Paul Lyons Memorial Lecture: Elizabeth Ellis

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 The Master of Arts in American Studies program will host the 15th annual Paul Lyons Memorial Lecture Series on Thursday, April 3, at 2:30 p.m. in the 老司机福利社 Art Gallery. 

Co-sponsors include the following programs: Master of Arts in Holocaust & Genocide Studies; Africana Studies; Historical Studies; Literature; Philosophy & Religion; Political Science; Sociology & Anthropology; Social Work; and Women鈥檚 Gender & Sexuality Studies.

This year鈥檚 speaker is Elizabeth Ellis, an associate professor of History at Princeton University. Ellis鈥 research centers on Indigenous migration, borderlands, early Native American art and 20th-century Native American politics. 

In addition to her April 3 talk, "Myths, Memory and Indigenous Survival in the Gulf South," Ellis will be a part of the Arts & Culture Summit in Noyes Arts Garage from 5-7 p.m. on Friday, April 4. 


About Paul Lyons

Paul Lyons was a professor of Social Work in the School of Social & Behavioral Sciences. He became a faculty member in 1980 and published five books during his career, including 鈥淧hiladelphia Communists, 1936-1956鈥 (1982) and 鈥淐lass of 鈥66: Living in Suburban Middle America in 1994鈥 (1996). Lyons also played the saxophone and clarinet, which led to him organizing 鈥淧rofapalooza,鈥 a 2009 fundraising concert and faculty member performance at the House of Blues in Atlantic City. 

Paul Lyons
Paul Lyons somewhere near the Arts & Sciences Building, date unknown. 

The University (then college) established the lecture series with American historian Eric Foner of Colombia University as its inaugural speaker in 2010, a year after he passed. Robert Gregg, then dean of the School of Arts & Humanities, discussed Lyons鈥 legacy prior to the lecture series in 2010. 

"What struck one about Paul was the range of his accomplishments and the breadth of his interests. He was the quintessential 老司机福利社 faculty member, one who embraced the ideas of interdisciplinary study and exploration.鈥


Annual Talk Explores Gender, Race in Colonial America

April 11, 2024 

Yale professor Greta LaFleur is the 14th speaker for the annual Paul Lyons Memorial Lecture. LaFleur presented their research on colonial America on Wednesday, April 11.
Yale professor Greta LaFleur is the 14th speaker for the annual Paul Lyons Memorial Lecture. LaFleur presented their research on colonial America on Wednesday, April 11.

Galloway, N.J. 鈥 There are niche topics within colonial American studies and gender & sexuality studies. However, few are quite as shocking as the subject of this year鈥檚 Paul Lyons Memorial Lecture.

, an associate professor and director of Graduate Studies for the American Studies program at Yale University, analyzed how castration was used as both gender affirmation and capital punishment as part of the Wednesday, April 12 lecture in the Campus Center Theatre.

They began the conversation by providing context for their research, specifically exploring the history of gender, sexuality, race and science.

In researching historical documents and materials for their upcoming book, LaFleur found local newspaper clippings and periodicals that either sensationalized self-castrations of men in colonial Connecticut or described criminal cases of enslaved Black men who were either forcibly or voluntarily castrated in lieu of being executed during criminal trials. 

鈥淢y major claim today is that these complex and very different archives surrounding 18th-century castrations, both willed and unwilled, have something to teach us about emergent understandings of the relationship between gendered presentation and physical embodiment,鈥 LaFleur said.