Field Reports

March 2, 2016 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

“Field Reports” will approach modernisms as local responses to a capitalist and colonialist modernity as it voraciously expands all over the globe. Our blog posts will focus on a wide range of languages, nations, and regions, illuminating a global, interconnected, and uneven reality as well as the varied responses that arise in relation to it. Aimed at a non-specialist audience, individual posts might introduce tribal and indigenous poetry, protest literatures, a newly discovered archive, a recent cluster of groundbreaking articles or books, climate fiction novels, an art exhibition visited, or a major translation.

January 14, 2026 By: Amit Baishya

Anglophone Literature from the borderland region of Northeast India has a relatively short history with the major works comprising the oeuvre published in the last four decades or so. One of the most visible trajectories in Northeast Indian Anglophone Literature (NIAL) [1] is the reworking of myths and origin stories, especially by writers from indigenous communities. [2] NIAL writers weave myths to explore both deep pasts and contemporary conundrums about community and political identity...

May 28, 2025 By: Huda Fakhreddine

It is the twentieth month of genocide, our planet’s second rotation around the sun, drenched in Palestinian blood, 600 days of Palestinian slaughter, and nothing is new except the finality of the massacre. The world has sacrificed the Palestinians with its complicity and silence, and it will soon start rehabilitating itself by erecting monuments of guilt, reciting land acknowledgements, mythologizing the Palestinian, and cannibalizing the myth. Given the scale of this historic calamity, the...

May 21, 2025 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

Understanding that modernity is always already global and colonial informs how Field Reports approaches modernism. Modernist studies is inevitably a comparative project because modernity has a shared material ground of an ever-expanding colonial-capitalism that traverses and connects the globe but that nevertheless manifests differently in singular locations. Colonial-capitalism produces a world-spanning interrelated singularity that renders the Anglophone world, including its imperial centers...

October 12, 2021 By: Katarzyna Bartoszyńska

I’m sitting on my parents’ couch, working on the translation of an archival text by the Polish sociologist, Zygmunt Bauman, who is most famous, perhaps, for his work on “liquid modernity” and globalization. Though much of his writing was in English, this is one of his earlier works, entitled On Frustration and Conjurers, about the events that took place in Poland in March, 1968—the student uprisings and anti-Semitic propaganda campaign—and there is a discussion of the situation of the working...

August 26, 2021 By: Mukti Lakhi Mangharam

My final words of advice to you are educate, agitate and organize; have faith in yourself. With justice on our side I do not see how we can lose our battle. The battle to me is a matter of joy. The battle is in the fullest sense spiritual. There is nothing material or social in it. For ours is a battle not for wealth or for power. It is battle for freedom. It is the battle of reclamation of human personality. [1] B. R. Ambedkar In the introduction to their graphic novel Bhimayana: Incidents in...

October 22, 2020 By: Marijeta Bozovic

From its contested origins in Germany’s Black Forest to the Black Sea, Europe’s second longest river connects ten countries and its watershed four more. Navigable along the entire route, the Danube river serves as the artery and border of a diverse geographic region, and frustrates attempts to divide Europe from non-Europe even as it facilitates the flow of transnational environmental, economic, and cultural exchange. Diversity along the Danube has long eluded stable political arrangement; nor...

February 19, 2020 By: Simon van Schalkwyk

The specter of modernism has haunted South African culture for quite some time. In Katharine Kilalea’s recent novel, O.K. Mr. Field (2018), it takes the form of “the House for the Study of Water,” a replica of Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye, transplanted from its original setting in Poissy, France, to the coastal cliffs of South Africa’s Cape Peninsula. [1] After an accident that leaves him unable to continue his career as a concert pianist, Field purchases the Villa from Hannah Kallenbach, the widow of Jan Kallenbach who, in the imaginary world of Kilalea’s novel, was a disciple of Le Corbusier (Kilalea Field, 4-5). It is worth noting, however, that the name “Kallenbach” suggestively recalls one of the leading figures of South African architectural modernism: Hermann Kallenbach, described by Loren Kruger as “friend of Ghandi and heir of German modernism.” [2] Modernism, in other words, is the motor that drives the novelistic machinery of Kilalea’s O. K. Mr. Field.

