Future Pasts

March 11, 2018 By: Robert Spoo

This blog concerns itself with the messy, multidisciplinary spaces of the archives—both real and imagined. It brings together everyone involved in the creation of archives to discuss how these spaces shape, have shaped, and will shape the study of modernism.

May 7, 2025 By: Tobias Boes

In October of 1905, a defamation trial that would have a lasting impact on the development of literary modernism took place in the sleepy German harbor town of Lübeck. A lawyer with the slightly preposterous name “Ritter aus Tondern” was suing his cousin, the regionalist writer Johannes Valentin Dose, claiming that Dose had maliciously portrayed him as an alcoholic and an adulterer in the 1904 novel The Milksop ( Der Muttersohn)

May 7, 2025 By: Tobias Boes

Translated by Tobias Boes. Read his critical introduction here. The other day I was much abused in Lübeck, my hometown. My novel Buddenbrooks became the subject of a long and heated debate in a trial concerning the freedom of the press that was reminiscent of the Bilse affair. [1] It was a noisy matter, the particulars of which need not concern us very much. My novel has become an integral part of every public outrage about art, because its characters are partially based on living people, and...

January 29, 2025 By: Anne E. Fernald

On January 6, 1925, Jessie Redmon Fauset wrote a letter to Langston Hughes from Paris. It's a long letter—over a thousand words—and it balances advice with appeal in ways that capture the intimacy and strength of their friendship. Her first novel, There is Confusion, had been published in 1924 and Fauset was on leave from her position as the literary editor of The Crisis, studying and writing in Paris. She had planned the trip as a celebration: finally, at forty-two, she had published a novel...

September 12, 2024 By: Melissa J. Homestead

Melissa Homestead and Emily Rau have spent the past decade collaborating with Andrew Jewell and a team at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln to create the Complete Letters of Willa Cather. With 2,800 letters published at the time of this writing, the Complete Letters is an ongoing digital scholarly edition of all known letters written by American author Willa Cather. The edition features full transcriptions of the letters, detailed annotations, high-quality scans, and sophisticated searching and...

January 17, 2024 By: Joel Hawkes

By Joel Hawkes; Madison Robinson; Vanessa Funk; Katie Croudy-Hollott; Ella McQueen-Denz; Samantha Burt; Maya Smith; Marcus Tisot; Sam Oosterman; Alistair Corp; Devan Gillard; Emily Coldwell; Sean Godwin; Noah Brandon; Thomas Nienhuis In the fall of 2019, the Mary Butts Letters Project began seeking collaborators to help track, transcribe, digitize, and critique the letters of lesser-known British modernist author, Mary Butts (1890–1937). Scholars, librarians, undergraduate and graduate students...

November 30, 2022 By: William S. Brockman

James Joyce was an avid postcard writer at a time when the western world’s fascination with postcards was at its peak. We know of nearly a thousand postcards that he sent, dating from a Christmas card to Frances Sheehy Skeffington in 1898 to a card to his brother Stanislaus in early January 1941 announcing his arrival in Zurich only a week before his death. Postal correspondence is a fundamental point of reference in both Ulysses and Finnegans Wake, their texts replete with various postal media...

November 2, 2022 By: Scott Matthews

The past year’s global pandemic may be remembered as a time of boundaries: six foot or two-meter personal bubbles, restricted entry to and movement within public spaces, and the once-steady stream of international travellers reduced to a trickle. In many ways, this new reality further emphasized the concentrically fortified position occupied by the Special Collections archives housed in the University of Victoria’s McPherson Library. How does a department located in the basement of a locked...

March 23, 2022 By: Robert Spoo

This blog post is about an institution of modernism that is quite different from the ones that Lawrence Rainey examined in his groundbreaking book, Institutions of Modernism: Literary Elites and Public Culture. His subjects were patronage, collecting, speculation, investment, little magazines, and deluxe editions—institutions that marked modernism’s “tactical retreat” into a “counter-space securing a momentary respite from a public realm increasingly degraded [by mass media and market values]...

January 29, 2021 By: Frances Dickey

Almost as soon as they began corresponding in 1930, T. S. Eliot told Emily Hale that he treasured her letters—not just the words, but the paper itself: “I cannot bear to be separated from your letters at present, not so much for need to refer to the contents, some of which I repeat to myself often during the day and night, but for the touch of the paper and sight of the writing.”

