In These Times

February 2, 2017 By: Debra Rae Cohen

In These Times is a space for our community to explore issues of social justice, teaching, and research in uncertain times.

June 6, 2025 By: Harrington Weihl

In the weeks leading up to the 2024 Paris Olympics, coverage was dominated by a number of controversies stemming from the city’s efforts to stage the games: threats of strike from public and private sectors and an attack on rail lines grabbed headlines. But these preliminary and somewhat routine crises were eclipsed by furor over the opening ceremony, which included a runway show featuring drag performers and others staged in the style of a feast.

May 8, 2024 By: David R. Castillo

The deterioration of the information environment in our age of inflationary media has precipitated a crisis of reality: any sort of baseline for what we take to be “facts” no longer exists. Evidence-based information is routinely drowned in a media market that rewards the loudest and most strident voices at the expense of truth and the common good. The powerful AIs employed by social media giants like Facebook (now Meta), Twitter (now X), YouTube, and TikTok have been trained to generate the...

December 14, 2023 By: Rebecca Colesworthy

I have heard proclamations of feminism’s death many times over the years. Nevertheless, it came as a genuine surprise when I encountered it this past July, in an essay on “Sidecar,” the New Left Review blog, by NLR editor Caitlín Doherty. “A decade ago,” Doherty writes of feminism, “a generation of women—now in our late twenties and early thirties—claimed it as a primary political identity, but no longer.” Since then, Doherty argues, feminism has become not a politics so much as a style thanks...

September 13, 2023 By: Charles Andrews

Recently, while sifting through a long and detailed academic book contract, I found a list of items the publisher required me to exclude. A wonderful bullet point mandated that there be “no recipes or formulae or instructions” that “if followed accurately” would be “injurious to the user.” [1] I have enjoyed hearing friends’ reactions to this mandate, several of whom have asked: but, seriously, what is this referring to? Since contracts, much like syllabi, always have ground-rules based on...

June 29, 2023 By: Aimee Armande Wilson

We're all familiar with this scenario: a scholar spends years of her life dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge on a relatively narrow topic, and the reward for this dogged pursuit is the esteem of colleagues and mentions in specialist publications. Then, an event occurs that overlaps with the scholar’s area of expertise. This scholar’s topic now dominates the news cycle. Many would view this as cause for celebration, a chance to share their research with a broader audience. Our hypothetical...

February 16, 2023 By: Lesley Wheeler

I’m sometimes told by people who work outside of universities that being a teacher-writer-editor in an English Department sounds great, and occasionally it is. Yet lately everything “great” about academia sounds ominous: the Great Resignation, The Great Faculty Disengagement, The Great Pause after the Great Pivot. Resignation and disengagement are paradoxical side effects of the profession’s dependence on enthusiasm—employees so dedicated and diligent that they volunteer for unpaid labor. Women...

May 4, 2022 By: Gabriel Hankins

How should modernists think about the current invasion of Ukraine, and the underlying crisis of liberal order, if at all, and what does that have to do with the crisis in historical thinking and legitimation in literary studies more generally? My initial claim in the following is that what we already teach and write, in this centenary of the modernist Wunderjahr 1922, has everything to do with the sudden re-entry of geopolitics into view in 2022. The modernist masterpieces of 1919–1922 were formed and contested one hundred years ago in the matrix of a crisis of liberal order, a crisis that has now returned with only slightly different names, faces, and justifications. That we cannot quite recall this is not only a gap in our understanding of modernist geopolitics, but also a more fundamental failure of historicist reason and legitimation. If we are in fact living through the repetition of certain cyclical patterns of history, ideology, and liberal-imperial order that modernists themselves diagnosed, do we still have the commitment to historicist understanding required to read those problems accurately?

January 6, 2022 By: Laura Hartmann-Villalta

As a scholar of modernism and the Spanish Civil War, I have long been engaged with others’ ideas about engagement—both modernists and scholars of modernism—questioning the intersection of politics and art. As a scholar at the margins of the academy, I have sought to make sense of where my own work might fit, both into the world of scholarship and the wider world in which scholarship takes shape. Now, in my new position as Director of the Engaged and Public Humanities Master’s at Georgetown...