October 25, 2019 By: Jeanne-Marie Jackson

In the introduction to his superb book Realism after Modernism, Devin Fore describes a “shared modernist aspiration to achieve conditions of perception and consciousness outside of what is customarily arrogated to the human.” [1] He sees this as the tie that binds avant-garde movements across early twentieth-century Europe: from José Ortega y Gasset to Jean-François Lyotard, Paul Cezanne to Velimir Khlebnikov, modernism was a radically diverse enterprise with an eye to the aesthetic...

August 14, 2019 By: Jacob Edmond

What is this thing called modernist studies? And what does it look like when viewed from the—for most—faraway islands of Aotearoa/New Zealand? A Bird’s-Eye View Such a shift in perspective, I want to suggest, can prompt a new way of writing and thinking about modernism. Modernism itself is full of such shifts in perspective, of course. Think, for example, of the radical new poetic forms that Futurists such as Vasily Kamensky and F. T. Marinetti produced in response to the invention of the...

April 22, 2019 By: Jeanne-Marie Jackson

Those of us who work in traditions considered “global” within US and, to varying degrees, European academies are often pulled in two professional directions. On the one hand, many of us feel rightly accountable to a kind of work most welcome in area studies: granular, situated, concerned with historical depth over what can feel like untenable generalization. On the other, we feel the sting of exclusion from the field’s “big” conversations, and seek broad conceptual discussion of “the literary,” as such. Both impulses—as an Africanist, I think here of toggling between the African Studies Association and the MLA—have value. In the effort to entrench a globally conscientious modernism, though, I find their differences hard to split. Terms like “global modernity” often feel removed from the lives and locales that anchor aesthetic practices beyond a few transnational publishing houses. Neither an historically intertwined (whether network-based or world-systematic) nor a discrete, comparative approach to global modernist method feels quite right, and yet the challenge to find something that does (to modernists, at least) is perennially cast as urgent. Job and book titles aside, I have grown to see Global Northern takes on the “global” even within the “global Anglophone” field as an over-beat drum, stemming as they often do from a form of what Modernism/modernity readers might recognize as “ weak theory.” As David Ayers has written in his reponse to the Modernism/modernity special issue on weak theory, there is only so much one can do to inclusivize an exclusive position, which, like a maximally expansive modernism, “simultaneously claims and renounces its universality.

January 23, 2019 By: Rachel Price

Three recent New York exhibitions highlight Latin American and Caribbean culture, crossing contemporary art and anthropology: Pacha, Llaqta, Wasichay: Indigenous Space, Modern Architecture, New Art (Whitney Museum of American Art, July 2018–September 2018); Taíno: Native Heritage and Identity in the Caribbean (National Museum of the American Indian, July 2018–October 2019), and Lydia Cabrera and Édouard Glissant: Trembling Thinking (Americas Society, October 2018–January 2019). The first two...

April 26, 2018 By: Maite Conde

Turn-of-the-century Rio de Janeiro: this period was a time of radical changes for what was then Brazil’s capital. These changes intended to make the city Brazil’s “capital of the twentieth century” (to paraphrase Walter Benjamin). Rio’s transformations were part of broader changes taking place in the country. In 1888 slavery had been abolished in Brazil, followed a year later by the ousting of the imperial family. These events marked the start of the First Republic (1889-1930) and signaled a new era for the country. Once in power, the Republican government set out to reinvent the country’s identity. The former colony’s peripheral character was to be a thing of the past. Incorporating European imperial ideas that promoted universal values of civilization and progress, the elite turned its back on Brazil’s rural, slave-holding history to rewrite its identity as a modern nation-state, a nation of order and progress, as the new flag announced–one equal to any other on the Western world.

December 17, 2017 By: Sanja Bahun

Cushioned in an archival box in the Museum of Applied Arts, Belgrade, Serbia, lies a remarkable surrealist photograph: Nikola Vučo’s The Arrested Flight of Surreality ( Zadržano bekstvo nadstvarnosti, 1929, fig. 1). Posing as a visual riddle, the photograph shows the figure of a woman with her back to the viewer, as if intent on moving on, or fleeing, and the semitransparent hands arresting her flight or gently pulling her in the opposite direction. The surreal effects of the photograph result from double exposure, considered an innovative technique at the time, wherein superimposition is obtained by apparatic means rather than interventions on the negative. Dual exposure photographs have to be premeditated and carefully staged performances, thus presenting great examples of what Pavle Levi has called “ cinema by other means.”

