1)
Those of you who’ve been reading this blog
since last summer might remember the New England American Studies
Association (NEASA) Pre-Conference Blog that I organized, where conference
presenters and attendees, and other interested American Studiers, had weekly
dialogues about different conference (and related) topics and themes. Well I’m
no longer NEASA’s Jefe, but the current President Sara Sikes, along with
Webmaster Jonathan Silverman, have organized another Pre-Conference Blog, to lead
up to this October’s digital
humanities-centered conference. Please check it out when you can
over the next few months (I’m sure I’ll mention it again!), add your voice and
ideas to the mix, and take part in the conference this way, whether you can
come to Providence in October or not!
2)
Thanks to an email from last year’s NEASA
keynote speaker, Jim Loewen, I’ve learned about a very worthwhile effort, to
establish an endowed Civil Rights Chair at Mississippi’s Tougaloo College. Tougaloo’s students and
faculty supported the Civil Rights movement in Mississippi as much as any
community and organization, often at significant cost (in every sense); it’s
the perfect place for such an endowed chair, and the position would allow the
college to continue doing great work in the 21st century as well as
to better remember and teach this vital American history. If you’re able to
give any money (as I have) in support of the chair, this
link tells you how; but even if not, you can still spread the word!
Digital
and institutional; forward-looking and historically grounded; conversational and
educational; communal and dialogic. Sounds like American Studies to me!
Next
series this coming week,
Ben
PS. Any American
Studies links, conversations, or efforts you’d highlight? Don’t be shy!
7/7 Memory
Day nominee: Margaret
Walker, the Alabama-born
writer and poet who followed the Great Migration to Chicago, worked there
for the Federal
Writers Project and with Richard Wright,
and published some of the most powerful political and
social poetry and fiction
of the late 20th century.
7/8 Memory
Day nominee: George Antheil,
the Modernist avant garde
composer who had a hugely prolific
career, was also a talented writer,
philosopher, and critic,
and with actress Hedy Lamarr helped invent an innovative
communications system that’s still in use today.
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