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Federico García Lorca in Vermont
The celebrated Spanish poet and playwright Federico García Lorca (1898-1936) was only 38 years old when he was executed by nationalist partisans at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, at least in part because of his homosexuality. News of Lorca's death galvanized the international community and inspired many young men and women to join the fight against Franco's forces in Spain. To this day, Lorca's poems and plays continue to engage readers, captivate audiences, and inspire writers, musicians, and social activists around the world.
In August 1929, Lorca left his student quarters at Columbia University in New York City, where he was studying English, and traveled to northern Vermont to spend ten days at a lakeside cottage with a young Vermont poet named Philip Cummings. Although Lorca's time in New York has been extensively researched and analyzed, his visit to Vermont and the resulting impact on his life and work have been largely unexplored. Independent scholar Patricia Billingsley will present recent findings that shed new light on the people and places Lorca encountered in Vermont, his relationship with Cummings, and the many ways in which his Vermont experiences influenced the poems in his well-known collection, Poeta en Nueva York/Poet in New York.