March 15, 2017 By: Andrew van der Vlies

In the final room of Thick Time, the William Kentridge show recently on at the Whitechapel Gallery in London, viewers encountered yet another of the installation environments those familiar with the South African artist’s work have come to expect from this fascinating—mercurial, polymath—contemporary global art-maker. [1] We imagine we are in a room in a villa near the sea. On one wall, a demagogue gesticulates in vintage newsreel footage, addressing an audience in French (apparently an international gathering of socialists), while disappearing slowly from view as water rises to obscure all but the English subtitles.

February 8, 2017 By: Anneka Lenssen

“Well this exhibition feels a little too timely,” my colleague Clare Davies posted to Facebook during a November 21, 2016 visit to Art et liberté: Rupture, guerre et surréalisme en Egypte (1938-1948) at the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. The exhibit—a major contribution to contemporary

October 15, 2016 By: Kate Baldwin

When race is pictured historically, it often is removed from leftist radicalism. (Ellison’s novel Invisible Man is about Harlem in the 1930s, a decade when even middle of the road intellectuals were at their most socialist.) Likewise, when the “American” is imagined, it is at a distance from the mobility of artistic lives, influences and historical factors, including the circuits of Soviet communism (mentioned, briefly, in a sign about “industry and labor” in “After the Fall”).

June 1, 2016 By: Carlos Rojas

It has been between 15,000 and 30,000 years since dogs began living with humans, and although it is appealing to imagine that it was humans who originally domesticated man’s best friend, it is actually more likely that the ancestors of modern dogs effectively domesticated themselves—finding it evolutionarily advantageous to adopt behaviors that would permit them to live symbiotically with early humans, from whom they could then obtain food and protection. Similarly, chickens were apparently first domesticated in China about 10,000 years, but for much of that time they were used primarily for symbolic and social purposes, and the earliest evidence we have that they were being consumed in large numbers dates back only about 2,200 years ago.

March 2, 2016 By: Christopher Bush

The study of literary modernism has expanded so dramatically over the past few decades that I’ve heard more than one colleague ask in exasperation, “Well, then, what isn’t modernism?” As Stephen Colbert might ask: is this a great problem to have . . . or the greatest? Almost certainly the latter, but even so, such dynamism and growth bring challenges: so much to read, compelling us to choose from among the now-dizzying array of possibilities, according to criteria that are themselves subject to change.
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Between “Invisible Man” and “After the Fall”

October 15, 2016 By: Kate Baldwin

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It’s a good day when you get to see two touring exhibits that are situated across the hall from one another at a major national museum.  My good day came recently when I visited the Art Institute of Chicago with my two young children.  I had lured them to the door with promises of cold Sprite packaged in sleek aerodynamic bottles.  Damp with the heat of an August morning spent exploring Maggie Daley Park, they were captive to my persuasion. And with the crossing of a pedestrian bridge, we arrived in the new wing: “Invisible Man: Gordon Parks and Ralph Ellison in Harlem” on our left, “America After the Fall: painting in the 1930s” on our right.  We gravitated left.

Before you get anxious that this will be a tale of heroic parenting, let me assure you that my aim here is neither to recap our experience nor to give a precise overview of either exhibit (both of which are excellent).  Rather, I want to juxtapose these concurrently showing exhibits to talk about what I didn’t see.  I have a hunch that this absence has a lot to say about popular conceptions of the relationships between race, radicalism, and the “American.” 

When race is pictured historically, it often is removed from leftist radicalism.  (Ellison’s novel Invisible Man is about Harlem in the 1930s, a decade when even middle of the road intellectuals were at their most socialist.)  Likewise, when the “American” is imagined, it is at a distance from the mobility of artistic lives, influences and historical factors, including the circuits of Soviet communism (mentioned, briefly, in a sign about “industry and labor” in “After the Fall”). Rather than critique, I want to meditate on that slip of land between these two shows, their connective tissues, the soft spoken, what Ellison might call “lower frequencies” echoing in those AIC halls.

