Orientations

November 30, 2021 By: Amy E. Elkins

A space for reorienting ourselves as scholars, teachers, writers, and practitioners of interdisciplinary modernist studies to the feminist, to the queer—and also a space for sustained orientation to feminist and queer modernisms.

March 18, 2026 By: Laura Hartmann-Villalta

The George Peabody Library in Baltimore, Maryland is not accessible from the street; one must traverse two anterooms before entering into that magnificent, public library. It is in one of these anterooms—a very large open room with wooden floors and tall windows open to the street—that the Gertrude Stein in Circles: Spheres of Life and Writing exhibition was held from September 22, 2024 through March 2, 2025 at Johns Hopkins University. With material drawn from archives across Johns Hopkins’s...

November 20, 2025 By: Claire Bracken

In March of 2020, right before the COVID-19 lockdown, we—then-undergraduate Marissa Stinson and her Rider University professor Laurel Harris—visited the Special Collections at Princeton University’s Firestone Library to sift through boxes of Sylvia Beach’s papers . Rider is a fifteen-minute car ride down Route 206 from Beach’s hometown of Princeton. The accessibility of Beach’s and the Shakespeare and Company’s archives offered us a local connection to James Joyce’s iconic Irish modernist novel Ulysses (1922). Unsure of what we would find, we wound up spending the day particularly focused on Box 49, which includes a series of letters from around the world sent to Joyce in care of Beach in the 1920s and 1930s.

November 21, 2024 By: Laura Tscherry

Although I have been living alone for a few years, I still remember having roommates and how communal living shapes domestic space and the rhythms of daily life. I remember how thin walls, bleary mornings, and long evenings in shared kitchens and living rooms inevitably lead you to learn more about your cohabitants than you’d perhaps like, the mutual exposure to daily patterns of work and leisure, mood shifts, and the vicissitudes of bodies creating an intimacy that emerges from the slow...

September 18, 2024 By: Victoria Papa

In the introduction to her 500-page unpublished manuscript, A Mirror for a Star, A Star for a Mirror, held in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the writer, teacher, astrologer, farmer, and herbalist Silvia Dobson recounts her first correspondence with H.D. in 1933—a “rapturous” fan letter sent to a poet whom she did not know was “a man or a woman? Alive or dead?”

May 16, 2024 By: Amy E. Elkins

When Alice Oswald delivered her final lecture as Oxford Professor of Poetry in 2023, she (once again) made new the modernist manifesto. Counterblast! (a manifesto for poetry) launches the futurists on a rocket ship back to Homer via stanzas containing questions about how we come to sense each other in a vortex, since “after all humans are dark inland pools full of anguish and panic-stricken love.” As an orientation, poetry becomes an “architecture of profusion,” multiplying and mobilizing...

November 1, 2023 By: Lauren M. Rosenblum

As Janine Utell writes of her experience in the opening post of this forum, reader reports can helpfully push our work forward towards publication. But she also points out that they can (perhaps unintentionally) dismantle our attempts to draw attention to what is excluded from conventional scholarly inquiry. I, too, recently was struck by a particularly provocative comment on an article I submitted on the writer Katherine Mansfield, and similarly have now come to realize that traditional...

October 5, 2023 By: Jess Shollenberger

Personal writing is having a moment. The recent attention to autotheory has enlivened longstanding debates about the politics of the personal as a critical scholarly mode, opening out new lines of inquiry into genre, method, and argument specifically around minoritarian aesthetics and the potential of scholarly work to elaborate forms of social justice. [1] Across what Robyn Wiegman has called “identity knowledges,” the institutionalized fields of study that focus on gender, race, ethnicity...

April 27, 2023 By: Andrea Zemgulys

Over the last decade, #MeToo and the work of activists like Tarana Burke have brought attention to tacitly permitted sexual exploitation on university campuses and in work environments both on and off the clock. As #MeToo transformed the world around me, rumors I had come across in my scholarship regarding a poet laureate from nearly two centuries ago took on new significance. The rumors hinted at coercion and violation experienced by young women who found themselves in the company of Alfred...

