On the importance and power of audiences, both captive and really really
not.
While I was down in Harrisburg this past weekend for the
NeMLA Board meeting, I had the chance to give two books talks in two hugely
different spaces. At Penn State Harrisburg, I was able to talk about the book
with students in an Asian American Studies course that’s part of the university’s
wonderful American Studies program,
as well as with grad students and faculty like Jamie Hirami
and John
Haddad (who both helped set up the talk). And a day later, I talked about
the book at Harrisburg’s unique and wonderful Midtown Scholar Bookstore, one of the
nation’s best independent and used bookstores. Once again I got a lot out of
both experiences, but here I want to use them to think about two kinds of audiences
at opposite ends of a particular spectrum, and the challenges and benefits that
each offer for such presentations.
At the Penn State talk, the majority of the audience was comprised of those
students in Jamie’s class, and thus the audience was explicitly captive—both because
she had asked them to be there and because they had to pay enough attention to
my talk in order to discuss it in subsequent class conversations. For me, the
central challenge in talking to such an audience is thus to create a talk that (hopefully)
makes them happy to be there, both in the knowledge and perspectives it adds to
their world and in a delivery and performance that make those histories,
stories, and ideas as engaging and compelling as possible. Besides being great
practice for doing the same in my teaching, I would say that these kinds of talks
are also wonderful reminders of the importance of stories, narratives, and
frames for even the most scholarly or analytical focal points—because if we can’t
communicate those focal points to our audiences, and do so in a way that makes
them want to listen and engage and respond, then it won’t much matter what we
have to say.
At the Midtown Scholar talk, I found myself dealing with similar questions
but from a very different perspective. The talk had unfortunately not been
broadly publicized, and so while there were a decent number of people in the
audience, I’m not sure that many (or perhaps even any) of them had come
specifically to hear me talk. That made them the exact opposite of a captive
audience, since if anything I was potentially interrupting their reading,
browsing, chatting, coffee drinking, working, and so on—and thus if I didn’t
get and keep them interested, they were likely to get up and move or leave
within a short period of time. I can’t lie (not to you, blog readers!), some of
them did just that. But some others stayed, and when the talk was done and I
was sitting at an info table, each of them eventually came up to me, chatted a
bit, shared their own perspectives, and in a few cases asked me to email them
an e-copy of the book (an offer that extends to you as well! email brailton@fitchburgstate.edu if
you’d like one). And I have to say, being forced to make such connections
without any starting point, based purely on what I had to say and how I
communicated it, was both incredibly scary and even more incredibly inspiring.
A few hopes for my next talk tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think?
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