A tribute to the
man who made ALA, and the vital and enduring reason why he did.
At the ALA’s
opening night reception, a number of the organization’s original members paid
tribute to Alfred
Bendixen, the ALA founder and outgoing Executive Director thanks to whose
efforts and work this 25th annual ALA conference (like the 24 that
came before it) existed at all. Dr. Bendixen’s career as a scholar and teacher
of American literature has been significant and impressive in its own right
(and is ongoing), but, as many of the reception speakers put it, it’s through
his ALA service that he has truly and profoundly changed the discipline and
profession, an achievement few scholars can ever claim. I’ve had the chance to
meet and speak with Dr. Bendixen at a couple prior ALA conferences, and can
also attest to his collegiality and hospitality, even in the midst of what I’m
sure are the busiest and most hectic days of his year. The next ALA Executive
Director couldn’t ask for a better model.
As part of the
reception speeches, I learned a lot more than I had previously known about the 1989
founding of the ALA. Apparently the
organization had begun as a part of the Modern Language Association (MLA),
but Bendixen and others felt that the MLA’s size and focus did not tend to
allow for more in-depth examinations of particular works and authors, nor that
the MLA’s more formal conference and atmosphere facilitated the kinds of
communal, collegial conversations that these scholars hoped to find and take
part in. I’ve attended most of the last decade’s worth of ALA conferences,
beginning with the 2005 conference in Boston, and can definitely attest that
both features—a consistent focus on specific authors and works, and a communal
and collegial tone and atmosphere—remain hallmarks of the ALA; a tribute both
to how much these features are valued by those of us in the profession and, I’m
sure, to how much Dr. Bendixen has continued to advocate for them.
Given my own
absolute commitment to not specializing, to not focusing on particular authors
or time periods (or any specific category within American literature and
studies), it might seem hypocritical for me to praise this aspect of the ALA. But
for one thing, my work is simply driven by my own interests and goals, and of
course is far from the only option or path within this profession—and I’ve
heard consistently wonderful work being shared at ALA conferences. And for
another, if there’s one constant across all the ALA societies and categories,
papers and panels, I’ve encountered, it’s been close and extended attention to
the texts in front of us, out of which all broader connections and arguments
develop. I hope it goes without saying that there’s no part of what we do as
scholars, what we teach to our students, what we bring to all conversations,
than such attention and analysis. And we all do it more consistently and better
than to Alfred Bendixen and the organization he founded.
Last follow up
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Were you at ALA? If so, what stood out to you?
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