May 26, 2021 By: Samuel Cohen

I teach American literature in the public university system of Missouri, the state whose admission to the union as a slave state caused a national crisis, the state where Dred Scott was judged to have “ no rights the white man is bound to respect,” the state where Michael Brown’s murder turned Black Lives Matter from a hashtag into a movement. My state boasts that it is the birthplace of Rush Limbaugh, who did for talk radio what Rupert Murdoch did for cable news, as well as the place that...

April 22, 2021 By: Alice Kelly

In a striking moment in Joe Biden’s Inaugural Address in January 2021, the new head of state asked the nation to join him “in a moment of silent prayer to remember all those we lost this past year to the pandemic.” This was, he told the millions watching worldwide, his “first act as President.” It was a moment unprecedented in Inaugural Addresses. Biden, in both personally gracious and canny political terms, recognized the need for a moment of collective mourning and remembrance, a small act of commemoration as a necessary part of moving forward as a nation.

March 3, 2021 By: Jennie Lightweis-Goff

Is there any critical concept so abused in our political culture as “emotional labor,” a term seemingly used—like mansplain— to settle scores, to end conversation? Even now, I revise myself. Yes, “wave” language in feminism is more abused, and used to banish the radical histories that produced critique within feminism. Yes, intersectionality is conceptually abused, as a defense or elision of the conservative bona fides of women politicians from Hillary Clinton to Kamala Harris. This wandering away from context seems part of the whole: the rendering of feminism, and feminist language, as an affective and aesthetic position. A personal brand, even.

January 14, 2021 By: Janine Utell

This is about failure: my own failure to think forward, my own failure to see the future. Perhaps this piece can provide an opportunity to reflect on what can emerge from individual failures as well as our field’s reckoning with its wider failures: failure to grapple with racism and white supremacy, failure to support emerging scholars, failure to intervene meaningfully in the dismantling of the university as a site of serious thought and the generation of transformative ideas.

October 13, 2020 By: Cedric Van Dijck

By the time I moved to Cairo to research Forster’s years in Egypt, late in the summer of 2018, I was already familiar with his cabinet of lost artifacts and vanished statues.

May 21, 2020 By: Elizabeth Outka

For the past five years, I have been immersed in research on the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic and the unexpected ways it weaves its way into modernism. My book on the topic came out last October, about two months before a worrisome new illness began to emerge in Wuhan, China. [1] We all want our research to be relevant, to be able to articulate the critical “so what” question we struggle to answer in grant requests and cover letters. But the sudden thrust into an actual version of the sensory and affective climate I’ve been studying for so long has been surreal and unsettling, like a B movie where an author awakes to find her work has come to life. Even as we expose troubling elisions and injustices within the works we analyze, we may still use theory as a buffer between us and the world, and the past as a shield against our present realities. When a radio program recently approached me about an interview on Viral Modernism, they said that their listeners had been overwhelmed by COVID-19 coverage and would find it comforting to hear about a pandemic safely in the distance. I understood what they meant, even if patterns of viral and human behavior threaten to make the past the present.

April 8, 2020 By: Rebecca Colesworthy

Shortly after starting as an executive assistant in development at a nonprofit organization in 2012—my first nonacademic job following a three-year postdoctoral position—I joked to my new boss one night after everyone else had gone home that she should only hire former academics because we have no idea how not to work all the time. She laughed, as I guessed she would. Ever the court jester, I like to think I know my audience and I knew that, while not an academic herself, she could relate. We were there working late together and, from the start, I found that I could identify with the way she identified with her work.

January 30, 2020 By: Damien Keane

A couple of years ago, I published a book that worried the quantitative conception of information, by suggesting that “information” constituted a problem not because it lacked ways of being defined, but because it could be defined at once in so many competing and oftentimes contradictory ways. In the book, I was concerned specifically with radio broadcasting and the wartime literary field; but also, at a methodological level I was not entirely aware of until late in the composition process, with how forms of mediation and needs for remediation had created conditions in which the political charge of description and classification was suddenly, if also temporarily, to the fore. I tried to get at how this seemingly primary issue of definition is, in fact, the product of acts of and disputes about classification through which the “data of culture,” in Lisa Gitelman’s phrase, are put into meaningful sequences and mobilized, used, and managed—a in short, how they are put in formation. [1]

November 21, 2019 By: Anne Raine

When In These Times launched in early 2017, it gave voice to a collective sense of shock, a need to connect scholarship with activism and “engage, engage, engage.” Since then, contributors have offered a range of thoughtful reflections on how to study and teach modernism and modernity in these catastrophic times. But until recently the forum has been unsettlingly silent on the climate crisis—even as temperatures and sea levels continue to rise, record-breaking floods and wildfires proliferate, droughts threaten crops and ecosystems, glaciers continue to melt and coral reefs to bleach, and a million animal and plant species face extinction at heartbreakingly accelerated rates.

