At next
spring’s Northeast MLA (NEMLA) conference,
which will take place in Boston from
March 21-24, 2013, I’ll be chairing a roundtable discussion on the
following topic:
“For those of us who care about making American literature
more public, more connected to all Americans and their experiences, identities,
and perspectives, the NEA’s Big Read
program represents a great model for such efforts. Since its pilot project in
2006, The Big Read has brought a number of great, complex, vital works of
American literature to local communities and schools, getting lots of Americans
reading and engaging with those works in the process. Yet the program is
explicitly local, with different communities reading different books—there are
both practical and philosophical arguments in support of that local element,
but it does leave room for a more genuinely shared, national engagement with
American literature.
In this roundtable session, I’ll take nominations for a
nationwide Big Read—books (in any genre) that should be read and engaged with
by all Americans. We’ll talk not only about why, about what makes these works
so vital and broadly significant, but about the effects, of what in our public
conversations, narratives, communities, identities, histories, and stories
would change if we read these books as a nation. We’ll also take suggestions and
ideas from the audience.
This
conversation can help us not only further define American literature and
culture, as we collectively understand them, but also envision our own roles
and purposes as public scholars of American literature and identity. And since
I’m an advisor for the in-development
American Writers Museum, I’ll also bring these ideas to that institution,
to help shape how it reflects our most shared and significant literary works.”
If you want to
be part of the roundtable, feel free to email (brailton@fitchburgstate.edu) me a
brief abstract by September 30th. But in any case I’d love to hear
your nominations for a national Big Read text right here in comments, or in the
Forum, or more informally by email. I promise to bring ‘em to the discussion
and the American Writers Museum too!
Thanks, more this
weekend,
Ben
PS. You know
what to do!
5/21
Memory Day nominee: Robert
Creeley, the dense,
challenging, experimental,
and very
important late 20th and early 21st century American poet, essayist,
and scholar
who helped change the face of poetry and higher education in America.
(Check the Memory Day Calendar each day for the
5/22 through 5/25 nominees!)
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