SCHOLARS AND THEIR KIN: A SYMPOSIUM (NYU, March 6, 2020)

stephane gerson Announcement
Location
New York, United States
Subject Fields
Anthropology, Black History / Studies, Cultural History / Studies, French History / Studies, Research and Methodology
A symposium on personal family histories as modes of writing, forms of knowledge, political interventions, and ethical practices

A growing number of scholars are making their own relatives (and other kin) their object of study. These personal family histories mark a significant shift in scholarly practice and writing, with far-reaching methodological, political, and ethical implications. Scholars and Their Kin is one of the first symposia to bring together scholars who are presently writing in this vein or have recently done so.

This conversation between U.S.-based and European historians, anthropologists, sociologists, and literary/cultural critics will address far-reaching questions. They include the family as an object of study, modes and forms of scholarly writing, the recovery of lost or forgotten histories (with special attention to race, religion, and gender), the study of emotions and intimacy, questions of scale, familial memory and transmission, as well as history and genealogy. Participants will also discuss the institutional frameworks in which, depending on their background, field, and stage in career, scholars are encouraged (or not) to write such histories.

This event will take place at NYU's Maison Française, 16 Washington Mews, on Friday March 6, 2020 from 9:00am-6:00pm and will be followed by a cocktail reception. Free and open to the public with required registration. Please RSVP here.

Symposium Program

8:30am           Breakfast

9:00am          Welcome and Introduction

Stéphane Gerson (French/French Studies/History, NYU)

9:30am            FAMILY SECRETS, SHAME, AND COMPLICITIES

Martha Jones (History, Johns Hopkins), “A Jagged Color Line"

Christine Bard (History, University of Angers), “Jack in the Fog: Gen/eth/ics of a Family Secret”

 Amy Moran-Thomas (Anthropology, MIT), “Pennsylvania Salient: Carbon and Kinship”

 Commentator: Kendra Field (History/Africana, Tufts)

 Chair: Edward Ball (independent scholar)

11:15am           Coffee Break

11:45am           WRITING WITHIN AND BEYOND DISCIPLINES

Leslie Harris (History, Northwestern), “Racial Identity, Ancestry, and Privilege in a New Orleans Family”

Christine Détrez (Sociology, ENS-Lyon), “’Walk the Line’: Writing With a Trembling Hand, or How to Investigate One’s Mother’"

Marnix Beyen (History, University of Antwerp), “Beyond Taboo, Worship, and Irony: Tracing the War in My Family History (and Vice Versa)"

Commentator: Ivan Jablonka (History, Paris 13)

Chair: Ed Berenson (History/French Studies, NYU)

1:30pm            Lunch

3:00pm           GRAPPLING WITH OUR SOURCES

Martha Hodes (History, NYU), "Vivid Memories and the Quest for Archival Documentation"

Tao Goffe (Africana/Feminist, Gender & Sexuality Studies, Cornell), “Albums of Inclusion: Family, Vernacular Photography, and Afro-Asian Intimacies”

Frédéric Viguier (French Studies, NYU), “Being the Native Ethnographer of My 3rd-Grade Class: Methodological Advantages and Ethical Challenges”

Commentator: Claudio Lomnitz (Anthropology, Columbia)

Chair: Carolyn Dinshaw (English/Social and Cultural Analysis, NYU)

4:45pm            Coffee Break

5:00pm            CONCLUDING REMARKS

Marianne Hirsch (English/Comp Lit/Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Columbia)

Leo Spitzer (History, Dartmouth)

In conversation with Stéphane Gerson

6:00pm            Cocktail Reception

 

Symposium organized by Stéphane Gerson, Professor of French, French Studies, and History, NYU, and sponsored by NYU’s Institute of French Studies.


 
Contact Information

Stéphane Gerson (Director, Institute of French Studies, NYU)

Contact Email
stephane.gerson@nyu.edu