[The recent
NeMLA Convention also marked my final one as a member of the Executive Board
(I was Past President for this convention). So I wanted to take this moment to
reflect a bit more broadly on my years as a governing member of this amazing
organization.]
On five
takeaways from my five wonderful years with NeMLA.
1)
The People: I could write many, many posts about
the amazing folks with whom I’ve worked on the NeMLA Executive Board over these
years. From Elizabeth Abele,
who helped bring me on board and single-handedly kept NeMLA going for many
years; to Carine
Mardorossian and Brandi So,
who have taken up Elizabeth’s mantle and brought NeMLA into a new phase; to Ellen Dolgin, Daniela Antonucci,
Hilda
Chacón, and Maria
DiFrancesco, without all of whom the last few conventions would have been
shadows of the successes they became; to all of the other Board members
who have been models of collegiality and collaboration. That last note is
really the point I want to drive home: in the words of a phrase from the past
year that we should all better remember than we currently seem to be, NeMLA’s
leadership has truly been “stronger together,” and I’ve been blessed to work
with each and all of these folks.
2)
The Process: Throughout that work, and most
especially in the couple years of planning for my 2016 presidential
convention in Hartford, I got to experience in the most intimate and
extended way imaginable all that goes into making a convention and an organization
like NeMLA as successful as they so consistently are. The cliché is that you
never want to see how the sausage is made (and as a sausage fan I take that
point); but when it comes to NeMLA, seeing all the stages and steps of this
multi-year process has helped me enjoy and engage with academic conferences,
and indeed many other kinds of events, at a far deeper level than had
previously been the case. I don’t know that I’ll ever quite match the feeling
of introducing Jelani
Cobb’s keynote address in Hartford, a moment that culminated so many years
and so many small moments of planning and preparation; but I know that that
feeling can and does help me imagine and appreciate similar moments at many
other conferences and events as well.
3)
The Problem: “Problem” isn’t really the word for
what I’m highlighting here (I just couldn’t resist the alliteration); I mean
instead the limitations, the things that even a great organization like NeMLA
can’t necessarily do or affect. Throughout my time with NeMLA, I’ve worked
to figure out how the organization can intervene
in and possibly impact the frustrating and untenable situations facing adjunct
and contingent faculty across the world of higher education. As those posts
reflect, we’ve talked about this issue a great deal, both at our conventions
and before and after them; but I can’t say with any certainty that we’ve been
able to do anything other than talk, or that our conversations have made a
tangible difference for adjunct and contingent faculty or higher education.
There’s only so much an organization can do, of course, but I still have felt
and continue to feel this limitation quite acutely when it comes to these vital
and troubling issues.
4)
The Public Schools: You could say the same thing
about the issues facing America’s public schools, of course; what can any organization,
much less an academic and scholarly one, do in response to such issues? But
here I would say the opposite: that even though only a few of our 2016
convention attendees and speakers visited
Hartford public schools, I believe that those visits were potent on both
practical and symbolic levels: practically because the students, teachers, and
communities there had the chance to learn from interesting and inspiring
scholars and writers (and vice versa); and symbolically because the visits
reflected the inescapable fact that we are all connected, that the work of
public schools and universities, of teachers and professors, of professional
and student writers, of all these communities on so many levels, depend on one
another far more than they diverge. May we continue to work to find and nurture
such connections in the conventions and years to come.
5)
The Pleasures: Last, but far from least, are the
pleasures I have found in these five years of conventions and conversations and
collaboration and community. My life has turned upside-down and sideways
multiple times over that span (usually by my own doing, to be clear), and NeMLA
has been one of the most consistent and consistently positive parts of it. From
wonderful roundtables and panels and creative readings and addresses, to
dinners and meetings (yes, meetings!) with my colleagues, to unexpected
encounters with the cities and settings for each convention, to opportunities
for scholarly work I’ve found through the conventions, and in many other
ways too, NeMLA has made my life better, richer, and more meaningful. While my
time on the Executive Board may be ending, you can be sure I’ll find ways to
keep that connection going—and I encourage you all to do the same, with NeMLA
specifically or with whatever organizations and communities can offer such
pleasures for you.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. Any NeMLA
memories or connections you’d share?
Yes, doing registration with you after registration closed. We are nuts in a good way at NeMLA!
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