On three
scholars whose very distinct interests and projects demonstrate that childhood
studies is anything but child’s play.
The second panel
I attended at ASA was on race and childhood in American history and culture,
and featured three diverse but all equally compelling and significant focal
points:
1)
Mary Niall Mitchell, an Associate
Professor of History a the University of New Orleans, presented on the complex
and amazing American story at the heart of her new book project, currently
titled The Real Ida May: Race, Fiction,
and Daguerrotypes in a Story of Antislavery. It’s hard to do justice to the
many sides and layers to the story of Mary
Botts, the “white slave girl” who captured the attention of abolitionists, authors,
and many others in antebellum
Boston and America—but I’ll be very excited to read Mary’s engagement with
them all!
2)
Lara
Saguisag, a graduate student in Childhood Studies at Rutgers and also a published children’s
book author in her own right, spoke on the complex, cross-cultural, and
very American trend of racial “crossdressing” in turn of the 20th
century “kid strips” such as the Katzenjammer Kids,
Buster Brown, and Little
Nemo in Slumberland. Her readings of the individual strips were wonderfully
nuanced, but she also connected this trend to many other cultural and social
contexts, making for an appropriately interdisciplinary AmericanStudies
approach and topic for sure.
3)
Philip Nel,
Professor of English at Kansas State and one of the leading experts on children’s and
young adult literature, gave a talk on a project that he has just begun,
focusing on the practice of “whitewashing”
in the marketing and cover art of children’s and young adult literature.The
trend has ties to numerous complex issues, including publishing
and audience, commercialization, and racial stereotyping and discrimination,
and his project promises to develop these connections and add to our
understanding of the social and cultural roles played by these
far-from-insignificant genres.
I can’t wait to
see where these scholars take these compelling and vital American projects!
Next scholars
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Responses to
these projects and scholars? Other AmericanStudiers you’d highlight?
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