On two very distinct and equally compelling connections in the Pine Tree
State, and what they helped me to see.
One of the most exciting and largely unanticipated side effects of my book
talks has been how much they’ve helped me connect to people and places with
which I might not otherwise have gotten in contact, and from which I’ve already
learned so much. The Museum of the Chinese in America about which I wrote
yesterday represents one type of connection, but so do the many academic
institutions and colleagues with which I’ve been fortunate enough to share the
book. In one trip up to my northern neighbors at the University of Maine, I was
able to make two distinct and equally beneficial kinds of connections: to an
AmericanStudies colleague whose class offered new perspectives on the
discipline; and to an inspiring scholarly space that helped me think of my
project in an entirely new light.
The colleague, who helped bring me to the university and set up both
events, is Sarah Hentges, who
teaches American Studies and a ton of other interdisciplinary stuff at U of
Maine, and who has published
multiple interesting American
Studies books. I had the opportunity to talk to, and then participate in a
discussion on Manning Marable’s Living Black
History with, the students in Sarah’s Introduction to American Studies
course, and the experience was inspiring and envigorating on a number of
levels. I would particularly highlight the way in which the students, mostly I
believe local kids from northern Maine, brought their own identities and
perspectives to bear on not only Marable’s book, but also core AmericanStudies questions
and themes, such as how and why we should remember our most complex and
challenging national histories. With Sarah as their guide, these students are
charting their own path into AmericanStudies, and it was exciting to share a
couple hours with them as they did so.
Earlier in the same day, I got to give my book talk at a truly unique space
on the U of Maine Augusta campus: the Holocaust and Human Rights Center (HHRC) of
Maine. The HHRC was created thanks to an endowment from a
local resident who also happens to be a Holocaust survivor, and from its
design to its exhibits, the building continually took me by surprise during my
too-brief time there. I was particularly struck by one wall on which the words
of Holocaust survivors had been written, eerily paralleling my talk’s focus on the
Angel Island poetry. I don’t mean to equate Angel Island, or any American
experience, to the Holocaust—such equations aren’t of much use in either
direction—but of course the principle of a center dedicated to the Holocaust and human rights is that there are
issues which transcend any event, even the most horrific ones, and become
broader questions and conversations to which all people are connected. Talking
about my book at the HHRC helped me to imagine how my focal histories and
stories might link with such questions as well, a provocative and potent frame
with which I’m still grappling weeks later.
Next talk follow up tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
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