Please correct the following error(s):
There was an unknown error while attempting to reserve your seats.
If you find this message in error, please check your reservation request and try again.
There was an error adding your selection to the cart. Please review your quantity and price selections.
The amount must be greater
Please enter a number that contains a decimal (XX.XX).
BIG ARTS in Sanibel Island logo.
A blue wavy line on a black background.
BIG ARTS

Tickets

Cart

Time remaining:
View Cart 0
Your cart has expired
Your order contained expired items and your shopping cart has been emptied.
Close
Enter Promo Code

Talking Points Ray Arsenault Livestream, March 19, 2025 4:00PM

Event Summary

From March 19, 2025 4:00PM

Talking Points Ray Arsenault

Life & Legacy of John Lewis

Choose from the list below to jump directly to another offering of

Item details

Date

March 19, 2025 4:00PM

Name

Talking Points Ray Arsenault Livestream

Description

Professor Raymond Arsenault will illuminate the life and legacy of John Robert Lewis (1940-2020), the 17-term congressman from Atlanta, Georgia, who first rose to fame as a courageous civil rights activist during the early 1960s. Professor Arsenault’s recent biography of Lewis, In Search of the Beloved Community, is as relevant today as it was during the Congressman’s lifetime. John Lewis has long been one of the most admired members of the United States Congress, a revered figure widely considered to be an incorruptible moral leader, and a steadfast symbol of integrity and courage.  His stature as “the conscience of Congress” represents only the capstone of a sixty-year career as a civil rights and social justice activist.

Ray Arsenault is a Professor of Southern History emeritus at the University of South Florida, St. Petersburg. Born on Cape Cod and raised in Massachusetts, Virginia, Maryland, and Florida, he was educated at Princeton and Brandeis Universities. He moved to St. Petersburg, Florida in 1980 to teach at University of South Florida after four years at the University of Minnesota. He is a specialist in the history of Civil Rights, the American South and environmentalism.  He has authored numerous books and articles, including The End of the Long Hot Summer:  The Air Conditioner and Southern Culture (1984), St. Petersburg and the Florida Dream, 1888-1950 (1988), and Paradise Lost? An Environmental History of Florida (2005).

Seats

Choose from Available Items

Please select a group to display sections.
Choose an available section to see ticket options

Choose from the list below to jump directly to another offering of

Stay in the loop

Name(Required)