Guyana Folk Festival 2004
eCaroh Sponsors Spoken Word Symposium at Columbia
University in NY
September 3 and September 4
[from Press Release - August 2004]
eCaroh Caribbean Emporium CEO, Ron Lammy, a
Columbia University graduate, has partnered with Aaron Fox,
Director, Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University to host
the Guyfolkfest 2004 Symposium.
Guyanese Word:
Spoken, Written, Sung, and Drawn
will be held at Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus in
Manhattan.
Day # 1: Friday, September 3, 2004
The symposium will extend over
two days. The opening session will start at 1:00 p.m. on Friday,
September 3, 2004. After the formal opening ceremony, the symposium
will move into the first plenary session, a roundtable discussion
that will focus on Guyana's literary heritage. Several of Guyana's
internationally recognized writers and Guyana Prize winners will
participate in this session. Among the expected participants are
Cyril Dabydeen, Fred D'Aguiar, O. R. Dathorne, Michael Gilkes,
Stanley Greaves, Peter Lutchmonen Kempadoo, Paloma Mohammed, Henry
Muttoo, and Gokarran Sukdeo. Juliet Emanuel and the distinguished
Guyanese radio commentator Kojo Nmambi are expected to moderate the
roundtable. This session will end around 3:30 p.m.
Day # 2:
Saturday, September 4, 2004
The second day of the symposium will start at 10:00 a.m. and
will feature concurrent panels, readings, audio-visual
presentations, performances, a dance workshop, and a closing
concert.
The registration fee
for the symposium is $25.00
WILL CALL only
You may order your tickets online here -
service charge of $2.50 applies, no postage charge.
Click on the button, then adjust the quantity of tickets you would like in the
shopping cart.
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The sponsors for the Guyana Folk
Festival 2004 Symposium are the Guyana Folk Festival Committee,
The Center for Ethnomusicology at Columbia University; Ohio
University's Department of African American Studies, and
eCaroh Caribbean Emporium of Boston.
The Symposium 2004 Organizing Team Vibert Cambridge, Juliet Emanuel, Aubrey Bonnett, Ron Lammy, Aaron
Fox
For more details about the Guyana Folk Festival, visit
www.GuyFolkFest.org
Getting to Columbia in New York
The Columbia
University campus in Morningside Heights is located at Broadway and
116th Street in Manhattan.
1. Airport
The closest Airport is LaGuardia Airport;
you can take the M60 bus directly to the Columbia Campus. But all
airports JFK and Newark, NJ are accessible. Here is a link that will
help with airport info:
http://www.nyc.com/list.aspx?c=9&e=gettingAroundID&s=515&v=515
2. Taxi.
Average cab fare from JFK and LaGuardia
Airport is $45.00 flat fee plus tip and tolls to any of the five
Boroughs or from the boroughs to the airport. Here is a helpful
link: http://www.nyc.com/visitor_guide/taxis.aspx
Another option is Super Shuttle NY -
http://www.supershuttle.com/htm/cities/nyc.htm
3. Subway.
The subway stop for Columbia is the 116th
Street Station off the 1 & 9 (red) Line.
4. Driving:
Directions to the Columbia campus:
http://www.columbia.edu/about_columbia/directions.html |