There are
lots of different kinds of scholarly conversations, and I’d say that each is equally
and vitally important for a life of scholarly work. There are certainly those
we have with our
colleagues, both at a particular
institution and around
the world. There are those with our models
and mentors, in- and outside
of academia. These days there are those we find online, such as at the many
sites I highlighted in last week’s post. But for me, one of the most
significant and inspiring conversations is also one that it’s all too easy to
minimize, both because it’s less overtly dialogic and because it’s more old
school: the conversation that we have with prior scholars, with those
pioneering and influential voices who have come before us and with whose ideas
we must and should remember to keep conversing in our own careers.
That
conversation can also be easy to minimize because it seems distinctly tied to
our work in graduate school—to those reading lists that we create for exams,
for example, and the many scholarly voices we encounter during that experience.
Obviously the ideas and lessons we take away from those graduate conversations
remain with us throughout our career, but as we move into our own scholarly
identity, it can be easy to feel as if we have moved as well into the more
present and ongoing conversations such as those I cited in the prior paragraph.
Such, for me, was the case of historian Francis Jennings; Jennings’s
pioneering book The Invasion of America: Indians,
Colonialism, and the Cant of Conquest (1975), with its exemplary and
hugely innovative revisions of our historiographies of the era of European
arrival and settlement and of the relationships between settlers and Native
Americans, was one of the most
inspiring and striking texts I read in graduate school. Yet while I certainly
tried to pay back that debt by citing Invasion
prominently in the first chapter of my Redefining American
Identity, I didn’t necessarily feel that I needed further conversation
with Jennings.
Needless
to say, I couldn’t have been more wrong. While staying in my late
grandfather’s house this past week, I dipped into his impressive collection
of American Studies books, and picked up Jennings’ final work, The
Creation of America: Through Revolution to Empire (2000). And wow.
While the book is officially a history of the Revolutionary era, and certainly
represents a very distinct and important perspective on that period, it is also
and most significantly a culminating statement in Jennings’ life and career, a
final chance for him to articulate some of his most over-arching and meaningful
ideas about American history, culture, and identity. And as such, I found it
full of incredibly inspiring moments and ideas, passages that speak directly to
some of my own most central interests and ideas. So this coming week, I’ll be
highlighting five such passages, and using them as jumping off points for my
own evolving ideas. I can’t think of a better way to make clear how much
conversations with Jennings still have to offer, for me and for all American Studiers.
Series
coming up,
Ben
PS. What do
you think? Any prior scholars whose voices and ideas you’d highlight?
7/21
Memory Day nominees: A tie between two hugely distinct but equally
talented and influential
Modernist
writers, Hart
Crane and Ernest
Hemingway.
7/22
Memory Day nominees: Another tie, this time between two unique and interesting American
artists, Emma Lazarus and Alexander Calder.
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