[For this year’s
Valentine’s
Day series, I decided to share some of my blog’s early Tribute
Posts on teachers I have loved. Leading up to a special weekend post on a
very special teacher!]
Three things about which I have learned a great deal from
classes and students I have taught at Fitchburg State:
1)
American Identities: In two of the classes I
teach pretty regularly, Ethnic
American Literature and Intro
to American Studies, students complete a multi-generational family timeline
and analytical family history as a main piece of individual work. I’ve now
taught at least five sections of the former and at least seven of the latter,
meaning I must have read more than 350 of these family projects. And every one
has been incredibly valuable—hopefully for the students, but definitely for me,
teaching me a great deal about the variety and breadth and challenges and power
of American family and individual experiences and identities.
2)
American Artists: Since my second-half
American literature survey comes right up to the present day (our last
class reading is Jhumpa Lahiri’s The
Namesake [2003]), for the last two classes I ask the students to bring in
and briefly share a work by an artist (in any medium and genre) who has been
influential in their life and perspective. I can’t tell you the number of
writers and musicians, photographers and graffiti artists, and folks in every
other imaginable artistic genre to whom I’ve been introduced through these
presentations; but I can tell you that I learn as much about American art in
those two days as I did in whole semesters of college.
3)
America Itself: It’s not usually this clear-cut,
of course, but I can trace with exact certainty the development of my second book. It
started during an American Literature I class, as we were discussing Mary
Rowlandson’s captivity narrative and especially the complex middle section
where she begins to join the social and economic communities of her Native
captors; I linked the section to Cabeza de Vaca’s experiences, narrative, and
hybrid identity, and an idea was born. There were lots of stages along the way
from there to the book, and a great many of them were likewise directly situated
in FSU spaces (as were, as that hyperlinked post illustrates, my third book’s
stages as well!) and profoundly influenced by the voices and ideas of my
colleagues and students.
Special tribute
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. Teachers to
whom you’d pay tribute? Other loves you’d share?
https://www.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=10153378620492644&id=578732643
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