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Alumni : Alumni Newsletter : Spring 2002
Alumni Newsletter, Spring 2002
CONTENTS

New Views on Shakespeare
Michael Schoenfeldt
Steven Mullaney
Valerie Traub

25 Years at the Quarterly

Lem Johnson

The Quinn Endowment

Chair's Column

Faculty Notes
Lemuel A. Johnson

Scholar, critic, poet, and teacher, aged 60, died at home after an extended illness, March 12, 2002. Born December 15, 1941, and educated at the Sierra Leone Grammar School in his home country of Sierra Leone, West Africa, he earned in 1960 the highest marks in all West Africa on the Cambridge University Higher School Certificate examinations. He was graduated with an A.B. in Modern Languages from Oberlin College, 1965, an M.A. in Spanish from the Pennsylvania State University, 1966, and a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Michigan, 1968. Appointed assistant professor of English at the University of Michigan in that same year, he rose rapidly to the rank of professor.

Professor Johnson also held an appointment as Professor Investigador at the Colegio de Mexico, Mexico City, and at various times taught at Fourah Bay College at the University of Sierra Leone, on the Faculty of Literature at the Salzberg Seminar, and as a Visiting Distinguished Professor at Oberlin College. He was elected president of the African Literature Association (1977-78) and Vice President of the Association of Caribbean Studies (1983-85), and served on the Africa Committee of the Social Science Research Council (1985-1990). From 1985 to 1991, he was Director of the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan.

Professor Johnson’s scholarly interests ranged over the globe, which he traveled widely. Fluent in Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian, and German, as well as Krio, his national language, and Yoruba, Hausa, and Igbo, he had a broad and detailed knowledge of the significant literatures in all these languages as well as English, but, as a leading scholar of the African diaspora, he was especially interested in American, Latin American, Caribbean, and African literature.

The author of numerous articles, Professor Johnson published two books of scholarly criticism, The Devil, the Gargoyle, & the Buffoon: The Negro as Metaphor in Western Literatures (1970) and Shakespeare in Africa & Other Venues: Import and the Appropriation of Culture (1998), and a translation into English from the Spanish of Rafael Alberti’s play, Night & War in the Prado Museum (1969). He was also the author of the much-acclaimed Sierra Leone Trilogy (1995), which comprised three volumes of poetry, Highlife for Caliban, Hand on the Navel, and Carnival of the Old Coast. At the time of his death, he had essentially completed a seventh book, to be titled Private Parts & Public Bodies: The Experience of Sexuality in African Literature.

At the University of Michigan Professor Johnson was honored by a number of awards, including a Steelcase Research Professorship at the Institute for the Humanities, the Faculty Recognition Award, a Recognition Award from the Center for Afroamerican and African Studies, and a Certificate of Distinction for Outstanding Teaching. He was a demanding, committed, and charismatic teacher deeply concerned with preparing his students to live in and to appreciate the diversity and complexity of human experience on a global scale, and with “detoxifying” (as he called it) the noxious consequences of racialist thought and imaginings.

Descended from mutinous and rebellious slaves who found their way back to Africa from the Americas, and others taken off intercepted slave ships and resettled in Freetown, Professor Johnson was ever an advocate for human liberty and human dignity for people of all races, all genders, all creeds. A scrupulous and sophisticated scholar, an elegant and passionate poet, a generous and much-loved colleague, in thought, imagination, and practice he was, in the most charming and persuasive ways, an enemy to all bigotries and a discountenancer of little minds.

Over the last seven months of his life, Professor Johnson endured an increasingly painful and hopeless illness with good humor, unfaltering courage, and immense courtesy. He retained a sweetness and serenity of disposition through his last moments of consciousness and died as he lived, with grace and dignity, assured of the love of his family and friends, and seeking to reassure them.

Professor Johnson was preceded in death by his father, Thomas Ishelu Johnson, and his mother, Daisy Millicent Williams Johnson. He is survived by his wife, Marian Yankson Johnson, his daughter Yma Johnson, his son Yshelu Johnson, and his granddaughter, Shekinah Johnson Cornelio, all of Ann Arbor, as well as his sister Gloria Lock and brother-in-law Malcolm Lock, of Windsor, England, and their family, Aycee, Avril, Cyril, and Kulumo, his uncle Victor Williams and wife Edith, of Sierra Leone, and their family, his cousins Modu Oye and Charles Wyse and his family, all of England, and his close friends, Omotunde and Octavia Johnson of McLean, Virginia, and Jonathan Ngate of Ithaca, New York. Members of his immediate family include Lincoln and Kathleen Faller and their daughter Helen, of Ann Arbor.

A memorial service will be held at the First United Methodist Church of Ann Arbor, 120 S. State St., Saturday, March 23, at 2 PM. The family will receive visitors at the Muehlig Funeral Chapel, 403 S. Fourth Ave., the previous evening, Friday, March 22, from 5 to 7 PM. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to aid in the reconstruction of Holy Trinity Church, Freetown, Sierra Leone, severely damaged in the recent conflict. Professor Johnson’s dearly loved grandfather, the late Rev. S.S.Williams, served this church as priest and canon and it was a defining place for his memory and imagination. Contributions should be sent to: The Lemuel Johnson Church Fund, National City Bank, 505 E. Liberty, Ann Arbor, MI 48104.

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