Schedule Set for Second Kapnick Writer-in-Residence
Caryl Phillips, a seminal figure in Transatlantic literature whose critically acclaimed work has explored the African diaspora in the Caribbean, England and the United States, is scheduled to arrive on Grounds next week for a two-week stay as the Creative Writing Program’s Kapnick Foundation Distinguished Writer-in-Residence.
In addition to leading a master class for graduate and undergraduate students and holding one-on-one consultations with MFA and undergraduate prose writers, Phillips will deliver a reading on April 14 and a lecture on April 21. Both events are open to the public, and each one is scheduled to take place at 5 p.m. in the Special Collections Auditorium.
Phillips is the second writer in the program supported by the Kapnick Foundation Distinguished Writer-in-Residence Endowment, which was created to bring writers of international stature to the University to teach and engage with students and the literary community. The program follows in the tradition of William Faulkner’s legendary residencies at the UVA in the 1950s.
The late James Salter served as the first Kapnick Foundation Distinguished Writer-in-Residence. His public lectures in the fall of 2014 drew large audiences, and Prof. Jane. Alison, Director of the Creative Writing Program, expects ‘Caz’ Phillips’ public events to draw a similar response from the literary community. A renowned novelist and playwright, Phillips is a Professor of English at Yale University and an Honorary Fellow of The Queen’s College, Oxford University.
“From his revolutionary travel essays in The European Tribe, through his polyphonic transatlantic novel Crossing the River, and on to his latest book, The Lost Child—which re-investigates the story of Heathcliff through post-Colonial eyes—Caz Phillips brings to his extraordinary oeuvre a historical depth, global reach, empathy, and spirit of formal innovation that together make him a modern literary master,” Alison said. “He is also a generous teacher and compelling personal presence, and we in the writing community at UVA could not be more honored and delighted to welcome him.”
Born on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts and raised in England, Phillips studied English Literature at Oxford University and is the author of 10 novels, four plays and five works of nonfiction. His literary awards include a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, a Lannan Literary Award and a Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best Book in 2004 for his novel, A Distant Shore.
His 1993 novel Crossing the River was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and won Britain’s oldest literary award, the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. That same year, Phillips was named on the Granta list of “Best of Young British Writers.” In 2006, his eighth novel, Dancing in the Dark, won the PEN/Beyond the Margins Award.
His most recent novel, The Lost Child, was published last spring to glowing reviews. In the novel, Phillips recasts Wuthering Heights by imagining Heathcliff’s life before he’s brought to the moors of northern England as an orphan. The novel blends two other stories to Heathcliff’s narrative. One depicts novelist Emily Bronte’s final days as she confuses the details of her novel Wuthering Heights with her family life. The other focuses on a young female university student in the late 1950s who aspires to be a writer and who falls in love with a fellow student from an unnamed British colony.
A Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and the Royal Society of the Arts and a recipient of the 2013 Anthony N. Sabga Caribbean Award for Excellence, Phillips has taught at universities in Ghana, Sweden, Singapore, Barbados and India. As a professor, his teaching has focused on contemporary literature in English from around the world.