Humanities Center

Humanities Center

Since its formation in 2012, the BYU Humanities Center’s mission has been to promote innovative scholarship in areas pertaining to the language, literature, thought, culture, and history of the human conversation. This podcast is a continuation of that mission. During each episode, our listeners will be able to hear conversations with distinguished scholars across many disciplines about their current work and its exploration into these diverse areas of the human experience. We hope that you, in listening to this podcast, find additional ways to Think Clearly, Act Well, and Appreciate Life. Thanks for listening.

Episodes

  1. 01/11/2021

    On Academics, Aesthetics, and Advocacy, with guest Cherene Sherrard, University of Wisconsin-Madison

    Intersections between areas of scholarly inquiry and areas of creative expression are both fraught with complexity and ripe with opportunity. Where and how these spheres of academic, intellectual and creative work inform each other is often unique to the individual performing that work. But what happens when these two areas—the academic and artistic—also engage the work of advocacy, of inspiring social and political change? Our guest on this episode of the BYU Humanities Center Podcast is Professor Cherene Sherrard, the Sally Mead Hands-Bascom Professor of English at the University of Madison-Wisconsin. She is the author of many important scholarly pieces that take up questions of belonging and global black identity, most recently through the theoretical frameworks of Archipelagic American studies and eco criticism. These topics are similarly considered in her excellent creative publications, including a recently published collection of poetry titled Grimoire, published by Autumn House Press, as well as an engaging essay titled “Saltworks” published in Terrain magazine. We spoke with Professor Sherrard about how these pieces and their associated areas of inquiry speak to the current and urgent conversations about race and racism in the United States, and how harmony between these areas of academic and intellectual work can forward the nation’s and world’s progress towards greater racial equality and justice. Interview by Matthew Wickman, Founding Director BYU Humanities Center, and Sam Jacob, BYU Humanities Center Intern. Produced and edited by Brooke Brown and Sam Jacob.

    49 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Since its formation in 2012, the BYU Humanities Center’s mission has been to promote innovative scholarship in areas pertaining to the language, literature, thought, culture, and history of the human conversation. This podcast is a continuation of that mission. During each episode, our listeners will be able to hear conversations with distinguished scholars across many disciplines about their current work and its exploration into these diverse areas of the human experience. We hope that you, in listening to this podcast, find additional ways to Think Clearly, Act Well, and Appreciate Life. Thanks for listening.