MURFREESBORO
— A Clemson
University professor will discuss the harrowing national conflict that pitted a
president against a powerful congressman when he lectures on "Spielberg’s
'Lincoln': A Story of Thaddeus Stevens" Monday, Oct. 21, at MTSU.
R. Barton
Palmer, who directs the film studies program at Clemson University and serves
as Calhoun Lemon Professor of Literature there, will speak at 6 p.m. in Room
S-102, the State Farm Lecture Hall, inside MTSU's Business and Aerospace
Building.
His talk
is free and open to the public; a campus
map with parking notes is available at http://tinyurl.com/MTSUParkingMap13-14.
Palmer
says the Oscar-winning 2012 historical epic, recounting President Abraham
Lincoln's fight to push the 13th Amendment through the U.S. House of
Representatives, turned out to have a surprise focus in Pennsylvania
congressman Stevens and his determination to abolish slavery and end discrimination
against African-Americans.
"The
presence of Lincoln, memorably incarnated by Daniel Day-Lewis, is a vital
component of this narrative, for his determination that the amendment be passed
before the cessation of hostilities and Union victory serves as its animating
force," Palmer writes.
"And
yet the film’s drama in large measure unfolds on Capitol Hill, where executive
will must be enacted through partisan wrangling and the examination of
conscience on the part of many. In that struggle, Thaddeus Stevens (Tommy Lee
Jones), chair of the Ways and Means Committee and most powerful member of the
abolitionist wing of the Republican caucus, emerges as the protagonist.
MTSU’s
College of Liberal Arts, the English Department Virginia Peck Trust Fund and
the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures sponsor Palmer’s lecture.
You can download a flier with more information about his lecture at http://www.mtsu.edu/liberalarts/upcoming_events.php.
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