Jeany-Rose Hayahay, awardee of the 2023 Frontline Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk
Join us in welcoming Jeany Rose Hayahay, awardee of the 2023 Frontline Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk
“Nicholas Montemarano is one of our greatest writers, and here, his most moving and urgent book yet. If There Are Any Heavens is a work of cultural criticism, poetry, memoir, and elegy; a vital book of our times, and an impossibly beautiful reckoning. Montemarano refuses to allow the millions lost to a pandemic (and a culture of negligence) to remain anonymous, instead rendering the acute weight of loss, and the vibrancy of personhood, in astonishing detail.”
—T Kira Madden, author of Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls
This talk explores how, in 1784 New Orleans, Cecilia Conway—a recaptured maroon woman—asserted that she was pregnant and thereby leveraged the power of her reproductive labor. Her claims about her body briefly slowed down the system of capital punishment activated in response to her marronage by altering the trajectory of the state-sanctioned sexual violence inflicted upon her. The conversations between Cecilia and the prison’s authorities that this article unearths constitute an original archive of Cecilia’s assertions while accounting for their heavily mediated and yet remarkable presence. Centering the details of Cecilia’s life, recasts the threat of marronage in colonial Louisiana from simply one of male-led armed rebellion to one of reproduction, thorny kinship networks, and a potential maroon society.
SJ Zhang is an Assistant Professor of English at the University of Chicago. Their current project, Going Maroon and Other Forms of Family, considers how reproduction and carceral forces shaped the decisions and triggered the archives of four women who went maroon in North America and the Caribbean between 1781 and 1820. Professor Zhang is also working on a project concerning the woman called “Tituba, the Indian,” accused in the Salem Witch Trials of 1692-93. In this work, she examines Tituba’s testimony, racialization and subsequent scholarly and creative representations of her life from the 17th century through the present. Zhang’s work is published in Representations, Women & Performance, Transition, and Caribbean Literature in Transition, Volume 1: 1800-1920, with articles forthcoming in Small Axe and History of the Present.
Join us in welcoming Jeany Rose Hayahay, awardee of the 2023 Frontline Defenders Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk
Jack and Jill Western Massachusetts Chapter presents to you the Pink & Blue Table Talk: Black Love featuring Aneeka Ayanna Henderson, PhD, and her book Veil and Vow: Marriage Matters in Contemporary African American Culture.
4:00 PM–5:00 PM
Sunday February 6, 2022
Register for the virtual event
via Zoom on October 20, 2021 at 4:30 pm
https://www.amherst.edu/academiclife/colloquia/center-humanistic-inquiry/salon-series/node/810711
October 27, 2021 - Virtual via Zoom 4:30-6:30 pm
https://www.amherst.edu/academiclife/colloquia/center-humanistic-inquiry/salon-series/node/808853
Please read this interview with Professor Solsoree del Moral:
https://www.amherst.edu/news/news_releases/2021/10-2021/for-historians-that-is-like-magic
Hosted by President Biddy Martin, the President's Colloquium on Race and Racism features conversations with leading scholars studying the intersections of race and American democracy. Please register to participate in the final three events of the series. Beyond Hate and Anti-Asian Racism: A Conversation with Lisa Lowe
Amherst College Professor of American Studies Pawan Dhingra will moderate a conversation with Lisa Lowe, Samuel Knight Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, Race, and Migration at Yale University.