The Chicago Humanities Festival, The Newberry Library, and the Karla Scherer Center for the Study of American Culture at the University of Chicago are pleased to announce a special opportunity for graduate students.
On Saturday, November 2 three dynamic scholars of American history and culture-Professors Peter Mancall (University of Southern California, History and Anthropology), Wai Chee Dimock (Yale University, English and American Studies) and Susan Scott Parrish (University of Michigan, English and Environmental Studies) -will deliver public lectures at the Newberry Library as part of the 24th annual Chicago Humanities Festival’s theme of “Animal: What Makes Us Human.”
In addition to their talks, these speakers will lead brief discussions for a small group of students about their work focusing especially on the topic of environmental history and “Animal Archives.” Refreshments and lunch will be provided; and participants in the seminar will receive free passes for the lectures. The discussions will be moderated by Daniel Greene, Vice President for Research and Academic Programs at the Newberry Library, and Professor Eric Slauter, Director of the Karla Scherer Center. All events will take place at the Newberry Library, 60 West Walton Avenue, Chicago. A schedule for this daylong event appears below, along with brief biographies of the speakers.
Interested students should please submit the following:
1. A brief biography (200 – 500 words) including his/her area of research
2. One to two questions s/he would like to pose during the seminars
Email applications and questions to eslauter@uchicago.edu with the subject heading “Animal Archives.” The deadline is Wednesday, October 23. Priority will be given to current graduate students who have not attended the seminar in previous years. Selected applicants will be notified by Friday, October 25.
SCHEDULE: November 2, 2013
LOCATION: The Newberry Library, 60 W. Walton Ave., Chicago
About the speakers:
Peter Mancall, Professor of History and Anthropology at USC, and the Director of the USC-Huntington Early Modern Studies Institute, is a historian of colonial North America, the early modern Atlantic basin, Native American history, and environmental history. He is the Mellon Professor of the Humanities at the University of Southern California and the director of the USC-Huntington Early Modern Studies Institute.He is the author of five books including Fatal Journal: The Final Expedition of Henry Hudson-A Tale of Mutiny and Murder in the Artic (Basic Books, 2009); Hakluyt’s Promise: An Elizabethan’s Obsession for an English America (Yale, 2007; paperback 2010) and Deadly Medicine: Indians and Alcohol in Early America (Cornell, 1995). He is currently writing American Origins, which will be volume one of the Oxford History of the United States. He is an elected fellow of the Society of American Historians and an elected member of the American Antiquarian Society. His work has appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education, Bloomberg Businessweek, and American Heritage and been featured on NPR’s “All Things Considered” and “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.”
Wai Chee Dimock, William Lampson Professor of English and American Studies at Yale University, has written on American literature of all periods, from Anne Bradstreet to Star Trek. She argues for a broad conception of American literature, including materials both high and low, and scales both local and global. Her work has appeared in publications ranging from Critical Inquiry to Los Angeles Review of Books toSalon. She is the author of the prize-winning Through Other Continents: American Literature Across Deep Time (Princeton, 2006), Residues of Justice: Literature, Law, Philosophy (California, 1996), and Empire for Liberty: Melville and the Poetics of Individualism (Princeton, 1989), as well as the co-editor of Shades of the Planet: American Literature as World Literature (Princeton, 2007).She was a consultant for “Invitation to World Literature,” a 13-part series produced by WGBH and aired on PBS in 2010. Her lecture course, “Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Faulkner,” is available from Open Yale Courses. She is now at work on a digital humanities platform, “American Literature in the World,” which features a web-and-print anthology and an annual graduate conference.
Susan Scott Parrishis an Associate Professor in the Department of English Language and Literature and the Program in the Environment at the University of Michigan; she is also a Fellow at the Graham Environmental Sustainability Institute (UM). Her research addresses the interrelated issues of race, the environment, and knowledge-making in the Atlantic world from the 17th up through the mid-20th century, with a particular emphasis on southern and Caribbean plantation zones. Her book American Curiosity: Cultures of Natural History in the Colonial British Atlantic World (North Carolina, 2006) was awarded both the Jamestown Prize and the Ralph Waldo Emerson Prize; the Emerson prize is given by the Phi Beta Kappa Society to one book each year for its contribution to understanding “the intellectual and cultural condition of humanity.” Her recent projects include work on slavery and portraiture in the 18th-century Atlantic world, and a new edition of Robert Beverley’s 1705 History and Present State of Virginia (North Carolina, 2013). She is currently completing a book-length study of the ecological imagination of the U.S. South in the first half of the Twentieth Century.