Our second speaker, Liz Duclos-Orsello, wove theoretical, practical, political, and personal reflections on place, space, and history into a rich introduction to Salem’s many exemplary questions and themes.
I promise
that I didn’t in any way request or otherwise engineer this, but I don’t know
that it would have been possible for Liz’s talk to complement Nat Sheidley’s
any more fully than it did. Both introduced a significant number of crucial questions
and themes for our day’s and ongoing conversations, but they did it in very
distinct and again entirely complementary ways: Nat’s use of his specific
situation and example complemented by Liz’s wide-ranging and theoretical (in
the best sense) questions and focal points; Nat’s identification of particular
goals and plans complemented by Liz’s overarching sense of both the challenges
and opportunities available to 21st century public sites and
scholars; and so on.
One of our
later speakers noted the unfortunate fact that public and academic historians
or scholars don’t always talk to each other, much less work together. But in
this room, at this event, on this day—and in NEASA more broadly, I’d very
happily say—nothing could be further from the truth. We’re all American
Studiers, and as these first two talks proved, putting all of our voices and
ideas in conversation can only benefit not only us, but also and most importantly
our communities and audiences.
Next talk
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
5/15
Memory Day nominees: A tie between two influential turn of the 20th century
authors, L. Frank Baum,
who wrote many
successful children’s books but none that impacted American culture
more than the fourteen set
in in the marvelous land of Oz (thanks of course in part to the film adaptation); and Katherine
Anne Porter, perhaps the only modernist
American author whose use
of stream of consciousness could rival Faulkner’s, and for more
than three decades one of the premier chroniclers
of Southwestern
and American communities and lives.
Meeting in the House of the Seven Gables kind of sounds like bad luck....
ReplyDeleteHi Shelley,
ReplyDeleteMaybe! But none of us had blood to drink, so I'm gonna say we broke the curse.
Ben