William Nash
Professor of American Studies and English
 
          - Office
- Axinn Center 250
- Tel
- (802) 443-5337
- nash@middlebury.edu
- Office Hours
- Fall 2025: Tuesday 1:30-3:00, Thursday 10:30-12:00, and by appointment
William Nash is Professor of American Studies and English and American Literatures. He received his B.A. from Centre College of Kentucky and his M. A. and Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and has taught at Middlebury since 1995. The recipient of three NEH grants and author of Charles Johnson’s Fiction and co-editor of Charles Johnson: The Novelist as Philosopher, he has also published scholarly articles and reviews in anthologies and journals such as African American Review and Callaloo. His current research focuses on historical and contemporary representations of abolitionism and enslavement. He teaches courses on Black literature, enslavement and abolitionism, and contemporary Black culture.
Courses Taught
      
        
          AMST 0239
                                Upcoming
                  
        Cultural Work Country Music
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
The Cultural Work of Country Music
 “I like all kinds of music...except country.” Arguably, aversion to American country music often tracks with class- and race-based assumptions about both makers and consumers of this genre. In this course we will challenge those views while studying the history of the form. Balancing our consideration of the big picture with case studies of performers like Hank Williams, Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, and The Chicks, we will explore what types of music the “country” tag comprises; some of the major themes and motifs associated with the form; the Black and White roots of country music; and the politicization of the music and its performers throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Source materials for the course will include Bill Malone’s Country Music, USA; Ken Burn’s Country Music documentary; Creating Country Music: Fabricating Authenticity, and A Good-Natured Riot: The Birth of the Grand Ole Opry.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0252
                            
        African American Literature
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
African American Literature
 This course surveys developments in African American fiction, drama, poetry, and essays during the 20th century. Reading texts in their social, historical, and cultural contexts—and often in conjunction with other African American art forms like music and visual art—we will explore the evolution and deployment of various visions of black being and black artistry, from the Harlem Renaissance through social realism and the Black Arts Movement, to the contemporary post-soul aesthetic. Authors may include Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Gwendolyn Brooks, Ralph Ellison, Lorraine Hansberry, Amiri Baraka, Ishmael Reed, Toni Morrison, Charles Johnson, and Octavia Butler. This course may also be counted as a general elective or REC elective for the ENAM major. 3 hrs lect./disc. (Diversity)
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0257
                      Current
                            
        Music and Social Power
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Music and Social Power in American Culture
 Although many people associate the idea of “protest songs” primarily with the countercultural upheaval of the 1960s, popular music’s connection to cultural politics is much more complicated. In this course we will explore the relationship between music and social power in the United States from the antebellum period to the present. Using a combination of historical and ethnomusicological analysis, we will consider how and why music has been used for social influence in various historical moments. Topics may include 19th century campaign songs; music and abolitionism; folk ballads as a mechanism for social control; the political uses of country music; the protest songs and freedom songs of the 1960s; rock ‘n’ roll as social protest; and the cultural work of hip-hop.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0259
                            
        Re-Presenting Slavery
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Re-Presenting Slavery
 In this course we will examine 20th century American portrayals of chattel slavery through creative works and situate them in their historical contexts. Working primarily with fiction (Oxherding Tale, Kindred, The Underground Railroad), film (Mandingo, Django Unchained, Twelve Years a Slave), television (Roots, Africans in America, Underground), and visual art (works by Jacob Lawrence, Romare Bearden, and Kara Walker), we will evaluate how those various representations of the “Peculiar Institution” have changed, and/or have been changed, by the cultural moments in which they appeared. 3 hrs lect.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0279
                            
        The Guitar in American Culture
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
The Guitar in American Culture
 Although it has European and African antecedents, modern acoustic and electric guitars are American inventions. From the genteel parlor guitars of the 19th century elite to the electric weaponry of today’s rock stars, the guitar is an essential artifact of American material culture. Drawing on histories, cultural critiques, interviews, and sound and video recordings, we will study both the evolution of the instrument and the builders and players who have helped define its role. Examining artifacts and talking with working guitar builders will illuminate the craft of guitar making. The culmination of the course will be a student-curated exhibition.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0327
                                Upcoming
                  
