Visiting Scholar to Explore Memory, Aesthetics and Displacement During Keohane Professorship at Duke and UNC

Brett Ashley Kaplan will serve as Keohane Distinguished Visiting Professor for 2023-2024

Image
Brett Ashley Kaplan

Kaplan, who is Professor and Conrad Humanities Scholar in the Department of Comparative and World Literature at Illinois, is the author of 鈥,鈥 鈥,鈥 鈥溾 and 鈥,鈥 as well as a novel, 鈥.鈥

In addition to engagement with students and faculty on both university campuses, Kaplan will give public lectures on at Duke and on and at UNC.

Kaplan publishes in Haaretz, The Conversation, Salon.com, As It Ought to Be Magazine, AJS Perspectives, Contemporary Literature, Edge Effects and The Jewish Review of Books. She has been interviewed on NPR, the AJS Podcast and The 21st.

Currently, Kaplan is working on an edited collection about contemporary Black-Jewish voices and writing a second novel.

Memory, Representation and the Power of Fiction

Kaplan will draw on her novel-in-progress, which imagines the recovery of Nazi-looted objects found in a Vietnamese refugee center in England, during a Nov. 8 at the Nasher Museum of Art.

The book considers the intersections of loss, displacement and trauma arising from the Holocaust and the Vietnamese refugee crisis. Four main characters struggle with inherited legacies of exile, failure, uprooting and mourning, while the plot involves a family lawsuit to retrieve a portrait by a famous Spanish painter of his slave.

Kaplan will explore how the field of critical memory studies can inform fiction, as well as the strengths and limitations of fiction in conveying multicultural borrowing and conflict.

About the Keohane Professorship

The at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and 老牛影视 was created in 2004 by James Moeser, who served as UNC鈥檚 chancellor at the time. It recognizes Keohane鈥檚 contributions during her term as Duke鈥檚 president and seeks to strengthen the collaboration she and Moeser built between the two institutions.

The professorship was funded by the late Josie and Julian Robertson (parents of Spencer Robertson, Duke 鈥98, and Alex Robertson, UNC 鈥01) and the William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust. Last year鈥檚 recipient was Pawan Dhingra, professor of U.S. immigration studies at Amherst College.