Thursday: Dr. Doug Rossinow on Austin in the 60s
We hope you'll join us this Thursday, October 13th in Painter Hall 3.02 for a talk by Dr. Doug Rossinow, about Austin in the 1960s. Dr. Rossinow's book, The Politics of Authenticity, is commonly taught in UT AMS. We've included an image of the poster and a description of Dr. Rossinow's talk, below.
Austin was a major center of youth protest and dissident culture in the 1960s -- a radical center with a distinctive Texas identity. Civil rights agitation, dissident religion, peace mobilization, leftist radicalism, women's liberation, and a unique underground culture: it all happened here, and most of all at UT. Soon it will be fifty years since the world-shaking year 1968. Looking back with the benefit of a half-century’s perspective, Professor Rossinow will reflect on the significance of the 1960s for today, and on what Austin's Sixties tells us about that era.
5 Questions, First-Year PhD Student Edition! This Week: Zoya Brumberg
This month, AMS : ATX brings you a twist on our world-famous "5 Questions" series. Rather than interviewing the established professors and scholars of UT's American Studies department or the graduates of the AMS PhD program, we have decided to focus on those brave souls at the beginning of their American Studies scholarly journey: the first-year graduate students in UT's AMS doctoral program. Why do people pick up from steady jobs and loving communities across the country and move to sweltering Austin, Texas, for a chance to read hundreds of books, write thousands of words, and teach undergraduates about...American Studies? How do these folks define "American Studies," and why is this the field for them? We posed these questions, among others, to Zoya Brumberg, who has come to UT from Providence, RI by way of Chicago, IL. In this first installment of "5 Questions with First-Years," Brumberg discusses her academic and personal background, her scholarly interest in the human curation of natural landscapes, folklore, the American West, and her conviction that personal hobbies are a site of profound creative, scholarly possibility.
5) What are your goals for graduate school, and--if you dare-- for after you graduate?Obviously, I am going to get a tenure-track position at a well-respected university located in a very cool, not-too-expensive small city. But really I just want to write, and explore, and write some more, and hope that the work I do reaches people in an enjoyable, or at least palatable, way. Looking at the history of parks, of the articulation of natural history, forces the people engaging with those histories to question the dichotomy between human and natural spaces. I want my work to help people see nature not as something in a specially reserved park but as a part of human (and other living thing) experiences, to question land and water as property, to look critically at their own consumption, to enjoy "wilderness areas" as human spaces and human spaces as part of a global nature. If the whole academia thing doesn't work out, I would love to confuse and depress children by doing educational programming for the National Park Service or something.
Jason Bivins Book Talk Tomorrow
Tomorrow, Thursday, October 6 from noon to 1pm in Burdine 554 is a book talk by Dr. Jason Bivins, a prominent historian of American religions from North Carolina State University. A description of Dr. Bivins's new book, Spirits Rejoice, is below. We hope to see you there.
In Spirits Rejoice! Jason Bivins explores the relationship between American religion and American music, and the places where religion and jazz have overlapped.Much writing about jazz tends toward glorified discographies or impressionistic descriptions of the actual sounds. Rather than providing a history, or series of biographical entries, Spirits Rejoice! takes to heart a central characteristic of jazz itself and improvises, generating a collection of themes, pursuits, reoccurring foci, and interpretations. Bivins riffs on interviews, liner notes, journals, audience reception, and critical commentary, producing a work that argues for the centrality of religious experiences to any legitimate understanding of jazz, while also suggesting that jazz opens up new interpretations of American religious history. Bivins examines themes such as musical creativity as related to specific religious traditions, jazz as a form of ritual and healing, and jazz cosmologies and metaphysics. Spirits Rejoice!connects Religious Studies to Jazz Studies through thematic portraits, and a vast number of interviews to propose a new, improvisationally fluid archive for thinking about religion, race, and sound in the United States. Bivins's conclusions explore how the sound of spirits rejoicing challenges not only prevailing understandings of race and music, but also the way we think about religion.
UT AMS Grad Joshua Abraham Kopin Publishes Entry In The Encyclopedia of American Studies
Congratulations to UT AMS grad student Joshua Abraham Kopin, whose entry on the Mexican War was recently published in the Encyclopedia of American Studies.