Hi there, and here we go as out
first-week-of-the-Fall-semester(!) here in
sticky, hyper-humid Tallahades begins to settle down:
a short while ago I posted the following
announcement within our SASA portion
of theasa.net, so here for good measure
is a copy via our e-mail list (and, yeah,
in a moment I'll see about our Facebook
page : )
At our ‘009 conference at George Mason, we had a
lively, substantive, interdisciplinary discussion
of historian Woody Holton’s Unruly Americans and
the Origins of the Constitution -- and I’m
cooking one up for our Atlanta conference on the
book Custerology, by Michael Elliott of Emory
University. To apply, e-mail Dennis Moore,
[log in to unmask], by the Monday after Labor Day, September 13. Thanks!
Rather than presenting papers, each participant
in this interdisciplinary panel, including
Michael Elliott of Emory University, author of
Custerology: The Enduring Legacy of the Indian
Wars and George Armstrong Custer, will make a
four- or five-minute opening statement laying out
a specific issue or question related to the
book. That round of brief opening statements
frees up time for lively, substantive discussion
that engages audience members as well as
panelists. In organizing and occasionally
chairing sessions along these lines (e.g., with
Woody Holton on his Unruly Americans, at our most
recent bienniale; with historian Marcus Rediker
on The Slave Ship at the Society of Early
Americanists’ sixth biennial conference, in
Hamilton, Bermuda; with Stephanie Smallwood on
her Frederick Douglass Prize-winning Salt-Water
Slavery, for the November ‘009 American Studies
Association conference, in D.C.; with Joanna
Brooks on her American Lazarus: Religion and the
Rise of African-American and Native American
Literatures at the ASA’s ‘006 conference at
Oakland; with Vincent Carretta on Equiano, the
African at the American Society for
Eighteenth-Century Studies’ ‘007 conference, at
Atlanta; with Joseph Roach on Cities of the
Dead, at ASECS’s ‘006 conference in
Montréal; with Srinivas Aravamudan on
Tropicopolitans, at the New Orleans ASECS, in
‘001, and so on), the session organizer has
learned to work hard at avoiding two
extremes: on the one hand, assembling a
tablefull of sycophants ready to drool on cue
and/or the author, and, on the other, assembling
a lineup that would include someone intent on an
academic ambush: trashing author over his or her
methods, conclusions, and maybe parents. No fan
club, then, and no food fights! Dinnertime
Monday, Sept 13 firm deadline for contacting
Dennis Moore, [log in to unmask] Thanks!
Looking forward,
--Dennis
"all feelings grow to passions in the South"
--Forster (describing Italy : ), in Room With A View
Dr. DENNIS D. MOORE / [log in to unmask]
Choreographer, American Studies Association's EARLY
AMERICAN MATTERS Caucus, within theasa.net
University Distinguished Teaching Professor
Associate Professor / Department of English / (850) 644-1177
Florida State University / Tallahassee 32306-1580 U.S.A.
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