American Studies students receive national recognition for outstanding essays

Two students on the University of Manchester’s American Studies programme have claimed the top awards in the British Association for American Studies national essay writing competition.

Final-year History and American Studies student Anya Carr was named winner of the British Association for American Studies undergraduate essay award, and Xavi Goodall, a third-year student currently studying at Rutgers University in New Jersey, received an honourable mention in the same competition. Both students were honoured as part of the BAAS award ceremony, which took place in June this year.

Anya’s essay offered a sparkling account of the African American actor, singer, and activist Paul Robeson’s 1949 visit to Manchester. The project used Robeson’s brief trip to lens the local and global agendas that came together in this moment, as civil rights, decolonization, and the Cold War intermingled, and as various groups competed around Moss Side, Chorlton-on-Medlock, and Belle Vue to win Robeson’s support. The project argued that we should think of the city of Manchester as akin to ’the global activist hubs of London, Paris, and Harlem’ that other scholars have written about, and it made an innovative attempt to ’ground the global in the local, and to offer a new perspective on the complex interplay between the Red, white, and Black Atlantics.’ A short blog post that Anya wrote describing the research can be read here.

The BAAS judges "were incredibly impressed by this well-argued essay" which "situated Robeson within intersecting contexts" and which "highlighted the complexities of post-war organising and solidarity." Anya’s work drew extensively on the University’s US newspaper holdings, as well as materials at the Ahmed Iqbal Ullah RACE Centre , the People’s History Museum archive, and the Working Class Movement Library and Archive, in Salford.

Xavi Goodall’s essay looked at references to American writer Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1851-52) in The Century Magazine, America’s most popular periodical in the late nineteenth century. Xavi uncovered a handful of references to Stowe’s novel between the 1880s and late 1890s, and used these to show that, while Stowe’s novel exerted a lasting influence on American opinions about slavery, The Century Magazine seldom discussed the literary merits of Stowe’s work or offered a neutral account of her politics. As Xavi argued, ’Uncle Tom’s Cabin’s appearances in The Century were defined more by the magazine’s context than the book’s contents.’ The judges described the piece as "a beautifully written and accomplished essay," and thought Xavi’s "careful and detailed analysis of The Century magazine’s complex engagement with Stowe was very strong."

Both students’ essays were developed and written within second-year American Studies modules. Xavi’s work on Stowe began in Dr. Gordon Fraser’s AMER22662 Uncle Tom’s Cabin as Global Media Event , while Anya’s study on Robeson was written in Dr. Andrew Fearnley’s AMER20022 US History Long Essay module. Each project made use of the printed and electronic resources held by the University, and the physical archives available around the city of Manchester.