Paris in the Jazz Age
September 19 - 27, 2020
Featuring Professor Herman Beavers
Co-sponsored by The James Brister Society

Paris in the Jazz Age

Co-sponsored by the James Brister Society and the Black Alumni Society

(We will repeat this tour in 2021. Email emiliek@upenn.edu for more information.) Discover how African American culture shaped Paris in the Jazz Age and beyond on this seven-night trip to the City of Light. In the years following World War I, many African Americans — including luminaries such as Josephine Baker, Langston Hughes, and Eugene Bullard — felt accepted in Paris, thousands of miles from the States. Trace the rich history of the city’s African-American community on specially designed walking tours and talks. Learn how jazz enchanted the city, and feel the rhythms for yourself with dinner and a concert at a local club. Along the way, enjoy quintessential Parisian experiences: the cuisine, a Seine cruise, a Louvre tour, and traveling on the Métro. This small-group program, ideal for active travelers, features first-class accommodations and an extensive meal plan.

Faculty Host

Herman Beavers

Herman Beavers has taught at Penn since 1989. Professor Beavers has a joint appointment in the Department of Africana Studies and teaches courses in African American and American literature, including courses on Southern Modernism, 20th Century African American Poetry, as well as "Trading Fours: The Literatures of Jazz," which is a requisite course in the Jazz and Popular Music minor. He also teaches a section of the introductory poetry workshop in the Creative Writing Program. Professor Beavers also teaches the Arts-Based Community Service course entitled, "August Wilson and Beyond," which brings Penn students together with West Philadelphia residents to read August Wilson's Century Cycle of plays. His most recent poems have appeared (or are about to appear) in MELUS, The Langston Hughes Colloquy, Versadelphia, Cleaver Magazine, and The American Arts Quarterly. He has recently published essays on August Wilson, Charles Johnson, Ralph Ellison, and Toni Morrison. His latest book is: Changing the Order of Things: Geography and the Political Imaginary in the Novels of Toni Morrison  (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018). He also serves as an advisory editor at African American Review, Modern Fiction Studies, and The Black Scholar.

As of March 13, 2020, Penn faculty and staff members are prohibited from participating in University-related travel. We will confirm the faculty host’s participation in the tour upon receiving updated policy information from the University.
ITINERARY

Day 1 Depart gateway city
Day 2 Welcome to Paris.
Day 3 Paris’ African American History
Day 4 Paris Noir, Harlem in Paris, and An Evening of Jazz
Day 5 Flavors of France, The Louvre.
Day 6 Paris Free Time, Versailles
Day 7 An African American Writer in Paris Today, The Left Bank.
Day 8 Paris by Boat.
Day 9 Depart for gateway city


For detailed weather information as your departure date approaches, we suggest you consult http://www.weather.com/.