Free speech advocate, conservationist to discuss environmentalism

Posted: March 29, 2012 at 10:30 am

The last of the 2011-12 University Lectures will conclude Thursday with free speech advocate, conservationist and author Terry Tempest Williams.

Williams has been hailed a citizen writer who focuses on many prominent societal issues, particularly environmentalism, according to a March 26 SU News release. She is known for her environmental literature, including An Unspoken Hunger: Stories from the Field, Leap and her most recent book, Why Women Were Birds.

The event, The Writer as Witness, is free and open to the public. It will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Hendricks Chapel. The lecture will be conducted as a conversation between Williams and Don Mitchell, a geography professor in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.

Her text is passionate, philosophical, honest, eye-opening and thought-provoking, said Esther Gray, special assistant for the Office of Academic Affairs. She brings an honesty and openness about our environment that we all need to hear.

Williams has published work in The New Yorker, The New York Times and Orion Magazine, among others, according to the release. She also received the Wilderness Societys highest honor, the Robert Marshall Award, in 2006.

Williams said she will discuss major environmental issues, particularly the policies that affect New York, during the discussion. One major environmental issue is the proposed hydrofracking legislation that is currently being debated in the New York State Assembly.

Williams said she is very interested in what Gov. Andrew Cuomo will decide concerning hydrofracking in New York, the damaging chemicals used and the environmental consequences. Recently, she said, she attended a rally in New York City where hydrofracking discussions took place.

As a writer, these environmental issues become economic issues, which ultimately are matters of social justice, Williams said.

One controversial issue that has been discussed among political contenders has been President Barack Obamas decision to not allow the production of the Keystone Pipeline System. Williams said she strongly supports Obamas stance.

These are issues of water, issues of public land, Williams said. We all certainly have a lot at stake with this presidential election.

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Free speech advocate, conservationist to discuss environmentalism

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