Helon Habila, a professor of creative writing at George Mason University, and an acclaimed international author, has never shied away from important issues. In a fascinating discussion, Habila, the author of four novels, tells Mason President Gregory Washington about his process of combining compelling narratives and characters with current examples of oppression and exploitation, and how his factual account of the 2014 kidnapping in Nigeria of 276 young girls by the terrorist group Boko Haram forced him to confront his homeland as he had never seen it.
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Catherine Read, mayor of Fairfax City, Va., is outspoken, unfiltered
A view from the pulpit
Where the bodies are buried
Are we headed for an internet apocalypse?
The critical importance of shared humanity
The tension between war, justice, and peace
Nikyatu Jusu is elevating the horror genre
Former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe: ’I don’t have any regrets’
The metaverse, crypto, and the evolution of the internet
Everything is business
Black Dance: Housing the past and the present
Missy Cummings: Artificial intelligence is artificial and not intelligent
The absurd fallacy of a hierarchy of human value
Are the midterm elections the most consequential in our time?
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What it means to build peace
Cori Bush: Action must be the reaction
Russia’s war in Ukraine tied to corruption, organized crime
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