November 16, 2022 By: Catherine W. Hollis

Archival research in the 1990s involved #2 pencils and handwritten transcriptions, later painstakingly typed into a desktop computer. The archival research I undertook then as a grad student was a labor of love, a “passion project” in the spirit of Melanie Micir’s phrase for feminist modernist recovery work. Copying over (twice!) the letters and diaries of modernists like Djuna Barnes or Jean Rhys engraved their words deep in my memory. While researching early draft versions of Barnes’s...

October 12, 2022 By: Melissa Bradshaw

Amy Lowell is tired. “This is a work, this poetry,” she writes Harriet Monroe in March of 1922, finalizing the poems she’ll have included in the 1922 version of Monroe and Alice Corbin Henderson’s The New Poetry anthology. Lowell had published her eighth and ninth books the previous year, and would publish her tenth in ten years later that fall. She has pulled back on the rigorous lecturing schedule which has kept her away from her home in Brookline, Massachusetts and has had her crisscrossing the country the past several years.

September 30, 2022 By: Zoë Henry

In overturning Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court has rejected the notion that Americans have a constitutional right to privacy, opening the door to states’ policing of the bodies of women and others who can become pregnant. While it has been widely noted that the rolling back of reproductive rights will affect Black and Brown women disproportionately, less attention has been paid to what this means for their experience of privacy. As some scholars have suggested, privacy feels definitionally impossible for women of color, insofar as racial visibility in public spaces leads often to surveillance and harm.

July 14, 2022 By: Elizabeth Blake

In 1990, when Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick declared the closet “the defining structure for gay oppression in this century,” she followed that claim with a reference to the legal discourses of privacy, specifically those concentrated around the 1986 case Bowers v. Hardwick, which upheld the existence of anti-sodomy laws. As she describes them, the conversations following this case zoomed in on “the image of the bedroom invaded by policemen,” implicitly affirming that queerness belongs behind closed doors, while policemen belong in the street.

March 27, 2022 By: Erica Gene Delsandro

Bristling. I don’t use this word much, and I definitely do not see it on the page often. Maybe that is why it stood out to me when Carrie Rohman (whose post you can read here) employed it in her keynote at the Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf in June 2021. It seemed offhand but managed to strike me as significant. Carrie was saying something about how we—women, I think, in the context of her talk, but let’s circle back to this we later—bristle when we encounter familiar but nonetheless distressing articulations of sexism and misogyny in our places of work.

March 26, 2022 By: Carrie Rohman

Erica Delsandro’s galvanizing post about the possibilities and limitations of collective feminist bristling helps signal to us all just how much work, and how much care-ful work, needs to be done around issues of gendered disadvantage, and other forms of institutionalized abuse, in our profession. I want to deliberately evoke the tradition of feminist care ethics at the outset of this discussion, in part because my recent scholarly attentions to gendered experiences of ill-treatment and disadvantage in academia may seem a strange departure from my long-standing commitments in animal studies and performance studies.

November 30, 2021 By: Janine Utell

When I was in the process of proposing and developing the volume that became Teaching Modernist Women’s Writing in English, one of my peer reviewers noted an orientation towards the celebratory, a somewhat uncritical extolling of the vibrancy of modernist women’s writing. I had found such vibrancy in communities of modernist scholars as I was working on the volume, roundtables and seminars at the annual MSA conference, including one convened in honor of Jane Marcus shortly after her death. The...
Peer Reviewed
Print Plus Exclusive

“Read a Dirty Book”: James Joyce, Samuel Steward, and the Orientations of Literary Rebellion

November 20, 2025 By: Claire Bracken

Volume 10 Cycle 2

Tags:

In March of 2020, right before the COVID-19 lockdown, we—then-undergraduate Marissa Stinson and her Rider University professor Laurel Harris—visited the Special Collections at Princeton University’s Firestone Library to sift through boxes of Sylvia Beach’s papers. Rider is a fifteen-minute car ride down Route 206 from Beach’s hometown of Princeton. The accessibility of Beach’s and the Shakespeare and Company’s archives offered us a local connection to James Joyce’s iconic Irish modernist novel Ulysses (1922). Unsure of what we would find, we wound up spending the day particularly focused on Box 49, which includes a series of letters from around the world sent to Joyce in care of Beach in the 1920s and 1930s.

