Public Memory, Race, and Heritage Tourism of Early America, Vol. 2--extended deadline
Please note the extended deadline of September 1, 2025, for proposals
CFP: Public Memory, Race, and Heritage Tourism of Early America, Vol. 2
Edited by Cathy Rex (University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire: rexcj@uwec.edu)
and Shevaun Watson (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee: watsonse@uwm.edu)
We are soliciting scholarly essays (5,000-8,000 words) for inclusion in a follow-up volume to
our edited collection, Public Memory, Race, and Heritage Tourism of Early America, published
by Routledge as part of their New Directions in Tourism Analysis series in 2022. The original
collection has been favorably reviewed in journals such as Early American Literature, The
Quarterly Journal of Speech, and The Journal of Southern History; Routledge has subsequently
expressed a keen interest in a follow-up collection.
Building on the first volume, we are seeking essays which will explore the ways early American
sites, monuments, homes, museums, settlements, forts, etc. (from before about 1830) are
marketed to contemporary audiences as authentic historical or heritage tourist experiences while
often ignoring the complex racial dynamics that undergird their existence. This follow-up
collection seeks to once again bring scholars together from various disciplines to analyze sites of
historical and racial significance throughout the Americas (North and South) and the Caribbean
in order to examine and unpack the complexities and tensions of representing history and
memories in a popular, public way, especially when the very fact of a historic site is predicated
on legacies of imperialism, racism, genocide, and oppression. Within tourism scholarship, there
is a relative dearth of humanities perspectives and Early Americanist expertise, and we aim to
address these continuing gaps with this second volume. Therefore, we are interested in the work
of both academic and public-facing scholars in areas of early America, Public History, Rhetoric,
Geography, Heritage Studies, Museum Studies, Archives, etc.
We are especially interested in essays that consider the following:
•collaborative community development and engagement with heritage sites (particularly
with marginalized groups whose histories may have been misrepresented or sanitized)
•public-facing humanities projects focused on cultural preservation or heritage tourism
•digital storytelling or virtual experiences that offer alternative perspectives on a site's
history and/or are more accessible to a wider range of people
•performance-based or role-playing experiences that contextualize and interpret a
historical event or community milestone
•pedagogical approaches for teaching with and about heritage sites
This collection ultimately seeks to continue the conversation we began in the first volume on the
ways in which heritage sites from the early Americas revise, reify, or complicate conceptions of
identity, community engagement, education, and public memory within the tourism sphere.
Send 500-word abstracts and a brief biographical statement (100 words or less) to Cathy Rex,
rexcj@uwec.edu by the newly extended deadline of September 1, 2025. We will notify authors
of accepted proposals by early October 2025. Completed essays will be due January 5, 2026.