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Zora Neale Hurston: Looking This Over (virtual)

Join us for a virtual "Living History" performance, inspired by the life and work of Zora Neale Hurston.

Looking Things Over: Zora Neale Hurston a woman of enormous talent, she rose to become one of the central figures of the Harlem Renaissance. She was an outstanding novelist, journalist, folklorist and anthropologist. Hurston believed in the beauty of black expressions and traditions. Although her work was praised by some, many attacked it, focusing on Hurston’s lifestyle and personality- her audaciousness, independence, and arrogance. After going to Florida in 1927 to collect folklore, and after years of organizing her notes published Mules and Men in 1935. Zora, not only did she love writing the folklores she enjoyed telling them. Zora celebrated the African American culture of the rural South, because she believed that black people had wonderful stories that the world needed to hear, and she told them proudly.

About the artist:

Gwendolyn Quezaire-Presutti’s portrayal of historical women introduces untapped American History, drawing on a wide array of primary historical resources. For the past 22 years Gwendolyn has engaged audiences giving voice to real life accounts, struggles, self-determination and triumphs of women she portrays. Each performance is infused with her unique fingerprint giving an integral portrait of a historical woman or event.

This is a collaborative event with the public libraries of the following towns:

  • Chelmsford

  • Andover

  • Carlisle

  • Newburyport

Register here.