Conference: Translation in American Indian Studies

Date
Nov 23, 2013
Location

Speaker

Details

Event Description

 

Phillip Round

Phillip Round’s research and teaching in American literature focuses on material practices and discursive crossings. Each of his three books approaches literary practice from within very different contexts. The first, By Nature and By Custom Cursed: Transatlantic Civil Discourse and New England Cultural Production, 1620-1660 (UPNE, 1999), explores the discursive dimensions of England’s Great Migration to the new world. The second, The Impossible Land: Story and Place in California’s Imperial Valley (University of New Mexico Press, 2008), focuses on the American southwest, detailing how human beings use discourse to orient themselves to the land. His most recent book, Removable Type: Histories of the Book in Indian Country, 1663-1880 (University of North Carolina Press, 2010), examines the textual cultures that emerged in Native American communities as they mobilized literacy, books, and print in their struggle against the European occupation of their homelands.Removable Type was awarded the Modern Language Association’s James Russell Lowell Prize in 2011. In 2013, he was honored with a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.

Sponsors
  • Princeton American Indian Studies Working Group
  • Program in American Studies