[This past
weekend, the Northeast MLA held
its annual spring
conference in Toronto. I was there in my official capacity as the
organization’s Vice President, as well as a presenter and audience member, and
wanted to follow up on a handful of the many interesting things that took
place. Leading up to a weekend post on how you can help me plan next year’s
conference in Hartford!]
On three
takeaways from Marica Antonucci’s excellent seminar on transnational Italian
and American histories, with which my NeMLA conference began.
1)
Vincenzo Botta: Lucia Ducci of
UMass Amherst began the seminar with a paper on Botta, an Italian American
educator, journalist, author, and reformer about whose multi-part 19th
century life and transnational influence I literally knew nothing before this
talk (and I doubt I’m alone—even that Wikipedia page at the first link is
pretty bare bones). In many ways Botta seems to me parallel to Yung
Wing, and Ducci’s wonderful talk gave me lots of great starting points for
continuing to think about this interesting and inspiring life, voice, and
history.
2)
Tex: Tyler
Norris of William and Mary presented a compelling analysis of Tex, the longest-running Italian comic
book. Begun
in 1948, this depiction of a heroic lone Texas Ranger making his way
through multiple 19th century histories (Mexican American War, Civil
War, Native American wars, etc.). Tex
seems very much in conversation with other mid-20th century pop
culture depictions of the frontier, from the TV show The
Rifleman to John
Ford’s series of John Wayne Westerns. But I’ll need to learn a lot more
about what Tex and Italian culture do
with those familiar tropes, work that Norris once again prompted and modeled.
3)
The Man in
the Gray Flannel Suit: Marisa
Escolar of UNC Chapel Hill concluded the seminar by analyzing depictions of
Italy and Italian American culture in post-WWII fiction and culture, a topic
that interestingly complements the second book project of my colleague and
friend Joe
Moser. Escolar analyzed a number of books, films, and other texts, but I
was particularly interested in her compelling take on both Sloan Wilson’s 1955 novel
and the 1956 Gregory Peck film
of the same name. As with Botta and Tex,
I know more or less nothing about these texts, but Escolar and this seminar
have prompted me to learn more!
Those three
papers, along with David
Aliano’s on early 20th century tourism materials and Roberto Vezzani’s
on the “New Italy” in Fascist propaganda, got my NeMLA off to an inspiring
start for sure. Next recap tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Were you at
NeMLA 2015? I’d love to hear your follow ups as well—or your thoughts on this
post even if you weren’t there!
I was happy to attend another successful NeMLA convention. Thanks to everyone who hosted friendly, engaging, and stimulating discussions on a range of topics.
ReplyDeleteAgreed, Derek!
ReplyDeleteFYI, the CUNY Calandra Institute April 2016 conference: "MIGRATING OBJECTS: Material Culture and Italian Identities" is having a CFP. Some of the topics covered at NEMLA might be further explored there. Here is the link: https://respatrimoni.wordpress.com/2015/05/18/cfp-2016-annual-conference-on-migrating-objects-material-culture-and-italian-identities-john-d-calandra-italian-american-institute/
ReplyDeleteThanks Nancy, I'll pass that along to the panelists as well!
ReplyDeleteGreat!
ReplyDelete