As scholars Barbara Foley and Brent Edwards have reminded us, when Ralph Ellison began the project of Invisible Man in 1945 he conceived of the project as a black proletarian one. Over the next seven years, Ellison turned away from his earlier commitments to communism and became increasingly conservative in the milieu of a repressive Cold War climate. Dismayed by the hypocrisies he witnessed in party politics and the dogmatic demands of socialist realism, Ellison took up more experimental aesthetic projects and turned to nineteenth century writers, especially Fyodor Dostoevsky, for inspiration. But it would be an overstatement to say he abandoned the roots of internationalism altogether. As evidenced in the AIC exhibit, and in the work on which the exhibit is based--Ellison’s essays for “Harlem is Nowhere” (a collaborative project with Parks from 1947) and “A Man Becomes Invisible” (partially published in LIFE in 1952)--his meditations on poverty and race are infused with Lenin and Marx.  For example, Ellison writes, “Individual failures when taken as proof of inferiority of all Negroes, injure entire group as vitally as man who has been struck by car.” And, similarly, to accompany Parks’ photograph of a Harlem shop window, Ellison charts the debasements of consumer capitalism: “Religion and toilet paper, dream books and bobby-pins, saints and exotic figurines, deodorants and incense, piggy banks and belly dancers—the values of a civilization reflected ironically in this Harlem store window.” A laundry list juxtaposing necessity and desperation indexes the mood of deprivation that pervades these Harlem scenes.

Although Ellison may have turned towards psychology and a more European (and pre-Soviet) inspired modernism, other black artists and intellectuals sought to keep alive a hope that culture could transform perception by offering alternatives to capitalism through an anti-colonial world imaginary that foregrounded race, class and gender equality.  Langston Hughes was the best known of these figures. Hughes spent nearly two years traveling across Russia and Soviet Central Asia in the early 1930s.  He recorded these visits in his memoir I Wonder as I Wander (1956). But less edited and more socialist versions of these memories appeared in essays he published earlier in such unlikely places as Woman’s Home Companion, Theater Arts, and the Soviet literary magazine Internatsionalnaia literatura (International Literature).  Now fairly well known, Hughes’s championing of what he reported as the Soviet system of racial, class and gender equality was connected to his fascination with the artistic innovations of the Soviet avant-garde. Hughes admired the revolutionary poetics of Vladimir Mayakovsky, and later translated Mayakovsky along with Boris Pasternak (as well as French poets Louis Aragon, whom he met in Moscow, and Jacques Roumain; Spanish poet Frederico Garcia Lorca; and Cuban Nicolas Guillen).  As a black writer attempting to establish his authorial voice in a Western canon, Hughes was inspired by the Soviet project—as an artistic and political endeavor.  Hughes sought to use the inspiration (and the cautionary tales) of linking vanguard politics and aesthetics to explore the revolutionary potential of Comintern notions for his own purposes.

Hughes did not travel to Moscow alone, and his companions included Louise Thompson, Homer Smith, Mildred Jones, Wayland Rudd, and Dorothy West among others.  Dorothy West, best known as the Harlem Renaissance author of The Living is Easy, wrote three columns for the short lived magazine Challenge (which she founded) called “Room In Red Square,” “An Adventure in Moscow,” and “Russian Correspondence.”  Smith reported from Moscow under the pseudonym Chatwood Hall for the Baltimore Afro-American. Mildred Jones was an art student, and Wayland Rudd was an actor who stayed in Russia and became a well-known film personality.  Louise Thompson was the mastermind behind the group trip, organized around the premise of making an original film to be called Black and White, funded by the international Meshchrabpom film company and directed by Karl Junghaus.  Due to extenuating circumstances (including the construction of a major dam, formal diplomatic recognition of the USSR by the U.S., and not the poor quality of the script, as Steven Lee has documented for us in his elegant new book The Ethnic Avant Garde), the film never came to fruition.

But what did blossom from these Soviet encounters were black, white, and brown interactions around politics and aesthetics that continue to circle back to Moscow as a key alternative nodal point in the matrix of American modernism.  A reconsideration of these interactions has begun to create a lively subfield in modernist studies.  In addition to Steven Lee, Ryan Kernan has written persuasively about Hughes’s translations of Mayakovsky, and Evelyn Crawford has edited the correspondence between Hughes and Louise Thompson.  Although he didn’t travel there, Ellison was equally caught up in this milieu of Soviet enthrallment.  As Dorothy West almost breathlessly put it, “The word on everybody’s lips in the 1930s was Russia.” (Cherene Sherrard-Johnson’s excellent biography of West, Dorothy West’s Paradise: A Biography of Class and Color , documents her trip to Russia.)  Implicitly the question asked about Russia was “where do you stand?”  For Paul Robeson, the answer was clear.  Although his brilliant memoir was not published until the 1950s, Here I Stand put front and center the historical importance of mobility to African American liberation. While the U.S. stood with segregation in the 1930s, the Soviet Union had passed a constitutional amendment banning racism.  While he supported the verbal championing of anti-racism, Robeson was privately wary of Stalin’s tactics and he did not endorse him, nor his atrocities.  At the same time, he refused to support what he and William Patterson and the Civil Rights Congress termed Black Genocide in their failed petition to the U.N. in 1951. Put in an impossible position, Robeson became a casualty of Cold War belligerence.  But his enthusiasm for a reconstructed world in which culture promised to transform perception through an anti-colonial imaginary remained firm.

