Tom Zoellner, MALS 鈥12, Wins National Book Critics Circle Award

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The visiting professor was honored for his account of Jamaica鈥檚 slave rebellion.

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Tom Zoellner, MALS '12
鈥淚 hope this book highlights the under-appreciated heroism of Sam Sharpe and the approximately 70,000 people in Jamaica who took an enormous risk,鈥 says Visiting Professor Tom Zoellner, MALS 鈥12. (Photo courtesy of Tom Zoellner, MALS 鈥12) 
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, a visiting professor and 2012 graduate of the Masters of Liberal Studies Program (MALS), has won the National Book Critics Circle Award for the best nonfiction book of 2020. Island on Fire: The Revolt That Ended Slavery in the British Empire (Harvard University Press) chronicles the rebellion led by Samuel Sharpe, an enslaved Jamaican activist and Baptist deacon.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a tremendous honor, getting the award,鈥 says Zoellner. 鈥淚 hope this book highlights the underappreciated heroism of Sam Sharpe and the approximately 70,000 people in Jamaica who took an enormous risk. Thousands paid with their lives for liberty. These enslaved people have not been given enough credit. They are largely responsible for their own abolition.鈥

The 1831 rebellion, Zoellner says, came at a pivotal moment in British history, forcing Parliament to weigh the costs and benefits of using slave labor to harvest sugar cane, and to view the slave trade through both an economic and humanitarian lens.

鈥淚n fact, I originally envisioned this book as a broad-scale look at that condiment, and the rebellion came up in the course of looking at sugar and its consequences,鈥 he says. 鈥淪omething about it just kind of got under my skin. Anyone who really looks at this rebellion is overcome with the ingenuity of some of the most oppressed people on the planet, as well as the brutality of the British and the consequence of the events around the globe.鈥

By 1834, slavery was abolished in most British colonies. Mining primary sources, Zoellner shines a bright light on Sharpe, who, though proclaimed a national hero of Jamaica in 1975, is not as well known elsewhere as Zoellner believes he should be. He says the rebel leader, who was publicly executed in 1832, used methods of resistance that were later emulated by Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Black Lives Matter movement.

鈥淚f this book has even a tiny influence toward making us think about the Caribbean in a more complicated way, I鈥檒l consider it a success,鈥 he says.

Zoellner wrote about a third of the book on the fourth floor of 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 Baker-Berry Library while he was teaching a MALS course. Nearly a decade earlier, he says, when he was a graduate student, the liberal studies program spurred his literary ambitions.

鈥淢ALS changed my life. I don鈥檛 think this book would exist without MALS, in terms of what I learned in that program, reading history in a multidimensional way, and trying to understand the intent of the writings in the archives,鈥 he says. 鈥淢ALS gave me the guts to dream big.鈥

Zoellner studied with the program鈥檚 chair, , the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities.

鈥淭om came to MALS in 2011, after he had already published several books,鈥 Pease recalls. 鈥淗e took my cultural studies class, and that鈥檚 where I recognized his talent for turning what otherwise might be somewhat detached, theoretical perspectives into vital, and鈥攖hrough his prose style鈥攄eeply engaging articulations of an issue or perspective.鈥

In addition to Island on Fire, Zoellner has written seven nonfiction books, including National Road: Dispatches from a Changing America (Counterpoint Press, 2021); Train: Riding the Rails that Created the Modern World (Penguin, 2014); and The Heartless Stone: A Journey Through the Worlds of Diamonds, Deceit, and Desire (Picador, 2007).  A professor of English at Chapman University, in Orange, Calif., he鈥檚 at work on a new project about his native Arizona.

鈥淭he title is Rim to River, a series of 14 essays that attempt to capture the heart of the Grand Canyon state, in the tradition of Wallace Stegner鈥檚 Mormon Country and Larry McMurtry鈥檚 collection of essays about Texas, In a Narrow Grave,鈥 he says.

, director of MALS, says Zoellner鈥檚 journalism course, which he will teach virtually this summer, is 鈥渋mmensely popular鈥 among students, who value the inclusive learning environment he creates.

鈥淚n this time when former colonial empires are being pushed to acknowledge, if not account and atone for their previous behaviors, Tom鈥檚 book serves to shed light on one impactful moment of that history,鈥 says Ojurongbe. 鈥淭he recognition of this award will help to move this discussion from a purely historically academic endeavor to a public discourse that improves our understanding of the world we live in.鈥

Charlotte Albright