The box includes a 1921 letter from George Bernard Shaw, who backhandedly praises Joyce’s ability to capture the “foul mouthed, foul minded derision and obscenity” of a Dublin he opted to leave at age 20.[1] It also contains a 1934 letter from horrified Californian socialist-feminist activist Kate Crane-Gartz who turned directly to Molly Bloom’s monologue at the novel’s end, having been told it was “the vilest chapter ever written,” to find “it was just that.”[2] One of our most compelling finds, however, came from an Ohio State University undergraduate writing to Joyce in 1928 to request a copy of Ulysses, then censored in the United States (fig. 1). The writer notes that “the University library has your Ulysses in the stacks, but refuses to let it out to students other than those who somehow have obtained permission to read it.”[3] The writer defines himself as “an unheard of student at an institution of ‘higher learning.’ At least, that’s what the proletariat calls it” (Steward to Joyce).

Page with text
Fig. 1. Samuel Steward’s 1928 letter to James Joyce sent through Shakespeare & Company, Special Collections, Princeton University. Used with permission from Michael Williams.

Who was this playfully self-deprecating undergrad? And what does his letter tell us about the circulation of Ulysses in the United States before the 1933 obscenity trial? We did some sleuthing and discovered that this “unheard of student”—the young Samuel Steward—had a compelling literary career ahead of him. He became an English professor—first at Ohio State University, then at Carroll College in Helena, Montana, State College of Washington in Pullman, Washington, and DePaul University in Chicago. He wrote the once well-regarded and now long out-of-print debut novel Angels on the Bough (1936). While he was living in Chicago, Steward became one of Alfred Kinsey’s collaborators. In addition, he became a tattoo artist who, after a move to Oakland, California, was the artist for the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club. From the 1950s through to the 1980s, he wrote queer pornography under various pen names. He also cultivated significant modernist literary connections, maintaining a close relationship with Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas throughout his life, dining with Thomas Mann, and roaming the streets of Paris with Thornton Wilder. As he notes in his memoir, Steward as a young writer frequently reached out to the writers he admired as he did in this letter to Joyce (fig. 2).[4]

Photo of man leaning
Fig. 2. Photograph of Samuel Steward, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Used with permission from Michael Williams. 

The two-page letter Marissa and Laurel uncovered in the archive offered us a delightful (missed) connection between Steward and Joyce. With twentieth-century Irish literature scholar Claire Bracken—our third coauthor on this piece—we traced a transatlantic story of the representation of illicit sexuality and modernist literary aesthetics. The (missed) connection between Joyce and Steward returns to one of the key questions Benjamin Kahan highlights in his introduction to the 2016 Modernism/modernity Print Plus cluster “What is Sexual Modernity?”: How is the representation of queer modernity realized through the aesthetic affordances and generative obfuscations of literary modernist forms?[5] Steward’s career exemplifies across the twentieth century the recursive relationship between queer representation and literary modernism. Drawing from this unanswered correspondence, our article orients Steward’s fiction, and, indeed, his remarkable career, through cultural proscription and experimental aesthetics. Steward’s career unexpectedly connects multiple strands of modernism—bridging the urban centers of Paris and Chicago with the bohemian world of Depression-era Columbus, Ohio (reflective of Dublin in its marginality against the great modernist cities) and returning to the high-modernist 1920s throughout eccentric genre novels—pornography and mystery—written in the 1970s and 1980s. The long arc of Steward’s modernist career attests to how nonlinear our literary and political histories can be, an important reminder in a moment in which the censorship of the representation of sexuality, particularly LGBTQ+ sexuality, has become again a central political touchstone.

“A Terrible Stew”: Permission to Read Ulysses

We aren’t the first scholars whose attention has been drawn to this particular letter. In a reflection on his 1992 biography James Joyce: A Literary Life, Steward’s former Ohio State University professor Morris Beja regrets he was unable to include his passages on the young Steward’s letter. Recalling a corresponding phone call he had with Steward upon his discovery of the letter, he writes: “Without doing my homework, on an impulse I immediately picked up the phone and called him—and he answered on the first ring. . . . By the way, Joyce never did answer his letter. And I never did include Sam’s story in my book.”[6] We also learn from the notes in Steward’s autobiography that he narrowly missed meeting Joyce in person many years later when, in 1937, he frequented a bar at the Carlton Elite in Zurich, where Joyce had stayed just the previous week.[7]

