加州大学伯克利分校英文系导师教师师资介绍简介-Stephen M. Best

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Stephen M. Best

Professor; Director, Townsend Center for the Humanities
Wheeler Hall, room 407
Thursday, 1:00-3:00, send an email to schedule an appointment
sbest@berkeley.edu


Specialties
?19th-Century American
African American
Critical Theory
Film


Professional Statement
Stephen Best's scholarship encompasses a variety of fields and materials: American and African-American literature and culture, cinema and technology, rhetoric and the law, and critical theory.?His research pursuits in the fields of American and African American criticism have been rather closely aligned with a broader interrogation of recent literary critical practice.?To be specific, his interest in the critical nexus between slavery and historiography, in the varying scholarly and political preoccupations with establishing the authority of the slave past in black life, quadrates with an exploration of where the limits of historicism as a mode of literary study may lay, especially where that search manifests as an interest in alternatives to suspicious reading in the text-based disciplines.?To this end, Professor Best?has?edited a number of special issues of the journal Representations (on whose board he?sits) – “Redress” (with Saidiya Hartman), on theoretical and political projects to undo the slave past, “The Way We Read Now” (with Sharon Marcus), on the limits of symptomatic reading, and “Description Across Disciplines” (with Sharon Marcus and Heather Love), on disciplinary valuations of description as critical practice.?
Best is the author of two books:?The Fugitive's Properties: Law and the Poetics of Possession (University of Chicago, 2004), a study of property, poetics, and legal hermeneutics in nineteenth-century American literary and legal culture; and, most recently, None Like Us: Blackness, Belonging, Aesthetic Life?(Duke University Press, 2018).?
His work has been supported by the Mellon Foundation, the Hellman Foundation, the Humanities Research Institute (University of California), and the Ford Foundation. In 2015-2016, he?was the Mary Bundy Scott Professor at Williams College, and in spring 2020 he was the Whitney J. Oates Fellow in the Council of the Humanities at Princeton University.?

Books
None Like Us: Blackness, Belonging, Aesthetic Life
It passes for an unassailable truth that the slave past provides an explanatory prism for understanding the black political present. In?None Like Us?Stephen Best reappraises what he calls “melancholy historicism”—a kind of crime scene investigation i....(read more)
FIELDS:

African American
Critical Theory
Cultural Studies


The Fugitive's Properties: Law and the Poetics of Possession
In this study of literature and law before and since the Civil War, Stephen M. Best shows how American conceptions of slavery, property, and the idea of the fugitive were profoundly interconnected. The Fugitive's Properties uncovers a poetics of int....(read more)
FIELDS:

20th- and 21st-Century American
African American
19th-Century American



Selected Publications and Papers Delivered
"La Foi Postcritique, on Second Thought," PMLA, vol. 132, no. 2 (March 2017), 337-343.
"Building a Better Description," Representations 135 (Special Issue:?Description Across Disciplines), Eds. Sharon Marcus, Heather Love, and Stephen Best, Summer 2016, 1-21.
"Come and Gone,"?Small Axe?48 (November 2015), 186-204.?
"Surface Reading," Representations 108 (Special Issue: The Way We Read Now), Eds. Sharon Marcus and Stephen Best, Fall 2009, 1-21.
“Fugitive Justice,” Representations 92 (Special Issue: Redress), Eds. Stephen Best and Saidiya Hartman, Fall 2005, 1-15. “Best Special Issue for 2006” (first prize), awarded by the Council of Editors of Learned Journals.
The Fugitive's Properties: Law and the Poetics of Possession, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004.

English Department Classes
fall, 2022

100/2
The Seminar on Criticism: The African-American Essay
Literatures in English
Junior Seminars
African American Literature

fall, 2021

170/1
Literature and the Arts: The Writing on the Wall: African-American Literature and Visual Art
American Literature
African American Literature
Special Topics

200/1
Problems in the Study of Literature
Graduate Courses

spring, 2021

133T/1
Topics in African American Literature and Culture: The African American Essay
Literatures in English
American Literature
African American Literature

250/2
Research Seminars: Autotheory
Graduate Courses

fall, 2020

170/2
Literature and the Arts: The Writing on the Wall -- African-American Literature and Visual Art
American Literature
African American Literature
Special Topics

190/9
Research Seminar: James / Baldwin
American Literature
African American Literature
Novel
Research Seminars

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