A Guide to the Ernest J. Gaines Center
- Ernest J. Gaines Center
- Ernest J. Gaines Bibliography
- Items From the Collection
- Catherine Carmier
- Of Love and Dust
- "The Sky is Gray"
- "Bloodline"
- The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
- In My Father's House
- A Gathering of Old Men
- A Lesson Before Dying
- Ernest J. Gaines Center Website This link opens in a new window
- Questions? Ask Us!
Contact
Associate Professor of Library Science
400 E. St. Mary Blvd.
Lafayette, LA 70503
About the Center
The Ernest J. Gaines Center at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette is an international center for scholarship on Ernest Gaines and his work. The center honors the work of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette’s Writer-in-Residence Emeritus and provides a space for scholars and students to work with the Gaines papers and manuscripts. Gaines’s generous donation of his early papers and manuscripts (through 1993) and some artifacts to Edith Garland Dupré Library provided the foundation for the center’s collection.
The mission of the Ernest J. Gaines Center is to foster research and scholarship on the life and works of Mr. Ernest J. Gaines, to archive, house, preserve, protect and utilize the Ernest J. Gaines Collection, and to make the collection available to scholars in perpetuity. As part of its mission, the Center will collect, catalog and maintain a body of scholarship surrounding Gaines and his works; organize and conduct, as appropriate, colloquia, seminars, and conferences centered upon the Ernest J. Gaines Center.
Keep up with the latest events happening at the Ernest J. Gaines Center by following our social media outlets: Ernest J Gaines Center on Facebook, @Gaines_Center on Twitter, and gainescenter on Instagram.
Ernest J. Gaines - Brief Biography
Ernest J. Gaines (1933-2019) is a world-renowned novelist, short story writer, and teacher. Ernest J. Gaines is among the most widely read and highly respected contemporary authors of African American fiction. He was born in Pointe Coupée Parish in Louisiana and at age fifteen, Gaines moved to California, where he joined his mother and stepfather, because his Louisiana parish had no high school for African Americans.
After graduating high school and serving in the Army, Gaines enrolled in San Francisco State University where he began publishing in the university's quarterly literary journal. These stories secured him a place in Stanford University's graduate program for creative writing. After leaving Stanford, he settled in the San Francisco area.
In 1981, he accepted the position of Writer-in-Residence (Visiting) here at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette (the University of Southern Louisiana at the time). Not long into his tenure, he published A Gathering of Old Men (1983), which was also adapted for television. In 1993, he published A Lesson Before Dying, which was also adapted for television in 1999 and is one of the most critically acclaimed films based on his texts.
Over the span of his career, Mr. Gaines has won numerous awards for his contributions, including the Louisiana Humanist of the Year (1989) and a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship in 1993. In 1996, Gaines was inducted into the L'ordre des Artes et des Lettres [the French Order of Arts and Letters], and in 2000, he was awarded the National Humanities Medal. In 2013, Gaines was awarded the National Medal of the Arts.
The Ernest J. Gaines Center at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette is an international center for scholarship on Ernest Gaines and his work. The center honors the work of UL Lafayette's Writer-in-Residence Emeritus and provides a space for scholars and students to work with the Gaines papers and manuscripts. Gaines's generous donation of his early papers and manuscripts (through 1993) and some artifacts to Edith Garland Dupré Library provided the foundation for the center's collection. The center also anticipates acquiring the remainder of Gaines's papers.
UL Lafayette established the Ernest J. Gaines Center in 2008, and a Board was appointed shortly thereafter. Construction of the center, located on the 3rd floor of Edith Garland Dupré Library, began in Aug. 2009. The center was completed in fall 2010 and held its grand opening on Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010.
- Ernest Gaines Turns 80, Part One.This segment from the Jan. 25, 2013, episode of the series “Louisiana: The State We’re In” features the first part of Charlie Whinham’s interview with author Ernest Gaines at his home in Oscar, Louisiana, following his 80th birthday. He discusses his feelings on turning 80, the story he is currently writing, and his thoughts on watching President Barack Obama’s inauguration.
Hosts: Charlie Whinham and Shauna Sanford - Ernest Gaines Turns 80, Part Two.A continuation of Ernest Gaines Turns 80.
Ernest J. Gaines - Influences & History Documented
"He was among us, but he was a little different."—Ada Mae Gaines.
Dr. Ernest J. Gaines, the acclaimed author of eight novels and two collections of prose, as well as the recipient of the National Humanities Medal and National Medal of the Arts, achieved fame by staying connected to his roots in Southern Louisiana. Motivated by a need to see his people reflected in literature, Dr. Gaines captures the ordinary miseries and achievements of people who normally do not get a voice and has sealed them in literary history.
These documentaries provide information about the historical, social, community, and literary influences that not only helped shaped Dr. Ernest J. Gaines as a writer, but ultimately as a person.
- Ernest Gaines: Louisiana Legends InterviewThis episode of the series “Louisiana Legends” from Dec. 24, 1982, features an interview with Ernest J. Gaines conducted by Gus Weill. Gaines is the author of several novels, including “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman” and “A Lesson Before Dying.” He discusses: growing up on River Lake Plantation in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, where he worked in the fields and cared for his siblings and crippled aunt; segregation as a way of life for African Americans in the 1940s; putting on plays; moving to Vallejo, California, and experiencing integration; the importance of the library in allowing him to explore a wide range of authors; his recognition of the lack of novels by black writers at the library; his experience in the military; his need to tell stories; the origins and reception of “The Autobiography of Jane Miss Pittman”; his view of the “Roots” miniseries; slavery as a horrible experience; collaborating with Valerian Smith on a musical; serving as a “writer-in-residence” and teacher at the University of Southwestern Louisiana in Lafayette; and his writing habits.
- Ernest J. Gaines: Louisiana StoriesA 1993 documentary profiling the life and career of award-winning author Ernest Gaines, whose work is inspired by his childhood experiences of growing up in The Quarters of River Lake Plantation in Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, during segregation. In this documentary, Gaines shares memories of the people of The Quarters who inspired his writing and the impact of moving to San Francisco as a teenager on his life and career. It includes interviews with his family and childhood friends, as well as comments from other writers and scholars discussing his work. Passages from several of his novels are also featured, including The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman (1971), In My Father’s House (1978), and A Gathering of Old Men (1983). Narrator: Ed Shannon