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Franny Nudelman

Professor

Research Interests

Research and Writing

My research, writing, and teaching have focused on nineteenth- and twentieth century U.S. culture, with an emphasis on cultural responses to the problem of war. Before arriving at 杏吧原创 in 2006, I worked as an assistant professor in Yale University鈥檚 departments of English and American Studies (1992-97), and as an assistant and associate professor in the University of Virginia鈥檚 department of English and program in American Studies (1997-2006). While in Virginia, I wrote my first book, John Brown鈥檚 Body: Slavery, Violence, and the Culture of War (University of North Carolina Press, 2004), which examines representations of dead soldiers during the U.S. Civil War in light of a history of racial violence inflicted on free and enslaved African Americans during the antebellum period.

Since arriving at 杏吧原创 in 2006, my work has focused on U.S. culture after 1945 with an emphasis on radical documentary and war resistance in the context of American military expansion. With Joseph Entin and Sara Blair, I have edited a volume of essays entitled Remaking Reality: U.S. Documentary Culture After 1945 ().  Examining a wide range of forms and media, including sound recording, narrative journalism, drawing, photography, film, and video, Remaking Reality explores the flourishing of documentary activism in the contemporary period, and argues that after 1945 documentarians reconceived 鈥渞eality鈥 as the site of political conflict, and documentation as instrumental to anti-institutional struggles for justice and survival. I recently published a book on sleep and U.S. militarism, Fighting Sleep: The War for the Mind and the US Military (Verso Books, 2019), that considers experiments in sleep, conducted between 1945 and the present, that have shaped, and reshaped, our understanding of war and its effects on the mind. Fighting Sleep examines the work of military psychiatrists who, in the immediate aftermath of WWII, used drug-induced sleep to heal traumatized veterans and to pioneer the techniques of brainwashing, and the activism of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War, who politicized sleep states in the service of war resistance, and turned sleep into a form of direct action. Recent published essays on the subject of war and documentary include 鈥溾楳arked for Demolition鈥: Mary McCarthy鈥檚 Vietnam Journalism,鈥 American Literature (June 2013), 鈥淎gainst Photography: Susan Sontag鈥檚 Vietnam,鈥 Photography and Culture (Winter 2014), 鈥淣ew Soldiers and Empty Boys: Imaging Traumatic Memory,鈥 Visual Studies 30 (June 2015).

Honors and Awards

杏吧原创 University Development Grant, 2017-18

Collaborator, SSHRC Insight Development Grant, 鈥淔eeling Life: Biopolitics, Literature, and Sentimentality,鈥 Principal Investigators: Stuart Murray (杏吧原创) and Julie Murray (杏吧原创), 2016鈥2018

SSHRC Standard Research Grant, Anti-War Avant-Garde: Radical Documentary in the United States, 1945-1974, 2009-2012

SSHRC Institutional Grant, 2008-2009, 2007-2008

External Faculty Fellowship, Center for the Humanities, Oregon State University, 2002-2003

Sesquicentennial Associateship, University of Virginia, January-December 2001

Morse Junior Faculty Fellowship, Yale University, 1995-96

Books

Fighting Sleep: The War for the Mind and the US Military (Verso Books, 2019)

Remaking Reality: U.S. Documentary After 1945, co-edited with Sara Blair and Joseph Entin (University of North Carolina Press, 2018)

John Brown鈥檚 Body: Slavery, Violence, and the Culture of War (Cultural Studies of the United States Series, University of North Carolina Press, 2004)

Articles and Reviews

“The Document” (an essay on British photojournalist Tim Hetherington) in A Concise Companion to Visual Culture, eds. Aubrey Anable, Joan Saab, Catherine Zuromskis (Wiley Blackwell, 2021)

鈥淒eath in Life: Documenting Survival After Hiroshima,鈥 in Remaking Reality: U.S. Documentary Culture After 1945 (University of North Carolina Press, April 2018)

鈥淩eporting Nuclear Dread: The Stranger at Didion鈥檚 Door,鈥 a/b: Auto/biography Studies 32 (Autumn 2016): 591-96

鈥淣ew Soldiers and Empty Boys: Imaging Traumatic Memory,鈥 Visual Studies 30 (June 2015): 210-221

鈥淭ake Me to the River,鈥 Review Essay on Katherine Boo鈥檚 Behind the Beautiful Forevers and Rana Dasgupta鈥檚 Capital, Contemporary Literature (Spring 2015): 181-190

鈥淎gainst Photography: Susan Sontag鈥檚 Vietnam,鈥 Photography and Culture 7.1 (2014): 7:20

鈥楳arked for Demolition鈥: Mary McCarthy鈥檚 Vietnam Journalism,鈥 American Literature 85.2 (2013): 363-87

鈥淭rip to Hanoi: Anti-War Travel and International Consciousness,鈥 in New World Coming: The Sixties and the Shaping of Global Consciousness, eds. Karen Dubinsky, Catherine Krull, Susan Lord, Sean Mills, Scott Rutherford (Between the Lines, 2009): 237-246

Review of Sharon Cameron鈥檚 Impersonality and Branka Arsic鈥檚 Passive Constitutions, American Literature (September 2009)

