Member News: Gregory Cushman

 AHR cover

In the December 2024 issue of the American Historical Review, a special issue on “Histories of Resilience,” member Gregory Cushman co-authored a research article “Ecologies of Resilience: The Many Colonizations of Rapa Nui (Easter Island), c. 1200-Present” with Trisha Jackson and Johannes J. Feddema.

They see the island’s history as a “parable of survival, adaptation, and resilience.” To quote the issue introduction:

Engaging with Rapanui perspectives and historical methodologies, alongside paleoenvironmental evidence and traditional archival documents, the authors uncover the Indigenous longue durée of Rapanui resilience, from the original settling of the island around the thirteenth century CE through subsequent colonial intrusions. The authors showcase the complexity of Indigenous resilience through the ways Rapanui peoples encoded historical and ecological knowledge in place names, navigational direction tied to the stars, oral accounts, the recently reconstructed Native Chronicle of Years, and rongorongo script. Knowledge keepers developed and maintained this Rapanui archive over generations in an expression of resilience that counters colonial erasure.

The article is available here. Congratulations Greg!

Member News: Joela Jacobs

Let’s congratulate Joela on her upcoming publication of Animal, Vegetal, Marginal: The Germany Literary Grotesque from Panizza to Kafka (March 2025). Head on over to Indiana University Press’s webpage to read more about it.

Member News: Leerom Medovoi

Let’s congratulate Lee on his recent publication of The Inner Life of Race: Souls, Bodies, and the History of Racial Power (September 2024). Head on over to Duke University Press’s webpage to read more about it.

Community News: Collaboration with Jonathon Keats

Johanna Skibsrud is looking forward to a collaboration between the English department, Biosphere2 and the artist Jonathon Keats. With support from an RII grant, they will be exploring the art and practice of reading in an expanded sense through community outreach events. Their focus in spring 2025 will be on developing engagement and discussion of Keats’ “Common Law of Nature” project (to be installed at Biosphere2) and the 75th anniversary of the publication of Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles

Community News: Sustained Public Reading

The Future is Now! Join us in a “Sustained Public Reading” of Butler’s The Parable of a Sower: April 24, 2024, 2:00 – 8:30 pm, at Mission Garden, a living example of our collective power to re-interpret the relationship between humans and the environment, as well as between the past, present and future.

Hosted in partnership with Mission Garden and the Tucson Birthplace Open Space Coalition, this event aims to celebrate the power of literature to activate emotional connection, introduce new scales and perspectives, reformulate relationships to selfhood and otherness, and open new possibilities for affect and thought. It also aims to underscore the connections between these literary capacities and their interpretation through the practical goals of Mission Garden and TBOSC to (respectively) “represent the deep history of multi-cultural regional food production, while mitigating food insecurities, resource depletion and the impacts of climate change” and to “honor the past and manifest a more just future by working together to heal our common sacred ground.”

The event will take place on Wednesday April 24, 2024 from 2:00 pm to 8:30pm. A separate children’s area will operate from 3:00-6:00 with stories, crafts, and a seed planting activity. Light refreshments will be provided throughout the event. Please feel free to bring your own food and drink, as well as flashlights or lanterns.

We need readers and volunteers! If you would like to sign up to read a chapter of Butler’s novel, please sign up on the google doc, linked here. You can sign up as an individual or as a “team” (dividing the chapter among several voices).

**Though The Parable of a Sower is ultimately a tale of hope and growth and change, its content is often disturbing, and contains references to violence, including sexual violence. Because of this, we recommend participants and audience members to be over the age of 18.**  If you would like to sign up to volunteer at our children’s station (reading stories, leading an activity, or just generally helping out) between 3:00-6:00, please sign up here.

Also please feel very free to simply come and enjoy as much of the reading as you would like, as well as the beautiful April blooms in Mission Garden.

The event is free and open to the public!

Member News: John Melillo

Upcoming Publication

John Melillo

“Tracing Waves,” in Speculative Affect (ed. Charmaine Eddy)

Upcoming Opportunity: Residential Course

Writing the Landscape

Dates: October 7, 2024 – October 11, 2024

Deadline: June 3, 2024

Learn more about this residential, short course being taught by Gretchen E. Henderson here.

Member News: Maura Beste

Upcoming Presentations

Maura Beste

  • July 2024: “Let His Heart be Changed: Reading Nebuchadnezzar’s Daniel 4 Transformation with Recent Pig-to-Human Heart Xenotransplantation,” Society for Social Studies of Science, Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • September 2024: “Prospective Methodologies for Feminist Qualitative Human-Animal Interaction Studies in the Veterinary Hospital,” International Veterinary Social Work Summit