A symposium on campus Sept. 21 to 23 will bring together scholars and artists to explore the legacy of Robert Hayden, one of the most prominent Black poets of the 20th century.
will feature a keynote address by Charles Henry Rowell, founding editor of the journal Callaloo. There will be roundtable discussions and readings by award-winning poets, many of whom were influenced by Hayden.
And as its name indicates, the conference will seek to address a number of wrongs, including the derision Hayden faced from some of his contemporaries during his lifetime, says organizer , a poet and associate professor of English and creative writing.
This week鈥檚 conference has been on her mind for years, says Francis, who lauds Hayden as a visionary whose work influenced writers from a variety of backgrounds. He served as the consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress, which, given the title鈥檚 subsequent name change, effectively made him the first Black poet laureate of the United States.
Hayden, whose poems include the widely anthologized 鈥淭hose Winter Sundays,鈥 was also the first Black faculty member in the English department of the University of Michigan, and served on the faculty of Fisk University for more than 20 years. An internationally celebrated poet, he was elected to the American Academy of Poets in 1975.
Yet, he was reviled by major poets of the Black Arts Movement, which arose alongside the Black Power Movement, 鈥渂ecause he claimed himself as a poet first,鈥 says Francis, a Fisk graduate who describes Hayden as her 鈥淣orth Star.鈥
At a Black writer鈥檚 conference at Fisk in 1966, where he was a panelist, Hayden was 鈥渆xcoriated鈥 and 鈥渄erided鈥 by several of the poets who set the terms for the Black Arts Movement, says Francis.
鈥淚t breaks my heart that he was treated that way,鈥 she says.
Francis says Hayden, a Detroit native who died in 1980 at age 66, didn鈥檛 ignore his Blackness鈥攈e offered it up as normative.
鈥淲hen I read Robert Browning, I鈥檓 expected to see his experience as normative,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what Robert Hayden was doing. He puts himself out there as with any other artist and allows any of us to read his work and draw our own corollaries.鈥
Sponsored by the , the symposium will feature faculty from the Department of English and Creative Writing, including , associate professor, , assistant professor, , who holds the Dartmouth 天美影视ship in English and Creative Writing, and , associate professor. They will be joined on campus by such literary luminaries as poet Tyehimba Jess, whose Olio won the Pulitzer Prize and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, among others.

Francis, who moved to Detroit as a young teen, says the conference also will shine a much overdue light on the recent successes of poets and artists with ties to the city.
Detroit native Nandi Comer, a 2019 Kresge Literary Arts Fellow, will be among the panelists in 鈥淒etroit鈥檚 Historical and Aesthetic Context,鈥 a discussion set for Thursday, and take part in a poetry reading on Friday night.
Poet francine j. harris, a professor of English at the University of Houston, will participate in Friday鈥檚 roundtable, 鈥淭he Lineage of Production.鈥 Harris, who is originally from Detroit, won the 2020 National Book Critics Circle Award for her collection Here is the Sweet Hand. She will share her work during a poetry reading Thursday afternoon.
The conference also will include a screening of and discussion with director and Pushcart Prize winner Perry Janes on Thursday night. A writer and filmmaker from Metro Detroit, Janes received a Student Academy Award for the short film, which was shot on location in the city.
How can it be that in the last decade, writers from the city, which is often ignored and disparaged, have received every major poetry award, yet the only conversations about it are happening 鈥渦nderground,鈥 asks Francis, whose book Forest Primeval won the Sewanee Review鈥檚 Aiken Taylor Award in Modern American Poetry and the Kingsley-Tufts Award.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want it to be an underground conversation anymore because I think racism is what makes it an underground conversation,鈥 Francis says. 鈥淭o Dartmouth鈥檚 credit, they have allowed me to have this conversation on this large platform.鈥
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The conference is free and open to the public, but . For the most up-to-date schedule, .