{"title":"个人和专业:对埃丝特·克拉克·赖特的生活和遗产的致敬","authors":"Bonnie Huskins","doi":"10.1353/ACA.2018.0021","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"IN 2016 THE 21ST ATLANTIC CANADA STUDIES CONFERENCE OPENED with a roundtable profiling the life and legacy of historian Esther Clark Wright. Cosponsored by the Loyalist Research Network (LRN) and the Planters Studies Centre, the panel featured Barry Moody, a professor emeritus at Acadia University; Patricia L. Townsend, an archivist at the Esther Clark Wright Archives at Acadia University; and Keith Grant, a doctoral student in history at the University of New Brunswick (now an assistant professor of history at Crandall University). As the main coordinator of the LRN, it was my pleasure to chair this session. The panelists have graciously consented to have their comments reproduced here, with the addition of a submission by Gail G. Campbell, a professor emerita of history at the University of New Brunswick, who contributed to a vibrant discussion period after the presentations. The original idea for this panel must be attributed to LRN member David Bell, who reminded us that 2015 was the 60th anniversary of the publication of Esther Clark Wright’s The Loyalists of New Brunswick and who suggested that something should be done to mark the occasion.1 We should also note that 2015 marked the 120th anniversary of Esther Clark Wright’s birth and the 25th anniversary of her passing. The year of the conference (2016) was also the centenary of her graduation from Acadia University. The authors’ submissions reveal different aspects of Esther Clark Wright’s life and legacy. Barry Moody shares his various encounters with Wright over the years – a “tireless historian” as well as a “flesh and blood person.” In 1990, upon Wright’s death, Moody and Patricia L. Townsend collected her papers and arranged for their donation to the archives at Acadia University. Townsend comments here on Wright’s letters, manuscripts, and research notes – specifically, the many shoeboxes that were full of little slips of paper. Keith Grant, finishing his doctoral dissertation at the time of the conference, reflects on the ongoing relevance of Esther Clark Wright’s work to a graduate student studying religious communities in Planter and Loyalist Nova Scotia. And Gail G. Campbell completes this forum by reflecting on the significance of Esther Clark Wright’s scholarship, concluding that her work was “too far ahead of the curve to be properly appreciated in her own day. But it ought to be appreciated in ours.” The subject of our panel wrote 15 books and numerous articles over the course of her life, her last book appearing only a short time before her death.2 Many of these scholarly contributions are discussed below. 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Townsend, an archivist at the Esther Clark Wright Archives at Acadia University; and Keith Grant, a doctoral student in history at the University of New Brunswick (now an assistant professor of history at Crandall University). As the main coordinator of the LRN, it was my pleasure to chair this session. The panelists have graciously consented to have their comments reproduced here, with the addition of a submission by Gail G. Campbell, a professor emerita of history at the University of New Brunswick, who contributed to a vibrant discussion period after the presentations. The original idea for this panel must be attributed to LRN member David Bell, who reminded us that 2015 was the 60th anniversary of the publication of Esther Clark Wright’s The Loyalists of New Brunswick and who suggested that something should be done to mark the occasion.1 We should also note that 2015 marked the 120th anniversary of Esther Clark Wright’s birth and the 25th anniversary of her passing. The year of the conference (2016) was also the centenary of her graduation from Acadia University. The authors’ submissions reveal different aspects of Esther Clark Wright’s life and legacy. Barry Moody shares his various encounters with Wright over the years – a “tireless historian” as well as a “flesh and blood person.” In 1990, upon Wright’s death, Moody and Patricia L. Townsend collected her papers and arranged for their donation to the archives at Acadia University. Townsend comments here on Wright’s letters, manuscripts, and research notes – specifically, the many shoeboxes that were full of little slips of paper. Keith Grant, finishing his doctoral dissertation at the time of the conference, reflects on the ongoing relevance of Esther Clark Wright’s work to a graduate student studying religious communities in Planter and Loyalist Nova Scotia. And Gail G. Campbell completes this forum by reflecting on the significance of Esther Clark Wright’s scholarship, concluding that her work was “too far ahead of the curve to be properly appreciated in her own day. But it ought to be appreciated in ours.” The subject of our panel wrote 15 books and numerous articles over the course of her life, her last book appearing only a short time before her death.2 Many of these scholarly contributions are discussed below. