April 23, 1998
Harvard
University Gazette

 

Full contents
Notes
Newsmakers
Police Log
Gazette Home
Gazette Archives
News Office
Feedback

SEARCH THE GAZETTE

 

Columnist James Carroll to Deliver Lowell Lecture on Topic of Holocaust

Author and columnist James Carroll will deliver this year's Lowell Lecture on Tuesday, April 28, at 8 p.m. in Science Center A.

The annual Lowell Lecture, sponsored jointly by the Extension School and the Lowell Institute of Boston, is a public service event devoted to the major issues of the 1990s.

Carroll will speak on "Sacred Hatred: Religious and Political Lessons of the Holocaust."

Carroll attended the Priory School in Washington, D.C. After attending Georgetown University, he entered St. Paul's College, the Paulist Fathers' seminary in Washington, to train for the Roman Catholic priesthood. He earned his B.A. and M.A. degrees there and was ordained to the priesthood in 1969.

From 1969 to 1974, he served as Catholic Chaplain at Boston University. He published books on religious subjects and wrote a weekly column on religion and politics in the National Catholic Reporter. He was an anti-war activist from his student days in Washington until the Vietnam War ended. Carroll left the priesthood to pursue a career as a writer.

In 1974, he was Playwright-in-Residence at the Berkshire Theater Festival in Stockbridge, Mass. He published his first novel, Madonna Red, in 1976, and since then has written eight others, notably Mortal Friends (1978), Prince of Peace (1984), and The City Below (1994). His personal memoir, An American Requiem: God, My Father, and the War That Came Between Us, won the prestigious National Book Award in nonfiction for 1996. He is a frequent writer for The New Yorker, The New Republic, and The Atlantic Monthly. His weekly op-ed column on politics and religion and culture appears in The Boston Globe. He currently serves on the executive board of PEN-New England.

In recent years, Carroll has been a Shorenstein Fellow at the Kennedy School of Government and a Robert Frost Fellow at Amherst College. This year he is a Fellow at the Center for the Study of Values in Public Life at the Harvard Divinity School, where he is researching issues related to his Lowell Lecture topic.

The lecture is free and open to the public. For further information, call 495-4024.

 


Copyright 1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College