This month, the Samuel Proctor Oral History Program at the University of Florida features excerpts from an interview with Dr. Mildred Hill-Lubin (1933-2018), a retired professor and assistant dean at UF, who was instrumental in bringing African literature to UF.
Hill-Lubin [H] was interviewed by Ryan Morini [M] in 2014. Excerpt edited by Beth Grobman. For the full interview, go to tinyurl.com/Iguana2141.
M: Let’s start with a little background—your career was sort of situated between African and African American Literature … how did you get started on that track?
H: My early days in college did not include that much African American literature. I remember my senior year, the professor put one book on reserve and had us read a bit out of it. The book was Sterling Brown’s “The Negro Cavalcade.” Because we—at that time, our minds were not even on African American literature—we thought it was not any good, because we had never had any in any place.
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