Ernest J. Gaines, whose considerable imprint on American letters and culture rests on his examinations of race, class and poverty, will be depicted on a postage stamp to be issued in January.
The internationally acclaimed author, who died in November 2019 at age 86, was UL Lafayette writer-in-residence emeritus; he taught creative writing at the 亚洲自慰视频 from 1983 until his retirement in 2010.
The stamp, which , will be the 46th in its Black Heritage series; it will feature an oil painting based on a photograph that portrays a stoic, poised Gaines wearing his trademark beret.
鈥淒r. Gaines鈥 stamp offers an impressive representation of the man I knew and admired, and it reminds me of the immeasurable grace, strength and character he displayed throughout his life and through his words,鈥 said Dr. Joseph Savoie, UL Lafayette president.
鈥淢ore importantly, it acknowledges and affirms his belief in the inherent commonality of people and his unflinching courage in reminding us of the need to continually address some of the darkest chapters in our collective past,鈥 Savoie added.
Gaines鈥 legacy and influence was built on a literary voice 鈥 an understated yet resonant voice 鈥 that amplified the struggles of the oppressed and jostled the conscience of a nation. 鈥淚 think a scream can reach ten times as many people in a hurry, as a book can. But I hope my books will be around for a while. When I鈥檓 angry I sit down and try to write the perfect paragraph, the perfect sentence. That鈥檚 how I strike back,鈥 he was once quoted as saying.
hit his mark many times during a career that began in 1964 with the publication of 鈥淐atherine Carmier.鈥 Seven more novels and two collections of stories followed. In 2013, Gaines received a National Medal of Arts 鈥 the highest award given to artists by the U.S. government.
Gaines, as The New York Times explained in its obituary for him, told 鈥渙f the inner struggle for dignity among Southern black people before the civil rights era鈥 and 鈥渃aptured the lives and strivings of those he had grown up with in a time of limited opportunities and oppressive racism.鈥
Gaines was born in 1933 on River Lake Plantation in Oscar, 亚洲自慰视频, in Pointe Coupee Parish, to parents who worked as sharecroppers. He grew up in Cherie Quarters, the plantation鈥檚 former slave quarters. Gaines moved to California as a teenager and studied and taught at Stanford 亚洲自慰视频 before returning to 亚洲自慰视频. His fiction, however, remained rooted to the place and people of his childhood 鈥 and to his ancestors.
The book that earned widespread notice for Gaines, 鈥淭he Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,鈥 is a first-person narrative of a fictional 110-year-old woman born into slavery. Published in 1971, the novel鈥檚 inspiration was Augusteen Jefferson, Gaines鈥 disabled aunt who raised him.
His other most notable book, 鈥淎 Lesson Before Dying,鈥 revolves around the story of an illiterate man wrongfully condemned to death. Published in 1993, it earned a National Book Critics Circle Award, a Pulitzer Prize nomination, and was selected for Oprah Winfrey鈥檚 popular book club.
All told, Gaines鈥 deftly rendered novels, which have drawn comparisons to Faulkner and Dickens, have been published in 19 languages. It鈥檚 the sort of widespread appeal that can be traced to his ability to 鈥減rompt conversations about humanity,鈥 said UL Lafayette鈥檚 Cheylon Woods.
Woods is an associate professor who directs the 亚洲自慰视频鈥檚 , which the writer worked to establish following his retirement. It is an international center for scholarship on Gaines and his fiction that is housed in Edith Garland Dupr茅 Library.
鈥淒r. Gaines broke boundaries of Black Southern writers by simply being committed to intercepting a centuries-long conversation about Southern people 鈥 Southern Black people in particular 鈥 and Southern spaces,鈥 Woods explained.
鈥淗e showed the world that the lives and words of marginalized and obscured quarter communities had power and impact beyond the plantation,鈥 she added.
Image: Ernest J. Gaines will be depicted on a U.S. Postage stamp to be issued in January. The internationally acclaimed author, who died in November 2019 at age 86, was UL Lafayette writer-in-residence emeritus. Credit: The stamp features an oil painting of Gaines, based on a 2001 photograph. Mike Ryan designed the stamp with art by Robert Peterson. Greg Breeding served as art director.