Joshua Bennett Wins MLA Award for his Latest Book

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鈥淏eing Property Once Myself鈥 reframes classic works by Black American writers.

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Black and white portrait of Joshua Bennett wearing a scarf and leaning against a slate wall
(Photo by Beowulf Sheehan)
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, a professor of English and Creative Writing, award-winning poet, and scholar of African American literature, has won the Modern Language Association鈥檚 William Sanders Scarborough Prize for Being Property Once Myself: Blackness and the End of Man, his first book of literary criticism.

The prize is awarded annually for an outstanding scholarly study of Black American literature or culture. The announcement comes just months after Bennett was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship and won a Whiting Award for poetry and nonfiction.

He was astonished to learn of the MLA prize, Bennett says. 鈥淭he legacy of people who have won this award, and the finalists for it, it鈥檚 truly an honor to be in their company.鈥

Recasting the African American Literary Imagination

Being Property Once Myself, which tracks animal figures in the writing of Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, Zora Neale Hurston, Jesmyn Ward, and Robert Hayden, is 鈥渂rilliant in its approach and gorgeous in its prose,鈥 the MLA writes.

The book uses conceptual frames from ecological criticism鈥攚hich studies the relationship between literature and the natural environment鈥攁nd animal studies to recast and reinterpret the African American literary imagination, the MLA writes. 鈥淲hat emerges from this approach is a creative, elegant, and compelling study of the intersections among ecology, the human animal, and the nonhuman animal as sites of thinking.鈥

Bennett says he hopes readers will come away with a sense that Black ecological consciousness has always been at the center of Black literature and Black cultural practice, something he began intuiting as a little boy, listening to his grandmother tell stories about her life.

鈥淥ur historical practice of reading those texts has been contaminated by the pernicious lie that whenever Black people and animals are in the same frame, it always has to be in service of a certain kind of dehumanization,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat I鈥檓 saying is that Black people historically have turned to animals as ways also of thinking about freedom and flight and kinship.鈥

鈥楢 New Origin Story鈥

The book grew out of Bennett鈥檚 dissertation at Princeton, and was shaped by a meeting with his favorite living author, Stanford University professor emeritus Sylvia Wynter.

Bennett and his friend Harvard professor Jarvis Givens were interviewing Wynter for the journal 鈥淪ouls,鈥 when she asked each of them about their work.

They talked about origin stories and the need to tell a different origin story of humanity, and also, perhaps, of Black studies, Bennett says. Wynter鈥檚 capacious perspective helped him reconceptualize what he was doing with his work on animals, that 鈥渋n some ways, I was trying to say that this was perhaps a new origin story for the way we think about Black literary study.鈥

Bennett described his meeting with Wynter as one of the great moments of his life.

鈥淚鈥檓 hard pressed to think of someone else who has had more of an impact on my thinking, aside from my teachers and family,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o, I鈥檓 thankful as always for her witness and her kindness and generosity.鈥

鈥業 Wanted It to Sing鈥

Bennett says he considers the book a product of the care and stewardship of his colleagues in the English Department and the Program in African and African-American Studies. 鈥淚t鈥檚 made all the difference to have not just colleagues, but friends, people who have supported me.鈥

Being Property Once Myself also carries echoes from Bennett鈥檚 childhood. As he wrote, Bennett hoped to evoke the atmosphere of Christmas gatherings at his grandmother鈥檚 house in South Bronx, where each year the children performed poetry, songs, or dances, one of the many ways his family encouraged and celebrated self-expression and social connection.

鈥淚 wanted the prose to even approach the beauty of those evenings,鈥 says Bennett, who dedicated the volume to his late grandmother, Charlotte Elizabeth Ballard. 鈥淚 wanted it to sing.鈥

Ballard, who he credits for his commitment to ecological criticism, taught him to 鈥渢hink of folktales and poems as instruments for understanding the world and who we were in it,鈥 he says, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great gift she gave to me.鈥

Now on his Guggenheim Fellowship year, Bennett is currently finishing a book of poetry, The Study of Human Life, which will be published in 2022.

 

Aimee Minbiole