Hoyas in the Humanities: Bringing Research to Life in the Archives and on the Stage
桔子视频 & Sciences
November 8, 2024
Last month, the 桔子视频 & Sciences celebrated the opening of a dedicated space for the Georgetown Humanities Initiative.聽
By housing the initiative in historic Old North 鈥 the oldest academic building on the Hilltop 鈥 the university is symbolically and formally recommitting to, and celebrating, the humanities. Since the university鈥檚 founding in 1789, the humanities have been central to a Georgetown education.
Today, they offer students an entry point into interdisciplinary research that pushes the boundaries of knowledge and facilitates journeys of personal growth.
鈥淭he humanities will broaden a student鈥檚 perspective of the world around us through a deeper understanding of the human condition and cultures,鈥 said Toni Boucher, (P鈥98, 鈥00, 鈥04), one of the initiative鈥檚 founding donors. 鈥淭he skills developed through the humanities include communication, writing, evaluation of ideas, problem-solving and critical thinking skills, which are essential in any profession.鈥
Getting Into the Gilded Age
Davis Fellow Melinda Reed (C鈥25) spent the summer bringing the humanities into her personal passion project, a novel set in the Gilded Age.
Melinda Reed at Marble House in Newport, Rhode Island.
鈥淚 wanted to turn a novel I鈥檇 started as a teenager into a historically accurate, textured work that I could send to literary agencies,鈥 said Reed, a justice and peace studies major and creative writing minor. 鈥淚n service of that specific personal goal, my alien-in-the-archives mentality worked鈥攊t allowed me to be curious and to approach my research with the mind of an artist as well as a historian.”
Reed began working on the book when she was 16 during a summer writing camp at Georgetown.
鈥淲e went to the National Gallery of Art and were supposed to write something based on a painting,鈥 said Reed. 鈥淪o, I picked a painting, 鈥淪tudy of Lilia鈥 by Carolus-Duran, and started writing what would become my first novel that I finished in quarantine. Fast forward five years and I started building an academic project around my creative writing, realizing that there were a lot of gaps in that novel because originally I was writing it for fun and not for historical accuracy.鈥
The book begins the same year Carolus-Duran painted his piece: 1887. A bildungsroman, it follows 19-year-old Lilia Daley from her sheltered rural life through an unplanned pregnancy and a clash of cultures as she begins working as a maid for a wealthy family on the New England coast.
Reed cites several faculty and staff members at Georgetown as being instrumental to the completion of the project, including creative writing professor and historian , who helped point her in the right direction when she began doing research. Outside of class, Reed worked as a student employee at the Center for , where the staff were able to help her reframe her creative project as a piece of academic research.
Reed began her summer in Rhode Island, where she conducted formal research and informal exploration of one of the settings in her work.
鈥淚鈥檇 visited Newport when I was a kid and I remembered these mansions that are typically associated with the Gilded Age and the incredible amount of wealth that certain families had to have these summer homes on the coast,鈥 said Reed. 鈥淚 was there looking at the current experience and talking to anybody who would talk to me鈥揳ll of the tour guides were lovely and would talk about the period and help me get a sense of the physical space that the story was set in.鈥
Once Reed was back home in New Jersey, she began commuting into New York City to do archival research. There, she looked through journals and letters from the Gilded Age to get a firsthand look at how her characters should speak, act, and think.
鈥淚 got so invested in the stories of the people that I was reading about鈥搑eading very personal documents that they probably never intended for anyone else to look at,鈥 said Reed. 鈥淚 was very aware of that kind of privilege and that distant violation of privacy鈥搕o be able to read these documents and meet people who had lived so long ago and had all these emotions and feelings that they put on the page. I honestly felt honored to get a glimpse into their lives.鈥
鈥淎fter doing the research, I realized how much work the book needs in order to make it something I鈥檓 willing to send out. Now, I have a clearer sense of what I want the book to look like.
鈥淩esearch, broadly defined, is the process of discovery,鈥 said Reed. 鈥淏ut in our attempt to define it more specifically, we鈥檝e narrowed our understanding of what research can be, creating laws and a locked gate professing that only the qualified are allowed to enter and discover for themselves.鈥
Reconstructing Paradise in the Humanities
Inspiration struck Alex Wang (C鈥25) during an introductory English literature course when she first read John Milton鈥檚 Paradise Lost.
Alex Wang, far right, with the student directing staff team of The Great Gatsby, produced by Mask and Bauble.
鈥淎ll the texts we were reading were canonized鈥攖hat鈥檚 why they鈥檙e in a survey course,鈥 said Wang. 鈥淚 read Paradise Lost and it was such a long, dense, and incredibly beautiful text. It was so good and so amazing, but in many ways it didn鈥檛 provide a foundational story that was relatable to me, personally, and to the community that I identify with.鈥
Wang, who also received a Davis Fellowship to pursue her humanities research over the summer, scripted a one-act theatrical adaptation of Paradise Lost. At the end of the summer, she marked the completion of her script with a reading staged and attended by her close friends.
鈥淚 sought to create a world, a paradise, that I wish to live in,鈥 said Wang. 鈥淓ven with minimal tech, I attempted to envision a coherent space. Having been a director and designer, I often see a world on stage more vividly than I can on paper鈥攁nd that鈥檚 where the audience comes in.鈥
Wang is a double major in English and political economy with a minor in theater and performance studies.
鈥淧aradise Lost can establish aesthetics often aligning with mainstream productions, I sought to create a world, a paradise, that I wish to live in. Even with minimal tech, I attempted to envision a coherent space. Having been a director and designer, I often see a world on stage more vividly than I can on paper鈥攁nd that鈥檚 where the audience comes in.
鈥淯niversal might not be the right word, but I believe that the script reflects a queer experience that is not just Chinese or only related to one religion,鈥 said Wang. 鈥淚 hope this work is the first step toward creating more intersectional and cross-cultural projects.”
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