鈥溾楾he Blood of Millions鈥: John Brown鈥檚 Body, Public Violence, and Political Community,鈥 American Literary History (Winter 2001). Reprinted in Afterlife of John Brown, eds. Eldrid Herrington and Andrew Taylor (Palgrave Press, 2005)

鈥溾楪hosts Might Enter Here鈥: Toward a Reader鈥檚 History,鈥 in Scribbling Women: Engendering and Empowering the Hawthorne Tradition, eds. Melinda Ponder and John Idol (University of Massachusetts Press, 1999)

Review of Caroline Levander鈥檚 Voices of the Nation: Women and Public Speech in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, American Literature (September 1999)

鈥溾楨mblem and Product of Sin鈥: The Poisoned Child in The Scarlet Letter and Domestic Advice Literature,鈥 The Yale Journal of Criticism 10 (Spring 1997)

鈥淏eyond the Talking Cure: Listening to Female Testimony on The Oprah Winfrey Show,鈥 in Inventing the Psychological: Toward a History of Emotional Life in America, eds. Joel Pfister and Nancy Schnog (Yale University Press, 1997): 297-315

鈥淗arriet Jacobs and the Sentimental Politics of Female Suffering,鈥 English Literary History 59 (1992)

Multimedia

Guest Blog, 鈥淭rip to Hanoi,鈥 Cold War Camera, July 2013
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Developed and taught online seminar for high school teachers on the roots of the 1960鈥檚 counterculture, sponsored by the National Center for the Humanities
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Developed and taught online seminar for high school teachers on Walt Whitman鈥檚 Civil War poetry, sponsored by the National Center for the Humanities
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Invited Lectures and Presentations (selected)

鈥淪leeping Soldiers: Experiments in Militarism and Resistance,鈥 Keynote Address, delivered at Militarism, Security, and the Use of Force in U.S. History, Annual Conference of Historians, German American Studies Association, February 21-23, 2014

鈥淰eterans鈥 Nightmares: Trauma, Activism, and 鈥楾he New Soldier,鈥欌 Miami University, Department of English, November 2011

鈥淢arching On: Burial, Memory, Progress,鈥 Keynote Address, John Brown Day, John Brown State Historic Site, Lake Placid, New York, May 2010

鈥淛ohn Brown, Martin Luther King, and the Art of 鈥楥reative Suffering,鈥欌 John Brown, Abolition, and the Legacies of Revolutionary Violence: A Conference Commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Harpers Ferry Raid, Gilder Lehrman Center, Yale University, October 2009

鈥淢aking it New: Consumption and Consciousness on the Trip to Hanoi,鈥 Oklahoma State University, American Studies Lecture Series, April 17, 2008

鈥淩adical Scavengers and Winter Soldiers: Documenting the War in Vietnam,鈥 Institute for Historical Studies, University of Michigan, February 2006

鈥溾楾his Guilty Land鈥: Black Soldiers, Military Discipline, and the Wartime State,鈥 Interdisciplinary Civil War Symposium, Lawrence University, April 2005

“Getting to Gettysburg: On Teaching Civil War History,” Gibbs Museum, Charleston, South Carolina, April 1995

Recent Presentations (selected)

“Reframing Postmortem Photography: Tim Hetherington’s Sleeping Soldiers,” Reframing Family Photography Conference, University of Toronto, September 2017

鈥淔lying Blind: Repurposing Aerial Vision in Richard Mosse鈥檚 鈥楨nclave,鈥欌 American Studies Association, 2016

Roundtable Participant, 鈥淥n Joan Didion: Essayist, Journalist, Memoirist, Novelist,鈥 Modern Language Association Convention, January 2016

鈥淪leeping Soldiers: Tim Hetherington RIP,鈥 presented at the Association for the Study of the Arts of the Present, September 2016

Organizer and Presenter, 鈥淢ilitarism and the Environment: Ecology, Psychology, Technology,鈥 European Association for American Studies, The Hague, April 2014

鈥淎ctivism鈥檚 Aftermath: Susan Sontag鈥檚 On Photography,鈥 Capture 2012: Photography, Nature, Human Rights, Yale University, October 2012

鈥淲alking Again,鈥 American Comparative Literature Association Annual Conference, April 2013

鈥淲inter Soldiers: Trauma and Activism from Vietnam to Iraq,鈥 American Studies Association, November 2012

Organizer and Presenter, Roundtable on Documentary Work in the US, 1945-1989, American Studies Association, October 2011

鈥淪leeping In: Rest and Resistance at Dewey Canyon III,鈥 Post-45 Collective, University of Missouri, November 2009

Recent Ph.D. Supervisions

Andrew Connolly, 鈥淚 Used to Speak in Tongues: Spirituality and Pentecostal Deconversion Narratives鈥 (April 2015)

Robert Mousseau, 鈥淭herapeutic Reading: Self-Reflection and Social Awareness in Contemporary American Literature鈥 (September 2016)

Robert Hutton, 鈥淐omics and Literature: A Love Story鈥 (Co-supervised with Brian Johnson, September 2017)