Upcoming Events

The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Martha J. Cutter

Location: Texana Room, Fondren Library 211

Lecture: 5:30 pm, Followed by reception

Abstract:

In 1849, an enslaved man named Henry Box Brown obtained a large postal crate and had himself mailed from slavery in Richmond, Virginia to freedom in Philadelphia, PA.  Brown survived this voyage and went on to carve out a life for himself that entailed performing his story in the US, the UK, and Canada until his death in 1897. This talk traces his resurrections of himself as an abolitionist speaker, writer, hypnotist, actor, magician, concert singer, and even a ventriloquist. It shows how Brown’s multiple resurrections manipulate the traumatic legacy of enslavement to create subversive messages about the everywhere of slavery while also creating a unique and radical style of Black performance art. The speaker also discusses the nature of her own archival work, with a key emphasis on what literature and humanities scholars bring to the study of history.

Bio:

Martha J. Cutter is a professor of English and Africana Studies at the University of Connecticut and the Director of the American Studies Program. She is the author of  four books: Unruly Tongue: Language and Identity in American Women’s Writing (University Press of Mississippi, 1998), Lost and Found in Translation: Contemporary Ethnic American Writing and the Politics of Language Diversity (University of North Carolina Press, 2005), The Illustrated Slave: Empathy, Graphic Narrative, and the Visual Culture of the Transatlantic Abolition Movement, 1800-1852 (University of Georgia Press, 2017), and The Many Resurrections of Henry Box Brown (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2022). She is also the coeditor (with Cathy J. Schlund-Vials) of a collection of essays on multi-ethnic graphic narrative titled Redrawing the Historical Past: History, Memory, and Multiethnic Graphic Novels (2018, the University of Georgia Press). She has published more than forty articles or book chapters on women writers, American multi-ethnic literature, African American literature, abolition, and racial passing. She has received numerous awards, including the College English Association’s award for the best book in Literary Theory/Criticism in 2000, a University of Connecticut Humanities Grant for work on The Illustrated Slave in 2015, a Provost’s fellowship from the University of Connecticut in 2007, and the CELJ (Council of Editors of Learned Journals) Award for the Best Journal in North American Studies, for MELUS. Most recently, she was awarded an NEH academic year fellowship from 2019-2020 for research on her book on Henry Box Brown.