Dr. Cobb will present a workshop discussion on creating and submitting a book proposal for the ARC postdoc scholars and other Penn State postdoc scholars that wish to attend.
Jasmine Cobb is the Bacca Foundation Associate Professor of African & African American Studies and of Art, Art History and Visual Studies at Duke University. She is the author of Picture Freedom: Remaking Black Visuality in the Early Nineteenth Century (NYUP 2015) and New Growth: The Art and Texture of Black Hair After Emancipation (forthcoming). She has written essays for MELUS: Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States, American Literary History and Public Culture and she is the editor for African American Literature in Transition, Vol. 2 (Cambridge, forthcoming).
A scholar of African American cultural production and visual representation, Cobb is involved in two additional projects that examine the cultural aftermath of slavery. Her third monograph, The Pictorial Life of Harriet Tubman, offers a visual history of the abolitionist, from the middle nineteenth century through the present, including the persistence of the abolitionist’s image in contemporary art and popular culture. Cobb is also a co-director of the “From Slavery to Freedom” (FS2F) Franklin Humanities Lab at Duke University. This project explores the life and afterlives of slavery and emancipation through experimental modes of inquiry.
Cobb earned a PhD from the Annenberg School for Communication at University of Pennsylvania, as well as a graduate certificate in Africana Studies. Prior to her appointment at Duke, Cobb spent one year as a postdoctoral fellow at the Africana Research Center, Pennsylvania State University and four years on the faculty at Northwestern University. She is a recipient of the American Fellowship from the American Association of University Women (AAUW).
Please register in advance for this event: https://bit.ly/38dS0VX
Occurrences
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Tuesday, March 30, 2021, 1:00 p.m.–2:30 p.m.