BW in the glow of the prestigious Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards
One
of
many
cultural
riches
that
the
Baldwin
Wallace
University
community
can
access
with
easy
proximity
to
Cleveland
is
the
prestigious
Anisfield-Wolf
Book
Awards
supported
by
the
Cleveland
Foundation.
This year, a BW student and a faculty member are catching some light from the glow of the awards.
BW Creative Writing Connection
Senior
English
major
Ashtyn
Morris
'21
has
already
been
in
the
Anisfield-Wolf
spotlight.
An essay Morris wrote for Dr. Michael Garriga's class was chosen this spring as part of the Anisfield-Wolf Reflection Exhibit at Case Western Reserve University.
She had this to say about being selected for the exhibition, "I was honored to have my essay chosen from a group of other talented writers. It has always been a dream of mine to have something published. I could not have achieved this accolade without the guidance from our amazing English Department!"
"It's a real honor for Ashtyn to have her work accepted and published there," says BW Associate Dean for the Humanities Dr. Denise Kohn. "Michael is leading BW's work to partner with the Anisfield-Wolf association, and he is teaching some of the Anisfield-Wolf books in his courses, including a new class this fall."
Morris is also active at BW outside the English department as a member of the Yellow Jacket tennis team and a BW Center for Innovation & Growth Fellow. She also has several internships on her resume.
The annual Anisfield-Wolf Awards culminate each year during Cleveland Book Week, being held September 29-October 4 this year.
Recognizing BW's Zambia Connection
Part
of
the
annual
celebration
is
a
virtual
Sister
Cities
conference
hosted
by
the
Global
Cleveland
Partnership
featuring
BW
Professor
Chisomo
Selemani
of
BW's
Speech-Language
Pathology
(SLP)
program.
On October 1, Selemani will interview Namwali Serpell, professor of English at Harvard University and author of "The Old Drift," 2020 winner of the Windham-Campbell prize and Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for fiction.
Serpell's
book
catalogs
several
generations
of
Zambian
families.
Both
Serpell
and
Selemani
share
Zambian
heritage,
and
Selemani
is
excited
about
being
invited
to
conduct
the
high-profile
interview.
Selemani's
personal
experience
and
efforts
to
lead
BW's
award-winning
partnership
with
nonprofit
and
government
partners
in
Zambia
made
her
a
perfect
fit
to
facilitate
this
conversation,
and
she
is
proud
to
take
part.
"The Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards are the only juried book awards that 'confront racism and explore diversity,'" Selemani explains. "Namwali's book skillfully navigates matters of race, class and gender equity. All of these themes seem timely and appropriate right now."
The entire conference, including Selemani's conversation with Serpell, is free to attend at globalcleveland.org/portfolio/sister-cities-conference.