Anticipating the
next gathering of New England AmericanStudiers.
I’ve been blogging
about NEASA for about as long as I’ve been blogging, and for good reason:
no organization or community has contributed as much to my sense of what AmericanStudies
means, is, and can be at its best than the New England American Studies
Assocation. My year as NEASA President, including the first annual Spring
Colloquium and culminating in the 2011 conference at Plimoth
Plantation, amplified immeasurably not only my sense of the field and
scholarly community, but also my own goals for my work, career, and life. In
short, NEASA is one of my very favorite things, and I look forward to any
chance to highlight and advocate for it.
This fall offers
the next such chance, in the upcoming
(October 17-18) NEASA Conference at Roger Williams University in Bristol,
Rhode Island. NEASA President Jeffrey
Meriwether, Vice President Gretchen Sinnett,
and the entire conference committee and NEASA Council
have come up with a wonderful conference theme and focus: Emancipations:
Lineages, Legacies, and Limits. Inspired by an RWU exhibit
on Abraham Lincoln and the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation
Proclamation, the conference program has, as NEASA conferences always do,
expanded to include numerous other histories, themes, disciplines,
perspectives, and voices. While that program is finalized, you can and should
still consider joining us in Bristol next month: we offer a discountedregistration rate for Attendees, and it promises to be a wonderful
AmericanStudies weekend!
Moreover, if you’re
an AmericanStudier living in the greater New England region (ie, not just the
New England states, but the upper Mid-Atlantic as well; and for that matter,
anyone anywhere in the country can stay connected and contribute to NEASA
online and through email), I urge you to connect to NEASA—perhaps by running
for the Council (we have an election every December to fill a number of seats),
in any case by connecting
with Gretchen (who will be next year’s President) and staying informed
about the organization’s ongoing work and plans. Can I promise that your NEASA
experiences will be as inspiring and career-changing as mine have been? Maybe
not—but I do guarantee that you’ll experience a wonderful community of scholars
that represents the best of what this discipline has to offer.
Next fall plan
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
What’s on your autumn agenda?
No comments:
Post a Comment