August 27, 2019 By: Thomas S. Davis

Austral summer on the Antarctic Peninsula. Eight of us climb out of our zodiac onto the shore of Petermann Island. This place dazzles and overwhelms the senses. The luminous blue icebergs, granite streaked pink with penguin guano, the weakly green cryoplankton spread across the snow. Antarctica is not the white continent of popular imagination. And it isn’t quiet either. The plangent groans of glaciers crawl across the landscape, reverberating through our bodies. Gentoo penguins squawk atop their stone nests, staring helplessly skyward at the skuas eying their young. We are unwelcome, unneeded guests.

April 29, 2019 By: Jonathan Goldman

“We are still learning to be Joyce's contemporaries,” intones Richard Ellmann, the first words of his James Joyce, published in 1959. [1] Sixty years later, Joyce’s most famous book (and second-hardest to read) has become a talking point and prop of two Democrat candidates in the race for the US presidential nomination. Ulysses, over a century since avant-garde magazines started publishing it serially, has been seen trending on Twitter. Have we, have the United States, caught up to Joyce?

March 10, 2019 By: Megan Faragher

When the cold January turned to an even colder February, I would have loved nothing more than to begin teaching Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward as part of my class on twentieth-century utopian literature. But instead of going to class, I put on my wool socks, three layers of clothes, a winter coat, and snow boots to spend hours standing in the frigid Midwestern climes outside the main entrance of my university, sign in my hands, equal parts exasperation and anxiety in my heart. My colleagues and I were one week into what would end up being the longest faculty strike in the state of Ohio and the second-longest in the history of public higher education in the United States. As I prepared for the chill air and tear-inducing winds, I registered the ironic contrast between the day that was meant to be and the day that was. It turned out that the very question that had led me to formulate the utopian literature class—what possible value utopias can offer us in these troubled, uncertain, undoubtedly dystopian times—had become even more starkly personal than I could have ever imagined. Standing in the cold I recognized that if modernist utopian literature meant to push us towards radical changes that could counter an increasingly broken society, this current strike was going to force us to recognize what those changes might be. What, in fact, are our aspirational politics in higher education in these times and how, practically, do our actions push that agenda forward.

November 2, 2018 By: Patrick Deer

November 2018 not only sees the US midterm elections which will allow the American people to respond at the ballot box to the tumultuous and often exhaustingly toxic political environment during the Trump presidency. It also brings the less heralded and seemingly more distant centenary commemorations of the end of the First World War on November 11th, 1918. Yet another world historical milestone to be overshadowed by a relentless domestic news cycle dominated by a politics of distraction and fear that seems to harness racism, misogyny, economic inequality and outright violence to an unprecedented degree.

July 7, 2018 By: Lisa Mendelman

The information superhighway is paved with good intentions. This thought occurred to me earlier this summer, as I drove the Silicon Valley corridor of 101. “The first survivor of Alzheimer’s is out there,” one billboard declared. “Hello marijuana, goodbye anxiety,” announced a second (the company, Eaze, hand-delivers the substance, à la Instacart). “No data left behind,” avowed a third. Perhaps because I was headed to the ALA to deliver a paper on Edith Wharton’s satire of interwar scientific culture, Twilight Sleep, the third struck me as particularly ludicrous and problematic.

June 18, 2018 By: Séan Richardson

On a recent episode of the Modernist Podcast, I asked “What does precarity mean to you?” My inquiry came in the wake of the strike action that swept the UK in the early months of 2018, as academics became embroiled in an all too familiar fight to protect their working conditions by halting alterations that would see sweeping changes to pensions. I have returned to this question many times since and realized how flawed it is, for precarity is not an epistemological issue, but an ontological one.

