Why subscribe to Paul Green’s Cabin?

Paul Green’s Cabin is preserved and open to visitors at the North Carolina Botanical Garden in Chapel Hill. Paul Green’s Cabin is also a quarterly newsletter featuring information about the activities of the Paul Green Foundation. Occasional editions will also draw upon the wealth of writing that Paul Green did during his long life. Paul Green was a Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright who served other writers as teacher, mentor, and collaborator. Green was an activist for racial justice, human rights, abolition of the death penalty, and the preservation of North Carolina history, folkways, and our natural environment.

Subscriptions

Subscriptions to Paul Green’s Cabin are free, though you may also support the Foundation with a tax-deductible donation of any size to the Paul Green Foundation to help with operating expenses for the journal. These gifts can come directly to the Foundation through our Paypal account.

For teachers, scholars, and guest writers

The overall goal of this publication is to  encourage students and scholars to engage more deeply with Green through reading, research papers, and general articles. The Foundation also welcomes guest writers from time to time. Support for writers may be available in collaboration with our partner and grantee, the North Carolina Literary Review. If you are a teacher or university professor, please consider getting a copy of our new book from Blair Publishers.

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About the Foundation

The Paul Green Foundation is a private foundation that makes small grants to nonprofit organizations whose work echoes Paul Green’s passionate vision for social justice and his love of theatre. Some of our grants have supported:

  • Podcasts from the Vietnam Veterans Writing Program in Asheville, supporting vets on a journey of healing through writing

  • An adaptation of the LGBTQIA play Out, NC to be presented as a documentary-style podcast created by the Wilmington theatre group, Mouths of Babes

  • Short plays designed to engage farmworkers on topics of occupational and mental health in central and eastern North Carolina through Student Action with Farmworkers

  • Authentic Native American and African American costumes created for the Hickory Ridge Living History Museum by the Southern Appalachian Historical Association

  • A drama that explores the historic crime of lynching and the legislation created to halt it by Greenbrier Valley Theatre of West Virginia

  • Dramatic works created by incarcerated individuals and their families through the nonprofit organization, Hidden Voices

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The Paul Green Foundation is dedicated to nurturing the arts and supporting human rights

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