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
2016年,第21届大西洋加拿大研究会议在圆桌会议上开幕,介绍了历史学家埃丝特·克拉克·赖特的生活和遗产。该小组由保皇派研究网络(LRN)和种植者研究中心共同主办,由阿卡迪亚大学名誉教授巴里·穆迪(Barry Moody)主持;帕特里夏·l·汤森是阿卡迪亚大学埃斯特·克拉克·赖特档案馆的档案保管员;Keith Grant,新不伦瑞克大学历史学博士生(现为克兰德尔大学历史学助理教授)。作为LRN的主要协调人,我很高兴主持这次会议。小组成员已经慷慨地同意在这里复制他们的评论,并添加了新不伦瑞克大学历史荣誉退休教授盖尔·g·坎贝尔(Gail G. Campbell)的提交,他在演讲后的讨论期间做出了积极的贡献。这个小组的最初想法必须归功于LRN成员David Bell,他提醒我们2015年是Esther Clark Wright的《新不伦瑞克省的忠诚者》出版60周年,他建议应该做些什么来纪念这个日子我们还应该注意到,2015年是埃丝特·克拉克·赖特诞辰120周年,也是她逝世25周年。2016年,也是她从阿卡迪亚大学毕业100周年。作者提交的材料揭示了埃丝特·克拉克·赖特生活和遗产的不同方面。巴里·穆迪(Barry Moody)分享了他多年来与赖特(Wright)的各种接触——他是一位“不知疲倦的历史学家”,也是一位“有血有肉的人”。1990年,赖特去世后,穆迪和帕特里夏·l·汤森收集了她的论文,并安排将其捐赠给阿卡迪亚大学的档案馆。汤森德在这里评论了赖特的信件、手稿和研究笔记——特别是那些装满小纸条的鞋盒。Keith Grant在会议期间完成了他的博士论文,反映了Esther Clark Wright的工作与一名研究Planter和Loyalist新斯科舍省宗教社区的研究生的持续相关性。盖尔·g·坎贝尔(Gail G. Campbell)通过反思埃斯特·克拉克·赖特(Esther Clark Wright)学术研究的重要性来结束这次论坛,她得出结论说,她的工作“太超前了,在她那个时代无法得到适当的欣赏”。但在我们的生活中,这一点应该得到赞赏。”我们小组的主题在她的一生中写了15本书和许多文章,她的最后一本书是在她去世前不久才出版的下面将讨论其中的许多学术贡献。从这项研究中可以清楚地看出,埃丝特·克拉克·赖特的工作仍然有意义,并继续被人们所使用
The Personal and the Professional: A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Esther Clark Wright
IN 2016 THE 21ST ATLANTIC CANADA STUDIES CONFERENCE OPENED with a roundtable profiling the life and legacy of historian Esther Clark Wright. Cosponsored by the Loyalist Research Network (LRN) and the Planters Studies Centre, the panel featured Barry Moody, a professor emeritus at Acadia University; Patricia L. Townsend, an archivist at the Esther Clark Wright Archives at Acadia University; and Keith Grant, a doctoral student in history at the University of New Brunswick (now an assistant professor of history at Crandall University). As the main coordinator of the LRN, it was my pleasure to chair this session. The panelists have graciously consented to have their comments reproduced here, with the addition of a submission by Gail G. Campbell, a professor emerita of history at the University of New Brunswick, who contributed to a vibrant discussion period after the presentations. The original idea for this panel must be attributed to LRN member David Bell, who reminded us that 2015 was the 60th anniversary of the publication of Esther Clark Wright’s The Loyalists of New Brunswick and who suggested that something should be done to mark the occasion.1 We should also note that 2015 marked the 120th anniversary of Esther Clark Wright’s birth and the 25th anniversary of her passing. The year of the conference (2016) was also the centenary of her graduation from Acadia University. The authors’ submissions reveal different aspects of Esther Clark Wright’s life and legacy. Barry Moody shares his various encounters with Wright over the years – a “tireless historian” as well as a “flesh and blood person.” In 1990, upon Wright’s death, Moody and Patricia L. Townsend collected her papers and arranged for their donation to the archives at Acadia University. Townsend comments here on Wright’s letters, manuscripts, and research notes – specifically, the many shoeboxes that were full of little slips of paper. Keith Grant, finishing his doctoral dissertation at the time of the conference, reflects on the ongoing relevance of Esther Clark Wright’s work to a graduate student studying religious communities in Planter and Loyalist Nova Scotia. And Gail G. Campbell completes this forum by reflecting on the significance of Esther Clark Wright’s scholarship, concluding that her work was “too far ahead of the curve to be properly appreciated in her own day. But it ought to be appreciated in ours.” The subject of our panel wrote 15 books and numerous articles over the course of her life, her last book appearing only a short time before her death.2 Many of these scholarly contributions are discussed below. What is clear from this examination is that Esther Clark Wright’s work is still relevant and continues to be used by