Meanwhile, artists like Ben Shahn, Joe Jones, Alice Neel, and others in the U.S. were equally influenced by the Communist Party and socialist realism.  (Joe Jones’s painting “Roustabouts” appears in “After the Fall,” as does Shahn’s “The Passion of Sacco and Vanzetti.” Alice Neel’s work is not represented, but she is mentioned, along with Jones, as a member of the Communist Party.)  Many had met in Moscow in the late 1920s, or come into contact with those who had been there.  Diego Rivera went to Russia in 1927 and lingered in Moscow to create murals for the headquarters of the Red Army Club.  He hung out in Moscow with Vladimir Mayakovsky and Sergei Eisenstein, whose film Que Viva Mexico! hails from this Mexican/Soviet cross-pollenization.  Later in 1934 at the First All-Union Writers Congress in Moscow well-known Russian writers, Maxim Gorky, Isaac Babel, Yuri Olesha, Boris Pasternak, and Korneii Chukovskii, were joined by an international audience and roster of speakers who included Louis Aragon, Andre Malraux, Rafael Alberti, Ernst Toller, Robert Gessner, and Lloyd Brown. It was at this Congress that Andrei Zhdanov announced the new aesthetic platform of “socialist realism” a practice of representational art meant to inspire proletarian freedom and a global revolution that was hero and future oriented. Favored practitioners not only met with some of the Black and White troupe when they were in Moscow (Mildred Jones apparently had a short meeting with the Soviet painter Alexander Deineika), but they also traveled to the U.S.  In fact, Deneika was fascinated enough by African Americans that he specifically requested to spend time in Harlem, and drew some striking portraits and sketches of black dancers and musicians which were exhibited in Moscow in 1935 (see Christina Kiaer’s excellent essay in Russian Review, July 2016). In brief, the thirties were rich with interactions between Soviet and American artists who were among other things essaying to come up with new ways to picture race and a world that could refashion itself from the ruins of imperialism. 

The reverberations of these Soviet circuits were not uni-directional but had deep implications for Soviet artists as well.  For example, while Hughes’s Black and White was never filmed, a short animated film of the same title (taken from the title of a poem by Mayakovsky) was made by Ivan Ivanov-Vano and Leonid Almarik in 1932.  Through the stark depiction of a South American sugar plantation, the film links themes of racial injustice, violence, and working-class solidarity. In the short film (only minutes of it remain, six of which you can watch on YouTube), you see charcoal versions of black men suffering in fields, struggling in chains, and an electrocution that visually suggests the origins of the prison industrial complex.  Towards the end of the clip, black bodies are suspended from electricity poles in renegade murder; later state torture through electrocution cements the collusion of industry and white supremacy. All the while the film showcases an overweight, cigar-smoking overseer who menaces his charges.  One of the last images of the film is “LENIN” emblazoned over his tomb in Red Square.  This is followed by frames that proclaim: “Workers of All Countries, and the Oppressed People of the World Unite” and as red banners stream across the screen, the first is held aloft by a black fist. The soundtrack of the film is the black spiritual “Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child” sung by Robeson.

What one feels missing between these exhibits, then, is attention to the proximity between them, the shared anxieties and hopes between “Invisible Man” and “After the Fall.” On the one hand we witness testimony to the fallibility of U.S. capitalism across a varied template of region and political persuasion, and on the other we witness the ruin of lives parsed through capitalism on a daily basis.  Both bespeak artistic and political disruption. They are linked by a mood of agitation. And what one hears echoing in the space between them is not only my children begging to go home but the belief that art has a place in the reconfiguration of American perception and reality, and that for the U.S. this legacy may have undeniably Soviet routes.