January 31, 2018 By: Nick Fesette

Originally constructed in 1817, Auburn Correctional Facility in Upstate New York stands as the oldest continually functional maximum-security penitentiary in the United States. [1] I doubt that its designers would have predicted that 200 years later the US would come to incarcerate more people than any other country in history. We currently make up only 5% of the world’s population, but confine about 21% of its prisoners.

November 20, 2017 By: David Farley

Modernism has always been bound up for me with travel, with politics, and with protest. I got my first passport and traveled to what was then the Soviet Union in January of 1987. It was the dead of winter and the twilight of the Cold War when we visited Moscow, Leningrad, and the Central Asian Republic of Uzbekistan, where the calligraphic beauty of the Islamic design on the madrassahs in Samarkand echoed the ornate beauty of St Basil’s Cathedral back in Moscow. When I returned home, I read for the first time the Anglophone modernist writers whose obscure and difficult texts spoke to the shock of international travel that had resonated so strongly with me.

September 28, 2017 By: Julie Vandivere

As a scholar of early-twentieth-century literature, I have not found it necessary to address contemporary political issues in my work. However, the election of Donald Trump has forced me to change my thoughts about writing in general and more specifically, about publishing on modernist women writers. In the present academic climate, many who read and teach in the perpetually unpopular field of women writers also contend with heavy teaching loads, difficult family commitments and/or precarious employment.

July 4, 2017 By: Benjamin Tausig

No single word has signaled a repulsion toward Donald Trump—and the impulse to respond to him—like “resistance.” The term emerged immediately after the election, as soon as November 11th (The Advocate: “Count us as part of ‘the resistance’”), 10th (Charles Blow: “Count me among the resistance”), and 9th (Ben Jealous: “The resistance begins today”). One Facebook page, for a group called “Portland’s Resistance,” was launched on the 8th. This last one, presumably created to rechannel a late-night panic, captures something especially visceral. And indeed, it seems that no one ever announced that “resistance” would be the keyword of a new political mobilization. Hillary Clinton did not use the word in her concession speech. There was no massively viral John Oliver clip. Rather, the word seemed to lend itself so well to the coming crisis that, like certain scientific discoveries, it occurred to multiple people independently. Something in the water made its adoption logical.

March 2, 2017 By: Julie Beth Napolin

For the first time in 7 years, I am not teaching full-time. I’m on sabbatical. The morning after the election, there was no place I was supposed to be other than working on my book. I didn’t have to face a classroom and try to digest the election with students, nor did I have to convince them that our conversations were politically relevant. I didn’t have to get my kids off to school and move on with everyday life (I don’t have kids). It was like Johnny Rotten staring cross-eyed into the camera, “noooooo future.” It was just me.

February 10, 2017 By: Kate Macdonald

In January I was teaching speculative and science fiction from the modernist period to show my students how fascism emerges, and how to recognise the ways that literary strategies can instil alienation, fear of the Other, and anti-Semitism and racism. My students were German, and our seminars were held in the north-west German university town of Paderborn, a little east of the Ruhr, where a British Army base

February 7, 2017 By: Melissa Dinsman

In his insightful contribution to “In These Times,” James Gifford takes inspiration from Woolf to state that on or about November 2016 something fundamentally changed (or rather should fundamentally change) in our teaching of modernist studies. That the election marks a shifting moment in the ways in which we, as pedagogues, approach modern literature is a thought-provoking claim

February 3, 2017 By: James Gifford

On November 9th, 2016, I was teaching my last class on Hemingway’s in our time. I had only one North American student in the room, and everyone was silent. It was silence of a kind that my neighbourhood, even deep in the night, never finds.
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American Memory, Forgotten Wars

November 2, 2018 By: Patrick Deer

Volume 3 Cycle 3

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Map of location for the proposed WWI Memorial in Washington DC from the US WWI Centennial Commission website.

November 2018 not only sees the US midterm elections which will allow the American people to respond at the ballot box to the tumultuous and often exhaustingly toxic political environment during the Trump presidency. It also brings the less heralded and seemingly more distant centenary commemorations of the end of the First World War on November 11th, 1918. Yet another world historical milestone to be overshadowed by a relentless domestic news cycle dominated by a politics of distraction and fear that seems to harness racism, misogyny, economic inequality and outright violence to an unprecedented degree.

