• Menu

    What’s it going to be then, eh?

    The International Anthony Burgess Foundation
    About Anthony Burgess
    • Introducing Anthony Burgess
    • The Books of Anthony Burgess
    • The Music of Anthony Burgess
    Discover More
    • A Clockwork Orange
    • Earthly Powers
    • Anthony Burgess and Shakespeare
    • Dystopian Fiction
    About The Foundation
    • Our Mission
    • Visiting Us
    • The Burgess Bar
    • Support the Burgess Foundation
    • Join our mailing list
    • Bookshop
    • Contact us
    Anthony Burgess Archive
    • About the Archive
    • Visiting the Archive
    • Object of the Week
    • Contact the Archivist
    What's On
    • News and Blogs
    • Event listings
    • Venue hire
    • Burgess Prize
    • Exhibitions
    • Podcasts
    The International Anthony Burgess Foundation
  • What’s it going to be then, eh?

    OPENING TIMES
    Bar Open for events
    Reading Room Available for pre-booked appointments 10.00am - 3.00pm weekdays
    Office Hours By appointment: info@anthonyburgess.org
    HOW TO FIND US
    Engine House
    Chorlton Mill
    3 Cambridge Street
    Manchester
    M1 5BY
    Nearest train station Oxford Road More information
    Next event
    Comedy: Arash – Persian standup comedy Sat 10 May 2025 7:00 pm £25.00 More information
  • The International Anthony Burgess Foundation
  • What's it going to be then, eh?

    Exhibitions. New writing. Concert commissions. Academic research. Public events, in venues and online. And at the core of everything, preserving and promoting our extensive Anthony Burgess archive.

    Your donation to the Burgess Foundation supports our mission to promote the life and work of Anthony Burgess in so many ways.

  • What’s it going to be then, eh?

The International Anthony Burgess Foundation The International Anthony Burgess Foundation
what's on

Literature: Danez Smith — HIV/AIDS in the 21st Century Conference

  • Thu 16 Jan 2020
  • 7:00 pm
  • Free
share

Danez Smith laughing with hand over their mouth

The keynote event for the HIV/AIDS in the 21st Century: Memorialisation, Representation & Temporality academic conference will be a reading from poet Danez Smith, who will read from their work before being joined on stage by Keisha Thompson for a Q&A session.

Danez Smith is a Black, Queer, Poz writer, and one of the foremost contemporary poets writing on HIV/AIDS. Their poetry often presents a trajectory of living with HIV, responding to the fulcrum of diagnosis, navigating the virus publicly and socially, and reading the narratives through which HIV/AIDS is afforded meaning, be they PrEP, dire statistics, or hook-up culture. Smith has been particularly important in assessing the contemporary ramifications of HIV/AIDS in terms of race, sexuality, and gender — as such, their poetry has galvanized both public and academic work, making us reassess the role of HIV in our daily lives, whether one is positive or not, and raising political concerns over access to treatment, information, and a public voice for those in proximity to the virus. Danez is the author of “Don’t Call Us Dead” (Graywolf Press, 2017), winner of the Forward Prize for Best Collection, the Midwest Booksellers Choice Award, the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry and the Pushcart Prize.

Keisha Thompson is is a Manchester based writer, performance artist and producer. Keisha is the Young People’s Producer at Contact, chair of radical arts funding body, Future’s Venture Foundation, is a fellow of the MOBO x London Theatre Consortium Fellowship and is a member of Greater Manchester Cultural and Heritage Group. She is currently touring award-winning solo show, Man on the Moon. Her debut book, Lunar, features her poetry and the show script. Her work has been presented at venues high profile venues and platforms such as Tate Modern, Blue Dot Festival and the British Council Showcase in Edinburgh.

The HIV/AIDS in the 21st Century: Memorialisation, Representation and Temporality academic conference (@HIVHumanities) will take place on January 16 and 17 at the University of Manchester. It aims to interdisciplinarily address issues surrounding cultural representations of HIV/AIDS, and assess the relationship between aesthetic representation and lives lived with or without HIV/AIDS. The entirety of the conference is free and open to the public: see our blog for a schedule and further details.

BACK TO TOP
Go to home page
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Go to home page
Follow us

© 2025 International Anthony Burgess Foundation

Charity no. 1102623

International Anthony Burgess Foundation
Engine House Chorlton Mill 3 Cambridge Street M1 5BY
  • Site map
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of use
  • Designed by Instruct
  • Built by OH Digital