@ChicagoHumanitiesFestival
  @ChicagoHumanitiesFestival
Chicago Humanities Festival | Margaret Atwood: Dearly @ChicagoHumanitiesFestival | Uploaded December 2020 | Updated October 2024, 1 day ago.
While many know Margaret Atwood for her dystopian novels The Handmaid’s Tale (1985) and the MaddAddam trilogy, her distinguished career began via another medium: poetry. Audiences eagerly awaiting Atwood’s return to the form will not be disappointed with her first collection in over a decade. Dearly is an introspective and intimate reflection on love, loss, and the passage of time. Come hear the singular voice and mind of Margaret Atwood at play, reflecting on the role of writing in helping us to understand our past and prepare for the future. Atwood is joined in conversation by CHF Marilynn Thoma Artistic Director Alison Cuddy.

This program is generously underwritten by Ellen Stone Belic.

Women & Children First is Chicago's feminist bookstore, celebrating and amplifying underrepresented voices since 1979.

This week’s programs presented with the support of Bank of America.

Donate now to support programs like this: chicagohumanities.org/donate

View captions powered by StreamText: wordshare.com/player/CHF

Pre-show music by Mad Squabbles: madsquabbles.bandcamp.com/track/black-lives

Explore upcoming events: chicagohumanities.org
Connect on Twitter: twitter.com/ChiHumanities
Connect on Facebook: facebook.com/chicagohumanities
Connect on Instagram: instagram.com/chihumanities
Margaret Atwood: DearlyImagining Chicago’s Future: A Film Screening & ConversationTheaster Gates and Alison CuddySpektral Quartet with Robin Wall Kimmerer: Plain, AirJoyce Carol OatesKim Gordon, Sinéad Gleeson & Laurie Anderson on Women in Music [CC]Bob, Nate, and Erin Odenkirk in Conversation with Peter SagalMartin Luther King Jr. by Chicago’s 2024 Pulitzer Prize Winner Jonathan EigYouth Leading ChangeJoan Baez on Music, Art, and Lifelong ActivismBeto O’Rourke in ConversationCecil McDonald, Jr. on Cuts and Beats

Margaret Atwood: Dearly @ChicagoHumanitiesFestival

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER