Humanities Hub

ITALY COVID 19

(Director’s Note: Seeing  Covid-19 hit Italy early, and hard,  I wrote to a colleague in the Department of Languages, Roberto Risso, for his sense of the situation, below.  Dr. Risso was born and raised in Turin, Italy, where he lived until eleven years ago.  After relocating to the US, he has lived in Wisconsin, Maine, and […]

The second plague outbreak in my life

(Director’s Note: Lee Morrissey, Founding Director of the Humanities Hub, joined the Clemson English faculty in 1995, moving to Clemson from Manhattan, where, while a graduate student, he had volunteered to create the Archives at an arts center, The Kitchen.  From 1995 to 2000, he brought artists–including Ben Neill (who performed with David Wojnarowicz in […]

Déjà Vu All Over Again

(Director’s note: Dr. Abel A. Bartley, a native of Jacksonville, Florida, and a graduate of Florida State University where he received his BA in History and Political Science, his MA in History, and his Ph.D. in History in African Americans and Urban History, is Professor of African American and Urban History at Clemson.  Author of Keeping the Faith: […]

Reading the Classics under Lockdown

(Director’s note: Elizabeth Rivlin, teaches in the English department, and her research interests include the history of Shakespeare in American literature and culture, especially cultures of reading; theories of adaptation; and early modern drama and prose. Her current book project is titled Shakespeare and the American Middlebrow, for which she won a NEH Summer Stipend.  This is […]

COVID-19 digital contract tracing shows how badly we need data-literate humanists

(Director’s note: Jordan Frith, Pearce Professor of Professional Communication in English, researches mobile technologies, social media, and infrastructure, particularly where those topics intersect through questions of space and place. He’s the author of 30 peer-reviewed articles on these topics and three books, the most recent of which was published by MIT Press in 2019.  This is […]

Peace not Patience

(Director’s note: Pauline de Tholozany, an  Assistant Professor in the Department of Languages department, specializes in 19th-century French Literature. Her first book, L’Ecole de la maladresse (Paris: Honoré Champion, 2017), is a history of clumsiness in the 18th and 19th centuries. She is now working on a second book that focuses on impatience, a feeling that we tend to decry; […]

An Accurate Description of What Has Never Occurred

(Director’s Note: Stephanie Barczewski is Professor of History and Carol K. Brown Scholar in the Humanities. She is a specialist in the history of modern Britain. Her most recent book is Heroic Failure and the British (2016); her next book, Englishness and the Country House, is forthcoming from Reaktion Books in 2021.  The title of her essay comes […]

Amy Cooper Thinks She’s Free

(Director’s note: Erin M. Goss, Associate Professor of English, thinks and writes about eighteenth- and nineteenth-century writing by and about women, especially as it intersects with contemporary gender politics. She is finishing a book currently called Complicity and the Bargains of White Femininity, 1750-1850.  This is Clemson Humanities Now.) So much has happened since the morning […]

SPAIN COVID 19

(Director’s note: Salvador Oropesa, Chair of Languages, earned a PhD in Latin American literature from Arizona State, was born in Málaga, Spain, and studied Spanish Philology at the Universidad de Granada, Spain.  This is Clemson Humanities Now.) At this age of wisdom and foolishness, the pandemic arrived with the new year. The citizens of the […]

Condemning Racism and Supporting Free Speech

(Director’s note: Will Stockton is a Professor of English. His latest books include Members of His Body: Shakespeare, Paul, and a Theology of Nonmonogamy (Fordham University Press, 2017) and a translation of Sergio Loo’s Nightmare in Narvarte (Literalia, 2020). Find him at willstockton.com.  This is Clemson Humanities Now.) As the U.S. reels in response to the […]