Panizzi Lectures 2024: Spaces of Black Study
British Library, London.
Panizzi Lectures 2024: Spaces of Black Study
Thursday 12 December 2024, 18:30 – 20:30, Pigott Theatre
Professor Elizabeth McHenry discusses the stakes and challenges of studying the history of Black print with her lecture series entitled ‘Black Bibliography, Here and Now’.
More information about Panizzi Lectures 2024: Spaces of Black Study tickets
This event will take place in the British Library Knowledge Centre Pigott Theatre. It will be simultaneously live streamed on the British Library platform. Tickets may be booked either to attend in person (physical) or to watch on our platform (online) either live or within 48 hours on catch up. Viewing links for the online version will be sent out in the confirmation email you receive after booking. Captions are available for our online events and most in person events in the Pigott Theatre. If you have specific access requirements please email customer@bl.uk To consider Black bibliography is to evoke an array of histories of print from across the Black diaspora, all of which have their own genealogies, their own timelines, their own print formats, and their own modes of publication, distribution and circulation. How can we profitably think across these histories, to map them not as a seamless or homogenous field of inquiry, but as what has been called “a constellation of relational possibilities”? “To the Masses of our People, we say Read!”: Reckoning with the Spaces of Black Study is the third and final lecture in this series by Elizabeth McHenry. In it, McHenry looks into the archives of Black print culture across the twentieth century and across the Black diaspora, to suggest how books and their spaces became agents of thinking blackness otherwise, as sites of love, study and struggle. Part of the Panizzi Lecture Series, 2024: ‘Black Bibliography, Here and Now’ What are the stakes and challenges of studying the history of Black print? What is Black bibliography, and how can renewed attention to it lead us to a better understanding of the ways Black writing has been produced, conceptualized and valued? This series of lectures by Elizabeth McHenry grapples with these questions by examining the work current scholarship in Black Bibliography is doing to expand our knowledge of Black print culture, and what it has the potential to do going forward.
“To the Masses of our People, we say Read!”: Reckoning with the Spaces of Black Study
All attendees are invited to join a drinks reception in the Knowledge Centre Foyer following the final lecture in the series.
The Panizzi Lectures are a series of annual lectures given at the British Library by eminent scholars of the book and named after the librarian Anthony Panizzi (1797 – 1879).
Elizabeth McHenry is Professor of English at New York University. Her research and teaching are focused on African American literature intellectual history and the history of Black print culture, particularly in the nineteenth and very early twentieth centuries. She is the author of Forgotten Readers: Recovering the Lost History of African American Literary Societies (Duke 2002), which explores the long history of African Americans as readers in the context of their organized literary practices. Her most recent book, To Make Negro Literature: Writing, Literary Practice, and African American Authorship (Duke, 2021), returns again to the archives of Black literature to examine a variety of projects and conditions of authorship that have been dismissed or gone largely unnoticed in traditional accounts of African American literary history. She is currently at work on a project that aims to uncover the work of early twentieth-century Black job printers in the production and distribution of African American literature and the extension of Black literary culture.
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If you’re attending in person, please arrive no later than 15 minutes before the start time of this event.
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Image Credit: Untitled [Black People’s Information Centre], from the series On a Good Day. Vandenberg, Al. V&A, Prints and Drawings Study Room, level F, Shelf 1003, Box C. https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1189961/untitled-black-peoples-information-centre-photograph-vandenberg-al/