As we explored the connection between Steward and Joyce, we discovered that the Ohio State University library did indeed have a copy of Ulysses when Steward wrote his letter in 1928 (fig. 3). Steward writes to Joyce that he is “in a terrible stew” because “the University library has your Ulysses in the stacks, but refuses to let it out to students other than those who somehow have obtained permission to read it” (Steward to Joyce). Given that Ulysses was at the time a banned book in the United States, it makes sense that the library would have such restrictions. A survey of academic and public librarians Random House publisher Bennett Cerf conducted in May of 1932 reveals that some libraries did possess copies of Ulysses in their collections despite its illegality. [8]  Twenty-four librarians—mostly academic—noted they had the book thanks to travel to London and Paris. These librarians also noted that the cost of such a difficult-to-find artifact was as prohibitive as legality (Brockman, “American Librarians,” 67–8).

Page with text
Fig. 3. Title page of one of the two 1922 editions of Ulysses in Ohio State University (OSU) library collections. While it’s possible that this is the edition Steward aspired to borrow, its provenance is unclear. Materials prior to the establishment of the Rare Books Room at OSU were purchased for what OSU curator calls the “rare book closet” and were often only kept in the closet for a short period of time before entering circulating collections. Based on the good condition of the OSU library’s two 1922 copies, an OSU curator thought it was unlikely that either of the two editions in the collection had been purchased in 1924. Used with permission from Ohio State University Libraries.

In the completed Ohio State University questionnaire, librarian Earl N. Manchester states that the library does have a copy of Ulysses (“one”), which was obtained in 1924 through a “bookseller” (fig. 4). Additional information gleaned from the questionnaire is that there was “intermittent demand” for Ulysses from “both” authors and students for a book that, according to Manchester, is an “interesting example of a modern form of expression.”[9]

Page with text
Fig. 4. Ohio State University librarian Earl N. Manchester’s response to Bennett Cerf’s 1932 survey of librarians about Joyce’s Ulysses, Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin. Used with permission from the Morris Ernst Estate.

Whether or not the “smuggled” copy of Ulysses that Steward recounts reading during his college years was obtained through the library, we do know that Steward’s attempt to reach Joyce through this solicitation was never successful (Steward, Lost Autobiography, 63). However, most of his other youthful attempts to reach his modernist influences did pay off. As detailed in his book Dear Sammy: Letters from Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Steward sent Stein a letter in 1932, and a friendship blossomed.[10] The copy of Angels on the Bough that we read for this project from Yale’s Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscripts Library is Stein’s own copy, with an endearing written inscription from Steward on the opening page: “For Gertrude Stein, against the one day we will meet, with affectionate admiration for her and all her work has meant to me. Sam Steward.” Stein and Steward did indeed meet, with Steward visiting her and Toklas in France in 1937 and 1939, initiating a lifelong friendship (Dear Sammy, 5, 28) (fig. 5).

Page with text
Fig. 5. Inscription to Stein on Steward’s Angels on the Bough, Caxton, 1936, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Used with permission from Michael Williams.

Steward’s growing friendship with one of the formidable figures of twentieth-century modernism is evident in the experimentation of his early work. However, Angels on the Bough has much more in common with Joyce’s fiction than with Stein’s work. And it is Joyce to whom Steward writes first, four years before his first letter to Stein. In the 1928 letter, Steward flatters Joyce, telling him how “I have just read and re-read your Portrait of the Artist, and your Dubliners, and I couldn’t rest until I told you how I enjoyed them.” While Steward failed to meet him or engage a correspondence, Joyce’s presence nevertheless permeates Angels on the Bough.

James Joyce in Columbus, Ohio: “Dirty Books” and Literary Exchange

Set in Columbus, Ohio in the early period of the twentieth century, Angels on the Bough paints a lively portrait of a group of characters who, in various ways, are stifled by their environs. The novel is more akin to Joyce’s Dubliners than to something more local, such as Sherwood Anderson’s short story cycle Winesburg, Ohio (1919). It’s structured episodically, with each chapter focusing (for the most part) on a different character and their perspective, as we move through a bohemian group of young people during a Great Depression summer. Paralysis, the Joycean word par excellence, is a condition similarly experienced by the characters of Angels on the Bough, with the term itself self-consciously engaged by Steward towards the end of the novel, as one character Mary describes her constraint moving through town on a tram:

