book which, if anything else in our language should perish, would alone suffice to show the whole extent of its beauty and power.” To some people, even among learned cultures, owning a Bible appears to have more relevance than reading a Bible. In this program, Dr. Booker T. Anthony delights and entertains the studious reader of the Bible by referencing a number of time-honored literary texts that reveal allusions to the Bible. Ultimately, he creates an appreciation for the Bible itself as a literary text to be studied for analysis and aesthetics. Anthony examines classics including, but not limited to, Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, poetry by Countee Cullen, and selected works of Shakespeare.

 

Program requirements: lectern, lapel or clip-on microphone