The First World War is modernism’s war. Its mythic trench landscapes, Hemingwayesque crises of masculinity, and home front struggles over race and gender would seem far distant from today’s embedded media war reporting, high-tech drone warfare and stealth bombing, digital surveillance and cyberwarfare, and paramilitary special forces operating in 170 countries around the world. Yet the WWI Centenary has received sustained media attention and repeated commemoration in Britain and Europe, most spectacularly by a controversial “Petals of Blood” installation at the Tower of London by artist Paul Cummins consisting of 888,246 ceramic red poppies, each representing a British or Colonial serviceman killed in the War. The Great War was also at the center of an ideological battle over the teaching of history in the national curriculum, with a Brexiteer Education Minister attacking Wilfred Owen, revisionist military historians, and the satirical TV comedy, Blackadder Goes Forth. Christopher Nolan’s Oscar-winning WWII movie, Dunkirk, which caught the melancholy Post-Brexit transatlantic imagination, represents stoical heroicized infantrymen who could easily have stepped like Tommies out of the trenches of the Somme in June 1916.

Design image for the proposed WWI Memorial in Washington DC from the US WWI Centennial Commission website.

In the United States, by contrast, the WWI Centenary has passed more or less unnoticed. In a piece entitled, “The first world war helped shape modern America. Why is it so forgotten?” the Guardian’s Washington correspondent noted that President Trump declined to appear at “the official commemoration of the US entry into WWI on April 6, 2017 at the National World War I Museum and Memorial in Kansas City, Missouri, where the most senior official was the acting army secretary, Robert Speer.” The President traveled instead “to his luxury estate in Florida for talks with the Chinese president, Xi Jinping.” The WWI memorial approved for Washington DC in 2013 has still not been built in its designated spot near the National Mall, where the Vietnam War memorial and new WWII memorial attract hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Virtual mock-ups of the WWI monument proposed a relatively conventional, heroicized memorial featuring, of course, inscriptions drawn from Ernest Hemingway. More recent CGI designs show ghostly virtual citizens viewing a stark sculptural memorial wall. Commemorative exhibitions at the Smithsonian have had almost no media coverage, and as the New York Times recently noted, “Even the commission set up by Congress in 2013 to commemorate this year’s centenary calls World War I America’s ‘most forgotten war.’”

Design image for the proposed WWI Memorial in Washington DC from the US WWI Centennial Commission website.

Bearing Witness and Insisting on Complexity

Recognizing that modernism’s war is one of America’s “forgotten wars,” caught between a British and European “memory boom” and relative amnesia in the United States, is a powerful reminder of the unstable place of war in recent American popular memory.  It also reminds us that as scholars of literary modernism shaped by WWI we have a double responsibility. First, we bear must witness to the shattering impact of World War One that, as critics since Paul Fussell have argued, plunged an entire world into the crises of modernity wrought by the violent modernization of total war. Secondly, we must insist on the interpretive complexity of the war’s effects on memory across gender, race and class. The temptation is to counter the patriotic wartime propaganda and naïve beliefs about “a war to end all wars” by assuming a straightforwardly ironic critical pose that assumes our primary role as scholars and intellectuals is to demystify, insisting after the rupture of WWI everything changed. But the lesson of modernist—and non-modernist—responses to WWI is that demystifying is not enough, both because there are often profound aesthetic and historical continuities with what went before, and because the texts we read are epistemologically complex, often interwining fantasy and reality, the ideological and grittily real.

This seems an enormously important lesson for the present: the necessity of both bearing witness to forgotten conflicts and insisting on the complexity of interpreting their place in memory. Especially when the temptation is to assume that everything changed in November 2016. The toxic and polarized political and media environment of the Trump era puts pressure on concerned citizens—especially people who interpret texts and teach a younger generation for a living—to assume a reactive pose of fact-checking and demystifying falsehood when public discourse seems to have changed irrevocably and US institutions are under assault. Important then, to take a breath and remember what got us to this present crisis.

America’s recent war in Iraq (2003–2011) and “forgotten war” in Afghanistan (2001–present) also have an uncertain place in historical and popular memory compared to the Second World or Vietnam; they are distant wars without clear objectives or outcomes fought by an all-volunteer military of less than 1% of the population (since the abolition of the draft in 1974) separated by a “civilian-military divide” from a US public which often seems disengaged or uninformed. These “forever wars,” long in duration and catastrophic in their human and economic costs, lack either persuasive official narratives or a cohesive popular memory. To what extent has this forgetting of wars which have lasted the entire lives of many of our students contributed to the current political crisis and uncertainty? 