Vainly Mary cast about for help, feeling that she was drowning, or choking, or dying. Beads of moisture filled the lines of her palms and appeared upon her upper lip. She wanted to get out, to run, to scream—it was impossible to sit there. And yet she could not move. A paralysis wound around her . . .[11]

Mary’s inability to move, her sense of being stuck in place, conjures up images of the character Eveline in Joyce’s Dubliners, fixed in place and unable to move at the story’s end. Ideas of escape pervade Angels on the Bough, with some characters experiencing the small city life of Columbus, Ohio as a release from their more rural and stifling backgrounds, while others feel stuck there, anxious to get away.

Each character in Angels on the Bough reflects, as Spring writes, “some aspect of Steward’s own personality” (Secret Historian, 37). One central character Richard Dominay conjures up the specter of Joyce’s own biographical character, Stephen Dedalus, as a bookish young man working on his doctorate at the University. His friendship with another central character, Tom Cave, recalls the Cranly and Stephen amity in Portrait of the Artist. The Tom Cave character straddles both Cranly and Stephen. While the novel initially sets him up as the acquaintance-friend of Richard, mirroring Cranly’s foil position in Joyce’s novel, Cave’s own conflicts are akin to Stephen’s. Like Stephen in Portrait of the Artist, Tom struggles between sexual desire and the religious demands of Catholicism. Also like Stephen, he ultimately chooses desire and the body. 

And it is a “dirty book” that, for Tom, engenders his rejection of the self-abnegating values of Catholicism. As he tries to avoid all sexual pleasures in preparation for the spiritual demands of his new religiosity, Mary throws some reading material his way: “‘I've got a swell new book you'll love to read.’ She hurried to the bookcase and pulled out a small volume in a red paper cover. ‘Here it is. It’s called The Town Bull, and is it hot! Boy!’ She handed it to him. ‘I know you still like to read a dirty book as much as ever’” (Steward, Angels on the Bough, 247). The chapter ends with him taking the book. Is this Steward’s nod to the most infamous “dirty book” of all in the 1920s–1930s: the banned Ulysses?[12]

While the U.S. trial against Ulysses propped the book up as an affront to young women’s purity and innocence, focusing especially on the “Nausicaa” episode and Gerty MacDowell’s sexual revelations, it is a young woman—Mary—who gives Tom the book that invokes his transformation. Steward was dismissed from his university position on the publication of Angels on the Bough because of his sympathetic representation of Mary, a character who has several sexual partners and is unapologetically open with her sexuality. As Spring writes, Mary, the “good-natured floozy,” reflects Steward’s own sexuality though it is represented as straight (Spring, Secret Historian, 37). She carries the traces not just of Gerty, but also Molly and her sexual frankness in Ulysses’ final episode. Oh, and yes, Molly likes those “dirty books” too.

While Molly spends much of June 16, 1904 (the day that Ulysses is set) at home, her husband Leopold Bloom is out and about on the Dublin streets. Like his fellow protagonist Stephen Dedalus, he is keyless, locked out of his house and unable to return home. Steward’s 1928 letter to Joyce asking for access to his famous novel rehearses this condition of exclusion: he doesn’t have the key to access the banned book; he is hoping Joyce himself might provide that key. Intriguingly, in Angels on the Bough, we learn that Richard has also had some key issues:

Yes, Mr. Dominay thought, he didn't forget to bring his key along this time. His hand touched it in his pocket to assure him. It had been embarrassing to leave the house without it, as he had done once or twice, and be compelled to ring the doorbell and have one of those poor old ladies come hobbling down the stairs at three in the morning to let him in. (Steward, Angels on the Bough, 49).

While Bloom forgets his key, Richard does not: he now has the access he needs, just as Steward himself eventually got his hands on Ulysses during his college years, before writing Angels on the Bough. The key motif is a nice little nod to Joyce and to a novel that gave Steward access to a whole range of experimental forms and a license to play.

