华体会

The Wondrous Voice of Junot Diaz

By Lori Putnam

Junot Diaz

Photos: An expressive Junot Diaz captivates and connects with the audience

Just a day after being nominated as a National Book Award finalist for his latest work, This Is How You Lose Her, bestselling author Junot Diaz joined the CI community as part of the 8th annual Campus Reading Celebration. He greeted the near-capacity crowd with a reminder that while he teaches creative writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, he wasn鈥檛 speaking as a professor. 聽

鈥淚 was asked to come here tonight as an artist,鈥 said Diaz, in a conversation peppered with language meant to provoke and engage his audience. 鈥淲e always bug people. That鈥檚 the nature of being an artist. If you鈥檙e an outsider, and always pointing out stuff no one wants to hear, then you have some good training to be an artist.鈥

Diaz is the first author in the University鈥檚 Reading Celebration series to have been nominated by a student. His critically acclaimed novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 2007 and helped build a reputation for Diaz as a writer with a unique voice. In Oscar Wao, Diaz shares a collection of character stories that capture the immigrant family experience 鈥 an experience that the author and many CI students share. 聽

鈥淕rowing up, I didn鈥檛 realize I needed to have my own dreams,鈥 Diaz said. 鈥淚 assumed the dreams my family had for me were my dreams. It didn鈥檛 occur to me to be an artist.鈥 聽

According to Matthew Cook, Head of Unique Collections and Scholarly Communication at the Broome Library, Diaz offered students an important opportunity to meet a successful author and realize what we share in common. 鈥淔or many of us, we imagine a writer being different from ourselves,鈥 said Cook, one of five members of CI鈥檚 Reading Celebration committee. 鈥淭his event shows that writers are not as foreign as you may think. It shows that a kid from Parlin, New Jersey, may not be so different from a kid in Ventura County.鈥 聽

As part of this year鈥檚 event, Cook and the committee worked with faculty to pull out many of the book鈥檚 themes to discuss in class, such as the main character鈥檚 interest in computers, politics and political oppression, psychology, and more. 聽

These types of discussions speak to Diaz鈥檚 own belief in the university as a tool for transformation. 鈥淯niversities provide a fundamental opportunity for a student to encounter materials, peers, and faculty that open the door to complete transformation,鈥 said the author. 鈥淭hat is what getting an education is鈥n opportunity to be transformed. The person who walks into the university should be unrecognizable from the person who walks out.鈥

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