The wars have exacerbated the polarization of American political life. They brought home the lack of accountability for politicians, public officials and military commanders who justified the 2003 invasion of Iraq and continued military engagement across the globe. The wars instilled popular skepticism about the media who embedded with the military for the invasion of Iraq and who failed to challenge false claims—and “fake news”—about WMDs in Iraq or links between Saddam Hussein and the 9/11 attacks. The “long wars” have also normalized a post-9/11 climate of fear and apathy, the expansion of domestic surveillance and popular disregard for the consequences of US economic and military power on people of color in the Global South. It’s considered unpatriotic to discuss the impact of the vast US military budget (nearly $720 billion this year) on our societal and economic priorities or the influence of military research funding on our universities. Unchecked federal spending on vast military budgets blocks civic debate about the possible alternatives to a permanent war economy. And the domestic arms transfers of vast quantities of surplus military hardware (bought with taxpayer dollars for use in Iraq and Afghanistan) to city police departments escalated the militarization of policing that dates back to the Reagan-era War on Drugs, and which has been protested so powerfully by the Black Lives Matter movement.

Reading across Wartimes and Living with Crisis

As scholars, we often accept the wartimes of particular conflicts as compartmentalized states of exception that don’t speak to each other. War literature also has a somewhat dubious, siloed status in the academy, like that of genre fiction. But I find my students are able to readily negotiate its fluid boundaries, and to explore whether they too have grown up in a war culture. My students readily connect to Great War poetry, as they do to Hemingway’s short fiction from in our time, or Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, as they do to less canonical WWI writing by W. E. B. Du Bois, Mary Borden or Vera Brittain. Making contemporary connections between the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the militarization of policing of communities of color (and the killings of citizens like Michael Brown or Tamir Rice protested so powerfully by Black Lives Matter) can be challenging, let alone excavating longer histories of US warmaking and power projection in the Global South. Yet our students are up for it. The forgetting of the First World War—like the still ongoing “forgotten war” in Afghanistan or the war in Iraq—has much to teach us both about our disturbed relationship to war as scholars and citizens and the effects of the normalization of a state of “forever wars” on our media and national political life. Teaching Mrs Dalloway again, as well as Du Bois, George Bernard Shaw’s Major Barbara, and Bertolt Brecht’s Mother Courage, I’ve been struck by how clearly modernist writers understood the pervasive power of militarization to cut across a whole society, and by their skepticism about whether a post-war world might even exist given the pervasive reach of militarist imperialism, white supremacy and patriarchy.

Reading modernist writing about war teaches us that, even a hundred years on, its myths are intertwined with reality and that the urge to demystify has to be tempered by a willingness to explore. These myths are pretty familiar: the myth of the trenches and No Man’s Land of the Western Front as the topos of modern warfare; the myth of WWI as a European as opposed to a global war; the myth of the panoramic commanding vision of total warfare clashing with the individual collapse of vision in the trench labyrinth; the literary myths of modernist rupture, combat experience as higher knowledge and the ironic disillusion of the Lost Generation. Add to this mythologized history written by the victors and by the defeated; gendered, class and racial mythologies; the battle over military history; and the still ongoing post-war mythmaking. Read in this light, WWI literature is best approached as a mix of rupture and continuity, crisis and reconstruction, fragmentation and consolidation.

As other contributors to “In These Times” have incisively noted, if we have the stomach or will for it, teaching and writing about modernism can be invaluable preparation for dealing with this ongoing crisis. Thinking the present as scholars of modernism, we need to consider the seductive modernist tropes of discontinuity, rupture and fragmentation alongside the longer historical continuities of reconstruction, consolidation, and ongoing militarization. As Stuart Hall noted in his essay “Gramsci and Us” of the brutalist “reactionary modernization” of Thatcherism and Reaganism in the 1980s:

There is nothing more crucial, in this respect, than Gramsci's recognition that every crisis is also a moment of reconstruction; that there is no destruction which is not, also, reconstruction; that, historically nothing is dismantled without also attempting to put something new in its place; that every form of power not only excludes but produces something.

Considered in the light of a century of US wars, of which WWI saw the American’s entry onto the global scene, modernism’s double face can remind us of this contradictory logic.