LGBTQ+ Archives and Modernist Returns: Queer Literary Obscenity in Steward’s Later Work

Despite the positive reviews Angels on the Bough received from venues like The New York Times, it was never reprinted, and Steward did not embark on a more conventional career as a novelist.[13] Indeed, the novel exists today only in archives and used book repositories. Steward worked on his memoirs and wrote pornographic novels under the pen name Phil Andros through the 1960s and 1970s. The Tom of Finland designed 1984 cover of The Boys in Blue (1970) is shown here (fig. 6). In the 1980s, he returned to the modernist moment of which he had both been a part and of which had passed him by, another missed connection, in his also out-of-print—but utterly delightful—mystery novels featuring Stein and Toklas—Murder Is Murder Is Murder (1985) and The Caravaggio Shawl (1989)as well as in the 1984 novel introducing his young alter-ego self, Parisian Lives (fig. 7). Scott Herring claims of this shift that Steward transformed in these later-in-life, later-than modernism, novels from “a fledgling groupie [of modernist writers] in his late twenties to a bona fide modernist author by his midseventies. . . . Steward emerged near the end of his biological existence as a master modernist après la lettre.[14] Returning to the modernist scene—and inserting a younger version of himself into it, just as Joyce does with Stephen Dedalus in Ulysses—Steward’s novels reintroduce the profane zing of the moment, elucidating modernist queer sexuality in a way that wasn’t possible in Angels on the Bough.

Book cover with drawing of cop
Fig. 6. Cover of The Boys in Blue (Perineum Press Book, 1984). Cover drawing by Tom of Finland.
Book cover depicting three men in Paris
Fig. 7. Cover of The Caravaggio Shawl (Alyson Publications, 1989). Cover drawing by Bradley Look.

Joyce’s sexual salaciousness in Ulysses is here in The Caravaggio Shawl as well. In the chapter “Kayaking up the Medulla Oblongata,” Stein has an unpunctuated, “dirty,” Molly Bloom-esque train of untrammeled thought while walking through the Luxembourg Gardens. This chapter is at once a parody of and homage to Joyce and Stein simultaneously, beginning with Stein’s reflection, “I am a lot smarter than Molly Bloom” (Steward, The Caravaggio Shawl, 145). Later in the passage, Stein reflects, “I am mighty glad I am like I am liking lifting bellies and caesars and seize hers and loads of cow coming out instead of little squalling bundles and glad too that I have Pussy instead of some great beast of a husband and that is amusing that I have two pussies instead of one . . .” (146). This parodic transmutation of Molly’s monologue through sexually provocative Steinian wordplay also reveals how unspeakable explicit queer sexuality was in the 1920s and 1930s even as Molly’s monologue gave explicit voice to one woman’s sexuality as imagined by another male writer.

Luckily for his own legacy, Steward was an obsessive archivist, from keeping detailed diaries to carefully maintaining a “Stud File” of his sexual experiences (fig. 8). Recalling the character Mary and her sexual exploits in Angels on the Bough, we can retroactively read her through Steward’s later works as a powerful stand-in for Steward’s own desires. Steward writes of his first meeting with the sex researcher Alfred Kinsey—with whom he collaborated for years—in 1949: “The thing that amazed him most of all . . . was that I was a record keeper . . . I had an accurate count on the number of persons I had been to bed with, the total number of times of ‘releases’ (as he termed them) with other persons, number of repeats . . . I had kept on three-by-five cards from my very first contact many years before in Ohio. My information like Kinsey’s was coded, but not so unbreakably or exhaustively” (Spring, Secret Historian, 116). Nevertheless, the fate of Steward’s copious archives—contributing to an LGBTQ+ history he himself was gathering—fell to the labors of his biographer and the flux of happenstance and luck.

Photo of filing cabinet
Fig. 8. Sam Steward’s Stud File, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Used with permission from Michael Williams.