        Imagining Rural America
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Imagining Rural America
 Although many Americans equate “rural” with whiteness, political conservatism, and poverty, the realities and representations of rural life have always been complicated those notions. Using methodologies from geography, cultural history, folklore, and literary criticism, and privileging lenses of race, class, and gender, we will explore these complexities by analyzing novels, paintings, photographs, moving images, and music against the histories of Appalachia, the Rust Belt, the Dust Bowl, and New England. Texts may include Richard Wright’s Twelve Million Black Voices, The Grapes of Wrath (novel and film), paintings of Thomas Hart Benton and Edward Hopper, Winter’s Bone, O Brother Where Art Thou?/, and the music of John Prine and Steve Earle.
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0358
                            
        Reading Slavery and Abolition
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Reading, Slavery, and Abolition
 In this course we will study both black and white writers' psychological responses to, and their verbal onslaughts on, the "peculiar institution" of chattel slavery. We will work chronologically and across genres to understand how and by whom the written word was deployed in pursuit of physical and mental freedom and racial and socioeconomic justice. As the course progresses, we will deepen our study of historical context drawing on the substantial resources of Middlebury's special collections, students will have the opportunity to engage in archival work if they wish. Authors will include Emerson, Douglass, Jacobs, Thoreau, Stowe, Walker, and Garrison. This course may also be counted as a general elective or REC elective for the ENAM major 3 hrs. sem. (Diversity)
Terms Taught
Requirements
      
        
          AMST 0500
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Independent Study
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Independent Study
 Select project advisor prior to registration.
Terms Taught
      
        
          AMST 0701
                      Current
                            
        Senior Work I
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Work
 (Approval required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          AMST 0710
                                Upcoming
                  
        Honors Thesis
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Honors Thesis
 For students who have completed AMST 0705, and qualify to write two-credit interdisciplinary honors thesis. on some aspect of American culture. The thesis may be completed on a fall/winter schedule or a fall/spring schedule. (Select a thesis advisor prior to registration)
Terms Taught
      
        
          BLST 0700
                      Current
                            
        Senior Work
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Work
 (Approval Required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          BLST 0710
                            
        Senior Thesis Work
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Thesis Work
 (Approval Required)
Terms Taught
      
        
          CRWR 0560
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Special Project: Writing
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Special Project: Creative Writing
 Approval Required.
Terms Taught
      
        
          CRWR 0701
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Senior Thesis:Creative Writing
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Thesis: Creative Writing
 Discussions, workshops, tutorials for those undertaking one-term projects in the writing of fiction, poetry, or creative nonfiction.
Terms Taught
      
        
          ENAM 0500
                            
        Special Project: Lit
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Special Project: Literature
 Approval Required.
Terms Taught
      
        
          ENAM 0700
                            
        Senior Thesis:Critical Writing
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Thesis: Critical Writing
 Individual guidance and seminar (discussions, workshops, tutorials) for those undertaking one-term projects in literary criticism or analysis. All critical thesis writers also take the Senior Thesis Workshop (ENAM 700Z) in either Fall or Spring Term.
Terms Taught
      
        
          ENGL 0500
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Special Project: Lit
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Special Project: Literature
 Approval Required. (Formerly ENAM 0500)
Terms Taught
      
        
          ENGL 0700
                      Current
                                Upcoming
                  
        Senior Thesis:Critical Writing
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Senior Thesis: Critical Writing
 Individual guidance and seminar (discussions, workshops, tutorials) for those undertaking one-term projects in literary criticism or analysis.
Terms Taught
      
        
          FYSE 1054
                      Current
                            
        Understanding Johnny Cash
      
      
    
  
  Course Description
Understanding Johnny Cash
 From his first appearances as a performing artist to his present lionization, Johnny Cash has always had a tremendous impact on American culture. While his significance has been persistent, its his nature has rarely, if ever, been consistent. Creatively, spiritually, politically, and personally, Cash lived a life marked by contradictions—making him a figure that fans and scholars alike have struggled to understand. This course will enter into that process, working to develop a rounded, comprehensive assessment of the man and his music by setting his life, his work, and creative and critical responses to him in their historical contexts.
Terms Taught
Requirements