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Equatoguinean writer Juan Tomás Ávila Laurel will discuss his activism and latest novel, The Gurugu Pledge, which focuses on African migration to Europe as a result of decolonization and dictatorships. The event on March 28th at the Boston University African Studies Center will be in English and Spanish and examine Laurel's use of literature to protest civil liberties restrictions in Equatorial Guinea, from which he is now exiled in Barcelona, Spain.
Equatoguinean writer Juan Tomás Ávila Laurel will discuss his activism and latest novel, The Gurugu Pledge, which focuses on African migration to Europe as a result of decolonization and dictatorships. The event on March 28th at the Boston University African Studies Center will be in English and Spanish and examine Laurel's use of literature to protest civil liberties restrictions in Equatorial Guinea, from which he is now exiled in Barcelona, Spain.
Equatoguinean writer Juan Tomás Ávila Laurel will discuss his activism and latest novel, The Gurugu Pledge, which focuses on African migration to Europe as a result of decolonization and dictatorships. The event on March 28th at the Boston University African Studies Center will be in English and Spanish and examine Laurel's use of literature to protest civil liberties restrictions in Equatorial Guinea, from which he is now exiled in Barcelona, Spain.
THE EQUATORIAL GUINEAN DIASPORA MARCH 28, 2019 @ 6PM BU AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER ROOM 505, 232 BAY STATE RD Lecture in English and Spanish Translated by Carolina Nvé Díaz San Francisco
Equatoguinean writer Juan Tomás Ávila Laurel
embarked on an unexpected hunger strike in February 2011 to protest the repression of civil liberties in Equatorial Guinea. Now exiled in Barcelona, Spain, Ávila Laurel continues using his literary work to denounce the second dictatorial regime established in 1979. His latest book, The Gurugu Pledge, is a novel dedicated to the migrations of Africans to Europe and offers a vision of an extended phenomena resulting from decolonization and dictatorships.
CO-SPONSORED BY THE AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES PROGRAM & THE DEPARTMENT OF WORLD LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
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