By Larry J. Sanders
Ta-Nehisi Coates took the stage at Howard Universityâs Cramton Auditorium to rousing applause on Thursday evening (Oct. 3), returning to his alma mater for the third stop on a national tour in support of his newest book The Message, published Oct. 1 (One World).
Coates, a Howard alumnus and the Universityâs current Sterling Brown Endowed Chair, fought through fatigue to speak for roughly 80 minutes with Graduate School Dean Dana A. Williams (MA â95, Ph.D. â98) on a litany of topics, including his days as a Howard undergraduate, his literary career to date, and the moments that compelled his latest project.
The Meccaâs Impact on The Message
In his role as the Brown chair, Coates instructed the Zora Neale Hurston Advanced Writersâ Workshop during the summer of 2022. Coates decamped for Dakar, Senegal, while teaching the course, but offered to submit for critique an essay detailing his feelings on visiting the African continent for the first time. That essay would become the opening portion of The Message.
âOf course, the semester ended, and I was not done, which was par for the course for Ta-Nehisi Coates at Howard University,â he quipped. âIâm back, Iâm here, I have the assignment!â
Coates credited Howard for helping develop much of his worldview, and said the University continues to inform his writing philosophy.
âWeâre in a tradition,â Coates said. â[Frederick] Douglass Hall is named after somebody. And this man published a narrative â he was a writer, beautiful writer by the way. And he wrote at a time that he had siblings still enslaved. And he wrote at a time when at any moment, somebody could have dragged him back into slavery.â
âWe didnât get here by being safe. Our ancestors were not safe. So, what right do we have to our safety?â Coates continued. âI have larger responsibilities, and once you understand it that way â that itâs not just me â itâs like okay, what weâve got to do is what weâve got to do.â
The desire to mentor more writers in that tradition is what ultimately led Coates back to Howard. âPart of becoming a professor and a professor here was the recognition that I am not enough,â he said. âIt really doesnât matter how I feel about my skill. One person canât do it, two people canât do it, three of us canât do it. We need more. And I came here for that because this is the place that made me.â
Students Asked, Coates Answered
Coates conducted a student-only question-and-answer session to conclude the event, fielding queries ranging from his choice in diction to how he cultivated his writing talents as a Howard student.