Spring relates how he was also introduced to his subject through letters he found in another’s archive: “While writing a book on the artist Paul Cadmus, I found a group of letters from Steward in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscripts Library at Yale. The letters amazed and delighted me, for they were highly risqué and often very funny” (Spring, Secret Historian, xi). In the preface to his biography of Steward, Spring describes the archival journey that ensued. Finding a few archival traces of Steward through the archives of others—Kinsey, Stein—Spring eventually tracked down a manuscripts dealer in Berkeley who connected him to Michael Williams, a librarian and the executor of Steward’s estate. Williams introduced Spring to an attic full of Steward’s archival collections (xii). Beinecke Library acquired Steward’s archives from Williams in 2012.[15] As Martin Joseph Ponce and Debra A. Moddelmog note, interest in Steward’s paper was delayed by a “glut” of papers by queer writers seeking a home in the wake of the AIDS epidemic (“Introduction,” 9). Parts of Steward’s archives are now relatively open at least to the academic public, thanks to Spring’s biography, publication of works by Steward such as his memoirs and letters to Stein, and institutional archival accessibility through the Beinecke Library and Ohio State University. At the same time, none of Steward’s fiction remains in print and the story of Steward’s archives attests to the precarity of the archive itself. As Marissa pointed out in one of our discussions, the story of Steward’s archive was akin to that of Ulysses—or perhaps, more accurately, Bloom—fumbling his way home.

“Dirty Books,” Contemporary Culture Wars, and Archival Orientations

As the three coauthors of this piece, we read Steward’s contributions to modernism through different, but intersecting lenses. Claire and Laurel are academics with access to university libraries through which Phil Andros’s now quaintly literary pornographic novels can still be requested via Interlibrary Loan if they aren’t available in the stacks. Having received her Masters of Library Science after graduating from Rider, Marissa is currently a Young Adult Librarian at the Willingboro Public Library. She is thus at the forefront of our current culture wars over censorship. As Marissa is particularly well-aware in acquiring and maintaining her YA collection, what appears in public stacks and how it is categorized defines what is literary against what is obscene, what is age appropriate versus what is not age appropriate. Though they haven’t yet affected her acquisitions, our bad faith culture wars have particularly targeted texts that feature LGBTQ+ sexuality in public libraries and schools.

Moreover, these culture wars have morphed since January 2025, with the current administration’s increasingly fascist regime targeting sites of academic and public learning, which includes both institutions of higher education and public libraries. As we enter this new regime of repressive censorship, stories like Steward’s are all the more instructive and necessary. This missed—or not-so-missed—connection we trace here between Steward and Joyce through an archival discovery shows the limitations as well as the affordances that modernist literary experimentation offered for the representation of (queer) sexuality throughout the twentieth century. We have incorporated this insight into our pedagogies and practices, filling in the (missed) connections that contextualize the wreckage of our own twenty-first-century culture wars.


Notes

[1] Shaw to Beach, June 11, 1921, Princeton University Special Collections 49.

[2] Crane-Gartz to Beach, February 23, 1934, Princeton University Special Collections 49.

[3] Sam M. Steward to Joyce, April 27, 1928, Princeton University Special Collections 49.

[4] Justin Spring, Secret Historian: The Life and Times of Samuel Steward, Professor, Tattoo Artist, and Sexual Renegade (New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2010), ix-x.

[5] Benjamin Kahan, “What is Sexual Modernity?,” Modernism/modernity Print Plus 1, no. 3 (2016).

[6] Morris Beja, “Citizen Joyce, or My Quest for Rosebud,” Journal of Modern Literature 22, no. 2 (1999):, 205–214, 210–11.

[7] Samuel Steward, The Lost Autobiography of Samuel Steward: Recollections of an Extraordinary Twentieth-Century Gay Life, ed. Jeremy Mulderig (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018), 118.

[8] William S. Brockman, “American Librarians and Early Censorship of ‘Ulysses’: ‘Aiding the Cause of Free Expression’?,” Joyce Studies Annual 5 (1994): 56–74. 

[9] “Library and Bookseller Surveys,” Morris Ernst Papers, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center 364.2–3, 581.13.

[10] Samuel Steward, ed., Dear Sammy: Letters from Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1977), 4.

[11] Samuel Steward, Angels on the Bough (Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Printers, 1936): 293–4, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.

[12] This moment is also a nod to the presence of Joris-Karl Huysmans’s À rebours (1884) read through Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890) as Steward suggests in Chapters from an Autobiography (San Francisco: Grey Fox Press, 1981), 29.

[13] Spring, Secret Historian, 36.

[14] Scott Herring, Aging Moderns: Art, Literature, and the Experiments of Later Life (New York: Columbia University Press, 2022), 53.

[15] Martin Joseph Ponce and Debra A. Moddelmog, introduction to Samuel Steward and the Pursuit of the Erotic (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2017), 9.