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British Association for American Studies

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BAAS Bridging the Resource Gap Mini Lecture Series- Call for Educators

CfP: BrANCH PGR WIP Workshop

25th, 26th, and 27th of May 2022   We are pleased to announce a Call for Papers for three work in progress papers to be presented in the last week of May 2022 online over Zoom. This can include any form of writing that is unfinished, including but not exclusive to: Paper Chapter Article The piece must focus on an aspect of nineteenth century US history. Please send a 250-word abstract, brief CV, and bio to a.djelid@pgr.reading.ac.uk by 5pm on the 28th of February 2022. If accepted, the papers will be due no later than the 1st of May.

Southern Exchanges Grad Student Lightning Rounds

THURSDAY, MARCH 3RD — 12:30 to 1:30 PM EST SOUTHERN EXCHANGES is a virtual gathering of graduate students studying the U.S. South Are you developing an argument for a new chapter? Framing a new article? Working through the challenges of analyzing a new source? Are you looking for feedback in a supportive, low-stakes setting open to new ideas? Are you interested in connecting with a national and international network of graduate students? JOIN US for a conversation about research, writing, and the experience of studying Southern history FORMAT: Each participant will have five minutes to practice introducing their research interests or a specific project. Afterwards, we’ll open the floor for questions, responses, and conversation. REGISTRATION: https://docs.google.com/.../1FAIpQLScdHdXqFprEGc.../viewform ZOOM: https://uky.zoom.us/.../tZ0kc-2vrD0vEtDMdBCRQj2afE2VhZ1qRjYi  

Pre-Conference meet up for Women in American Studies

This WASN sponsored session is designed as a meeting place for delegates who are planning to attend U.K based American studies/history/politics conferences in 2022. It is open to and welcoming of all who identify as women and those marginalized along the gender spectrum.Come and introduce yourself and get to meet colleagues who are attending the same American studies conferences as you in 2022. These include but are not limited to the annual conferences of BAAS, SHAW, HOTCUS, APG and BrANCH.This virtual hangout provides an opportunity to:  meet a confirmed sister panellist for an upcoming conference introduce yourself to colleagues working in your field who you would like to meet up with at a conference find potential panellists to collaborate with on a panel proposal for a conference later in the year consider how to network and stay safe at conferences   Register in advance here:   https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZwvf-muqjksE9BniEFN5wL02UE7AANzqRTW   

BAAS Bridging the Resource Gap Mini Lecture Series- Call for Educators

Call posted by Dr Emily Brady, Emma Hall, Keisha Bruce, and Katharina Donn As part of the BAAS outreach research project “Bridging the Resource Gap”, we are looking to commission a small number of educators and researchers to each create a 5-10 minute video lecture on underexplored topics in A-Level curriculums for the following subjects: English Literature, History, Politics, Media, and Film Studies. The selected educators will each be paid an honorarium of £100. Project Aims: Bridging the Resource Gap aims to expand awareness of the discipline of American Studies to students in further education, by bringing resources created by American Studies scholars to the classroom. These mini lectures will supplement teaching materials on the existing curriculum, and show students the range of research areas that American Studies covers. Who We are Looking For: Educators will be required to script, deliver, and assist in the production of a video lecture […]

Slavery and Emotions in the Atlantic World

University of Reading Reading, United Kingdom

Department of History, University of Reading, November 17-18, 2022 This workshop will bring together historians researching the roles that emotions played in the creation, maintenance, and experience of slavery in the Atlantic World. Fundamental to how enslavers wielded power, the enslaved also used emotion as a method of resistance, and it was clearly central to their everyday lived experiences. It is almost impossible to read testimony left by the enslaved, or sources produced by enslavers, without encountering mentions of acute feelings, yet studies are only recently beginning to emerge that explore slavery through the lens of emotion. The value of pursuing this avenue of research has been exemplified by recent historiographical turns focused on the ‘history of emotions’ and the analysis of archival silences. Historians of emotion have fruitfully demonstrated that to understand societies, we must explore how emotional conventions functioned and how ordinary people created their own emotional worlds. […]