 Media Credit: Courtney Douglas Novelist
and 2008 Pulitzer Prize winner Junot Diaz signs books following his
appearance at Richard White Lecture Hall Wednesday night.
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One
of Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot Diaz's favorite subjects is a
society's ability to accept immigrants. When he made an appearance in
Richard White Lecture Hall Wednesday night, Duke certainly had no
trouble accepting him.
Diaz met with frequent applause and
laughter from the standing-room only crowd, few of them undergraduates.
He read passages from his short story "The Sun, The Moon, The Stars,"
first published in The New Yorker in 1998, and his novel The Brief
Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, winner of the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for
Fiction.
Diaz also fielded questions from the audience, which
touched on subjects ranging from the increased safety of nerds under
the Obama administration to why he writes about spurned women so often.
"I'm almost always interested in the losers of any equation,"
he said of the latter. "When it comes down to it, at the most basic
level, happy people-they're almost impossible to write about."
Diaz's
banter was peppered with obscenities and colloquialisms, which often
collided in entertaining ways with his literary intelligence.
"When you're a nerd, your ghetto pass is tenuous," he said, in one of the evening's finer examples.
Diaz
is an immigrant from the Dominican Republic, which he left at the age
of six. Dominican identity played a large role in both his answers and
the short story, which is about, in his words, "a dumba-" who visits
the island with his girlfriend as their relationship is spiraling.
"You
no deserve I speak Spanish to you," and "Let me confess: I love Santo
Domingo," are two lines from the story that hint at the author's
complex relationship with the island and his mother tongue. English was
the first language he learned to read. Diaz said Dominicans often look
down on this when he returns to the island.
Jenny Snead
Williams, executive director of the Program in Latino/a Studies in the
Global South, said Diaz was brought to Duke through a combined effort
by the program and
Lambda Upsilon Lambda Fraternity, Inc."This is very unique in that the students came to us and said, 'We'd really like to bring [Diaz],'" she said.
The combined effort between the students and the program was essential
to its success, she said. Both groups explored different methods of
raising the necessary funds. The event was more costly than most
functions the Program in Latino/a Studies had previously held.
"We're
still a fairly new program, about an 11-year history," she said. "All
of our events so far leading up to this have been much smaller scale."
Freshman
Hilary Henry heard about Diaz's appearance through one of her Latino/a
studies classes. She purchased his novel after being impressed by the
appearance.
"He's very funny and intellectual," she said.
Freshmen Kimberley Goffe. who found out about the event through Facebook, agreed.
"He's not one of those stuck-up writer, literary people," she said. "He was very down-to-Earth, relaxed."
Durham
resident Kendra Sena caught word that Diaz was coming to Duke after her
book group read his novel. She ended up bringing Anne O'Neil-Henry, a
graduate student in romance studies. Neither was disappointed.
"I really liked the short story too," O'Neil said. "I wish he'd finished it, because I really want to know what happened."
Throughout the night, Diaz wove in a message for the college educated, himself included.
"College
kids think they're mad cool, until they go home and see the people we
left at home," he said. "Compared to them, we're supernerds, man."
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