Viewed from the vantage point of 2018 America, the most urgent myth for us to confront about modernism’s war is the no less ideological formula of WWI as a “forgotten war.”  The military historian Andrew Bacevich recently noted on the book jacket of the Library of America’s new Centenary volume, World War I and America: Told by the Americans Who Lived It, “Situated at or near the top of America's long list of ‘forgotten wars’ is the Great War of 1914-1918. The United States entered the conflict belatedly, and most Americans soon regretted having done so at all. Now, a century later, comes A. Scott Berg’s brilliant anthology to make remembering possible and even imperative. The result is gripping, simultaneously sobering and illuminating.” In his book America’s War for the Greater Middle East, Bacevich, like other commentators, uses the same term to describe the “forgotten war” in Afghanistan, now the nation’s longest foreign war. Cheeringly for literary scholars, he argues that literature still has a role to play “make remembering possible and even imperative” in order to understand a more distant “forgotten” American war a century ago that decisively transformed the US role in the world and pushed domestic social battles into high relief. As historian David M. Kennedy has noted in Over Here: The First World War and American Society: “Americans went to war in 1917 not only against Germans in the fields of France but against each other at home” (41).

In my own work I have argued that silences in war culture are always actively produced. The military service of African American troops in the 369th Harlem Hellfighters Regiment, for example, remains anything but forgotten, a potent historical counter-memory of white supremacy—as does the historical trauma of the race riots and lynchings of the “Red Summer” that followed on all too rapidly on their return from Europe. This postwar era of revived white supremacy and Jim Crow segregation in the US South also saw the construction of monuments to the Confederacy and the Southern war dead of the US Civil War. These are the very same controversial war memorials that civil rights activists and mainstream politicians alike are seeking to remove from cities like Charlottesville, Baltimore and Maryland. This layering of the memory of one American war on top of another is typical of the palimpsestic quality of US war culture.

WWI also saw the expansion and normalization of propaganda, censorship and surveillance, and the beginnings of the permanent war economy. On the home front in the United States, opponents of the war were subjected to an unprecedented array of wartime legislation by the emerging national security state that continued into the interwar years: the Espionage Act passed in 1917 was bolstered by the 1918 Sedition Act under which Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party anti-war presidential candidate, was jailed and later pardoned. Although Congress repealed the Sedition Act in 1920, the Espionage Act remains in force a century later, a covert legacy of the “forgotten war.”

Holding onto the “Pity of War”

Literary critics like Paul Fussell, Samuel Hynes and George Mosse have come under fire for fostering a mythic version of the conflict as a futile war fought by a heroic, disillusioned and suffering soldiery commanded by incompetent General Staff, “Lions led by Donkeys.”[1] They continue to draw the ire of military and social historians who blame them for reading WWI through the poet Wilfred Owen’s “pity of war.” Some British revisionist military historians—and politicians—have recently argued, by contrast, that WWI should be commemorated as a “war of national survival,” even a national victory.

The central problem with Fussell and Hynes’s work, I would argue, is not that it produced an ironic or tragic vision of WWI. As Mosse argues, the insistence of writers like Wilfred Owen on “the pity of war” is of crucial importance in an era that has seen neo-fascist resurgence, populist intolerance of immigrants and refugees, a retreat into isolationism and a weary acceptance of a seemingly endless War or Terror. So we give that up at our peril. The military revisionists are wrong, though, to want to throw out modern irony or pity with the bath water. Rather, I would argue, the problem is that both Fussell and Hynes have a blind spot about the “combat Gnosticism” they celebrate in their criticism of a selective tradition of WWI writing, despite their celebration of poetic irony and gritty realism. As James Campbell has argued,

The critical tradition that I identify as mainstream and dominant is one that equates the term “war” with the term “combat.” . . . This is what I mean by combat gnosticism: a construction that gives us war experience as a kind of gnosis, a secret knowledge which only an initiated elite knows. Only men (there is, of course, a tacit gender exclusion operating here) who have actively engaged in combat have access to certain experiences that are productive of, perhaps even constitutive of, an arcane knowledge. Furthermore, mere military status does not signify initiation, but only status as a combatant. It is not the label of "soldier" that is privileged so much as the label of “warrior.”[2]

