2024 BAAS Awards — Digital Awards Ceremony
Join us to celebrate our 2024 winners at our digital award ceremony on Friday 14 June! You’ll find out who won the coveted best book/best first book prizes and much, much more!
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Join us to celebrate our 2024 winners at our digital award ceremony on Friday 14 June! You’ll find out who won the coveted best book/best first book prizes and much, much more!
Joanna Brooks reveals the harsh realities behind seventeenth- and eighteenth-century working-class English emigration—and dismantles the idea that these immigrants were drawn to America as a land of opportunity. Brooks follows American folk ballads back across the Atlantic, uncovering an archaeology of the worldviews of America’s earliest immigrants and a haunting historical perspective on the ancestors we thought we knew.
Saying No to Hate grounds readers in the history of antisemitism in America, emphasizing the strategies Jews have used to address threats and thereby preparing us to recognize, understand, and confront hatred today.
Across the United States, groups of grassroots volunteers gather in overgrown, systemically neglected cemeteries, they offer care to individuals who were denied basic rights and forms of belonging in life and in death. Cemetery Citizens is the first book-length study of this emerging form of social justice work. It focuses on how racial disparities shape the fates of the dead, and asks what kinds of repair are still possible by drawing on interviews, activist anthropology, and poems Rosenblatt dives into the ethical quandaries and practical complexities of cemetery reclamationtion.
Sam Ladkin, Frank O'Hara's New York School and Mid-Century Mannerism: Perfectly Disgraceful (Oxford University Press): offers a ground-breaking account of the poet Frank O'Hara and the extraordinary cultural blossoming O'Hara catalysed, namely the mid-century experimental and multi-disciplinary arts scene, the New York School. Fresh accounts of canonical figures (Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, George Balanchine, Fred Astaire) and original work on those too little discussed (Edwin Denby, Elaine de Kooning) resound with analysis of queer iconology from Michelangelo's David to James Dean.
The Associate Editors of the Journal of American Studies are looking for book reviews from doctoral candidates and early career researchers with expertise in any aspect of American Studies and its related sub-disciplines.
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