Burger King and Transnational American Studies: Lessons from the 2013 Nordic Association for American Studies Conference

Authors

  • Abby Goode Rice University
  • AnaMaria Seglie Rice University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22439/asca.v47i2.5352

Abstract

This article explores the incongruities between transnational American studies as theorized and practiced. Inspired by our experience at the 2013 Nordic Association of American Studies (NAAS) conference, we discuss the challenges of practicing “transnational” American studies within specific nation- and regionbased communities. U.S. scholars tend to conceptualize “transnational” American Studies as an attempt to destabilize U.S. nation—a broadening of the geopolitical frames of reference to promote a variety of heuristics such as hemispheric, Atlantic, circum-Caribbean, borderlands, and transpacific. Scholars at the NAAS conference foregrounded emergent trends and lines of exchange that are sometimes elided in a transnational American studies conceived largely from the vantage point of the U.S. While many themes emerged at the NAAS conference, we examine how the focus on Scandinavian-American relations, Asia, and transnational families help us rethink the transnational turn in American Studies and the borders that bind its practice. In this context, we discuss the paradox of transnational American Studies – that, despite its aim to expand toward an all-encompassing “transnational” paradigm, it remains defined by our geopolitical positions. This paradox presents opportunities for theorizing the divide between American studies and its varying scholarly terrains, especially through international scholarly practice.

Author Biographies

Abby Goode, Rice University

Abby Goode is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of English and the Center for the Study of Women, Gender, and Sexuality at Rice University, USA, where she is writing a dissertation entitled Democratic <i>Demographics: A Literary Genealogy of American Sustainability</i>. Her article, “Gothic Fertility in Leonora Sansay’s Secret History” appears in the June 2015 issue of <i>Early American Literature</i>.

AnaMaria Seglie, Rice University

AnaMaria Seglie is a postdoctoral fellow at the Program for Written, Oral, and Visual Communication at Rice University, USA, where she teaches courses in writing and nineteenth-century American literature. She has published articles on U.S. transnationalism, and she is currently at work on a project that explores the religious underpinnings of U.S. imperialism in nineteenth-century American romance writing.

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Published

2015-09-01

How to Cite

Goode, A., & Seglie, A. (2015). Burger King and Transnational American Studies: Lessons from the 2013 Nordic Association for American Studies Conference. American Studies in Scandinavia, 47(2), 103–123. https://doi.org/10.22439/asca.v47i2.5352

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Articles