Exciting updates:
1st, @kristenmvitale published a post describing her recent trip to the Folger Library. Read it on Ruff Draughts here: https://t.co/2lRMQsuIYT
2nd, We are beginning a new works in progress writing group. More info can be found here: https://t.co/UrVOokmYC0
Early modern lit/science folks! Please check out the brilliant essays in Imagining Early Modern Scientific Forms, a special issue just out from Philological Quarterly, co-edited with the wonderful @debapriya__s .
Check out this special issue of Philological Quarterly on “Imagining Early Modern Scientific Forms,” edited by Cornell's @jenny_c_mann and UConn's own @debapriya__s
https://t.co/Z3dOuv2hH0
Registration is re-opened for #RaceB4Race Race and Periodization in DC! We got a larger space at the American University Washington College of Law! APPLY for grants-in-aid with @FolgerResearch: https://t.co/zBexrwfWKL General registration: https://t.co/p0ANwykAm0
UConn Early Modernists! Here is the audio from thev2019 SAA Plenary Session "New Directions in Early Modern Race Studies." https://t.co/GM5mmVJoE8 via @YouTube
I'm attending the plenary panel, "Looking Forward: New Directions in Early Modern Race Studies" at @Shax2019. I'll try my best to tweet out the highlights for anyone who wants to follow along at home
I cannot do justice to Hall's very personal talk via tweet, but I will merely note how powerful it was that she interspersed her talk about archival work with items from an eighteenth-century inventory containing both books, household items, and enslaved persons.