Adam Haley, PhD

CONFERENCE TALK: Form, Fiction, Footnote: Historiography, Reading Practices, and the Presented Past in Edward P. Jones’s The Known World

If, as scholars of literature and literary reading, we earnestly believe that fictional narrative has something substantive to contribute to our understanding of the world, then it is imperative that we grant an appropriate philosophical weight to such narratives, understanding them not as footnotes or factual correctives, but as potentially radical reformulations of the totality of human experience—as ways of un-knowing and re-knowing the world.

CONFERENCE TALK: The Real Invisible Hand: Historical Haunting, Porous Chronologies, and the Grasp of What Came Before

What is virally postmodern or postmodernly viral about Kindred is not just the physical and ideological content of slavery it so ruthlessly and vividly uncovers, but the novel’s disruption and reconfiguration of the mainframe of contemporary historical consciousness.

ENGL 262: The Possibilities of Postmodern Historical Fiction

Faulkner tells us that not only is the past not dead, it’s not even past; this course will ask how, why, and to what effects the past is present (and I mean this both chronologically—present as now—and spatially—present as here).