On three of the many impressive and inspiring AmericanStudies panels I
attended at NeMLA.
1)
Masculinity in the
Transatlantic World: I attended this seminar to support my Fitchburg State
colleague Michael
Hoberman, who was talking about letters from an early American Jewish
businessman to his son. But I was very impressed by all seven of the presenters
and their distinct yet interconnected focal points: James
Francis on political pamphlets and Christopher Marlowe; Ingrid
Steiner on William Byrd II’s journals; Jackie Amorim
on the Trinidadian novel Emmanuel Appadocca;
Anthony
Brano and Jarred
Wiehe on Thomas Otway’s plays; and Liam Daley on King Lear. The seminar was transnational
and interdisciplinary in the best ways, and I learned a great deal from the conversation.
2)
Race and Reception: My
longtime Twitter buddy Luke Dietrich
organized and chaired this panel, and presented some of his very interesting
research on Charles Chesnutt’s relationship with Houhgton Mifflin and the
publishing industry. But the panel also featured Pierce Williams
on technology, race and ethnicity, and America in Twain’s Connecticut Yankee; and Cecilia
Cardenas-Navia on the histories, literatures, and controversial
debates over melanin sciences and racial identities. Luke’s paper helped me
continue to think about a topic that has interested me since my own
dissertation work; the other two pushed my ideas in radically new directions.
Pretty good conference combination!
3)
21st Century
Representations of Slavery: I’ll admit it: if you put 12
Years a Slave, Django
Unchained, and David Bradley’s Chaneysville
Incident in a paper title, as did Victoria
Chevalier, I’m there. But Victoria’s provocative paper (which focused for
time reasons mostly on 12 Years) was
perfectly complemented by Joseph Vogel
on the confessions of William
Styron and Quentin Tarantino, Tristan Striker
on tradition and memory in August
Wilson, and Nicholas
Forster on slavery and place in Kendrick Lamar’s
contemporary hip hop. Hard to imagine a more inspiring AmericanStudies
quartet than those four papers!
Last follow up tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Thoughts on these topics? If you were at the conference, other NeMLA
follow ups?
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