The Iraq war veteran writer, critic and environmentalist Roy Scranton has drawn on this to critique what he calls the “trauma hero narrative,” which presents American veterans as both heroes and victims of the violence they have perpetrated. This places veterans under an impossible burden of representation, thanked for their service but isolated from the rest of America. Recent US veteran and civilian writers have risen to the challenge of confronting their—and our—complicity with the wars.[3]

Iraqi writer and critic Sinan Antoon offers a postcolonial critique from Iraqi civilians’ point of view of what he calls “embedded poetry” that “views Iraq and Iraqis from an observation post and through military binoculars. And whatever it sees is filtered through a version of the war’s official narrative. The occupier is a victim trapped in a foreign landscape, fighting a war in an incomprehensible place.” Modern maps of post-WWI Iraq as an artificially constructed nation have also been mobilized to represent Iraq as a failed state, thus absolving the United States of responsibility for the disastrous destabilizing effects of its catastrophic 2003 invasion. It is much harder to find Iraqi and Afghan representations of the wars’ terrible impact, though the recent success of books in translation like Ahmed Sadaawi’s Frankenstein in Baghdad is a promising sign.

Looking back at the German “myth of war experience” of WWI from the end of the twentieth century, Mosse asks haunting questions relevant for our own era of seemingly permanent warfare:

did the confrontation and transcendence of the war experience and death in war lead to what might be called the domestication of modern war, its acceptance as a natural part of political and social life?  Did the Myth of the War Experience entail a process of brutalization and indifference to human life which was to perpetuate itself in still greater mass violence in our own time? (11)

Mosse’s questions were directed primarily at the ways Germany mythologized WWI in its defeat after 1918. But they resonate powerfully into the American present. This is a heavy note to end on. Here Siegfried Sassoon’s poem for the first Anniversary of the November Armistice, “Aftermath” (1919) offers a more literary reflection on the ways that the trafficking in memory can promote amnesia, distraction or remembrance:

Have you forgotten yet?....
For the world’s events have rumbled on since those gagged days,
Like traffic checked while at the crossing of city-ways:
And the haunted gap in your mind has filled with thoughts that flow
Like clouds in the lit heaven of life....

When we encounter the myth of a “forgotten war,” we have to ask: forgotten by whom and why? The next step is to find and listen to the voices of those by whom America’s wars are remembered.


Notes

[1] Jay Winter and Antoine Prost, The Great War In History Debates And Controversies, 1914 To The Present (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005). See Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory  (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975), Samuel Hynes, A War Imagined: The First World War and English Culture (New York: Atheneum, 1991), and George L. Mosse, Fallen Soldiers Reshaping The Memory Of The World Wars (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990).

[2] James Campbell, “Combat Gnosticism: The ideology of First World War Criticism,” New Literary History 30 (1999): 203–15, 204.

[3] There is now more than enough war writing from the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan to fill a syllabus. Notable recent US war writing includes short story collections by Siobhan Fallon, You Know When the Men Are Gone  (2011), and Phil Klay, Redeployment (2014), as well as Fire and Forget: Short Stories from the Long War (ed. Matt Gallagher and Roy Scranton, 2013). Critically acclaimed Iraq and Afghanistan war novels include Helen Benedict, Sand Queen (2011); Kevin Powers, The Yellow Birds (2012); Ben Fountain, Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk (2012); Lea Carpenter’s Eleven Days (2013); Sinan Antoon’s The Corpse Washer (2013); Matt Gallagher’s Youngblood (2016); Roy Scranton, War Porn (2014); David Abrams, Fobbit (2012); Michael Pitre, Fives and Twenty Fives (2014); Elliot Ackerman, Green on Blue (2015); Jesse Goolsby, I'd Walk with My Friends If I Could Find Them (2015); Chris Robinson and Gavin Kovite, War of the Encyclopedists (2015), Brian Van Reet, Spoils (2017). Influential veteran memoirs include Anthony Swofford, Jarhead (2003); Kayla Williams’s Love My Rifle More Than You (2005); Brian Turner, My Life As A Foreign Country (2014); and Matt Young, Eat the Apple (2018). For poetry and drama, see for example, Brian Turner, Here Bullet (2005) and Philip Metres, Sand Opera (2015), and Maurice Decaul’s play Dijla Wal Furat: Between the Tigris and the Euphrates  (2015).