[This past weekend I attended the one scholarly conference I never miss: the Northeast MLA. It was a great time as it always is, so as usual here’s a series of reflections on some of the great work I heard, saw, and shared there! Leading up to a few more reflections on NeMLA as an organization!]
On three
important layers to opening
speaker Dr. Rickie Solinger’s public scholarly work.
1)
Books: Like every scholarly keynote speaker
I’ve ever encountered at NeMLA, Dr. Solinger brought a
long and prolific publishing career with her to that podium. In this case, that
career has centered on a range of different publications tracing the history
and significance of reproductive politics in the United States, from monographs
like Wake
Up Little Susie: Single Pregnancy and Race before Roe
v. Wade (1992) and The
Abortionist: A Woman Against the Law (2019) to textbooks like Reproductive
Justice: An Introduction (2017, co-authored with Loretta Ross). We
can’t talk about reproductive politics in our own moment without engaging with
those multilayered histories and issues, and Dr. Solinger’s publications offer
a great starting point for that work.
2)
Exhibitions: As I know everyone reading this
blog would agree with, scholarly publications are far from the only way to get
our voices and ideas to audiences and into our conversations, and in her work
as a curator Dr. Solinger has also consistently done so through another medium:
museum exhibitions, both installed and traveling. A great example is 2013’s Interrupted
Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States, a traveling exhibition
which as that write-up describes featured five mixed-media installations that
offered a variety of ways to present the voices, perspectives, identities,
experiences, and communities of its focal women. I had the chance many years
back to be part of a planned traveling exhibition for the then-in-development American Writers Museum, I can
attest to the incredible work that curators as well as artists put into these
exhibitions, making them very much a form of collaborative public scholarship.
3)
Engagement: As the NeMLA talk itself reflected
of course, Dr. Solinger, like most of us interested in public scholarship,
finds many opportunities to share her work beyond those more formal forms. That
includes not only more familiar forms like this compelling NeMLA keynote
address, but other and more unusual opportunities like the chance to talk
with an adoption rights blogger, or a lunchtime
conversation (alongside her co-author Loretta Ross) with a student group
like UMass Students for Reproductive Justice. Every NeMLA keynote speaker I’ve
seen has been distinct in important ways, but one linking thread has been their
desire to connect with audiences, including but far beyond that conference
community, and Dr. Solinger embodies that goal to be sure.
Next
reflection tomorrow,
Ben
PS. If you
were at NeMLA, what would you share? If not or in any case, other organizations
you’d highlight?
No comments:
Post a Comment