November 12, 2020 By: Lauren M. Rosenblum

In Towards a Feminist Life, Sara Ahmed writes of feminism as “a fragile archive, a body assembled from shattering, from splattering, an archive whose fragility gives us responsibility.” [1] From this tenuous archive, I seek an affirming inclusion in modernist studies: Urmila Seshagiri explains in a recent Modernism/modernity Print Plus cluster that “the process of canon-formation––and deformation, and reformation––constitutes the simplest and yet the most complex act in feminist scholarship...

March 23, 2020 By: Margaret Konkol

In the opening days of 2020 modernists may have rejoiced over two significant events. On January 1, works published in 1924 entered the public domain. On January 2, Princeton University opened to the public the recently uncrated 1,131 letters from T. S. Eliot to Emily Hale. In these two opposing examples of the modernist archive 2020 stages a central tension between diffusion and enclosure, between the dream of a universal library—which paradoxically and simultaneously enacts a “library without...

September 4, 2019 By: Lauren Elle DeGaine

Southern Vancouver Island’s 100-kilometer-long BC-14 Highway slides predominantly east to west along British Columbia coastline through traditional Coast Salish territory. Beneath the old-growth trees that are the marrow of this lush ecosystem is the small, unincorporated community of Shirley, and the Cook Kettle Press (fig.1). Though small, the press is a regional hotbed of letterpress activity. As a print shop, it provides opportunities for artists to use its space and equipment. It also acts...

March 29, 2019 By: Joel Hawkes

Located in Special Collections at the University of Victoria is a little studied folder that contains fifty-one letters written by the British modernist author Mary Butts (1890-1937) to friend and fellow British modernist Douglas Goldring (1887-1960), with some few to Goldring’s second wife, Malin.

November 13, 2018 By: Amanda Golden

Alice Walker began 1982 with Virginia Woolf. Walker would spend the year recording events, plans, and phone numbers in spiral-bound pages of a calendar she had acquired filled with photographs of Woolf and her contemporaries. As Walker crossed out days, her purple ink seeped through one page, partly obscuring Woolf’s photograph on the verso. [1] The lines meet Woolf’s likeness, a purple X just passing her eye. The range of inks that Walker used throughout her calendar suggest that this was chance, but the ink also recalls Walker’s novel published the same year, The Color Purple; likely unbeknownst to Walker, it was also a color in which Woolf preferred to write. [2] It is the materiality of circumstance that makes this artifact a vestige of mass culture, everyday life, and artistic creation.

August 25, 2018 By: Amy Hildreth Chen

Using the modernist archive requires finding it first. The modernist archive does not live in one collection at one repository, such as a single university special collections department or one pivotal private library. Rather, the modernist archive is a term used to conceptualize a networked set of collections across many repositories in the United States or abroad. [1] The fact that the modernist archive is dispersed rather than centralized is critical because each institution’s holdings are more or less discoverable based on local application of user experience (UX) principles. Weave, a Journal of Library User Experience defines UX as employing a variety of methodologies to inform improvements to physical and digital space so that the user can easily access collections and services. Th US Department of Health and Human Services provides an overview of UX basics that, adapted for libraries and archives, would require repositories to identify their users, what they want, what skills they have, and which they don’t. According to Coral Sheldon-Hess, when UX is properly implemented, users of all levels of expertise can more easily access what they need. When UX is ignored or poorly applied, users are more likely to perpetuate pre-existing archival silences as well as less likely to have successful searches.

March 11, 2018 By: J. Matthew Huculak

The past twenty years, along with the promises and perils of the digital turn, have seen a robust engagement with the modernist archive. One can map nearly point for point the rise of the New Modernist Studies and the Modernist Studies Association with the rise of digital resources that have reenergized the field: the Modernist Journals Project (1997), the Modernist Magazines Project (2006), the Blue Mountain Project (2012), the Modernist Versions Project (2012), ModNets (2013), and the Modernist Archives Publishing Project (2013), among others, have all contributed to the “ expansive” forces enlarging the universe of material modernity.
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Cancelled in Purple: Alice Walker’s Virginia Woolf Calendar

November 13, 2018 By: Amanda Golden

Volume 3 Cycle 3

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Alice Walker began 1982 with Virginia Woolf. Walker would spend the year recording events, plans, and phone numbers in spiral-bound pages of a calendar she had acquired filled with photographs of Woolf and her contemporaries. As Walker crossed out days, her purple ink seeped through one page, partly obscuring Woolf’s photograph on the verso (fig. 1).[1] The lines meet Woolf’s likeness, a purple X just passing her eye. The range of inks that Walker used throughout her calendar suggest that this was chance, but the ink also recalls Walker’s novel published the same year, The Color Purple; likely unbeknownst to Walker, it was also a color in which Woolf preferred to write.[2] It is the materiality of circumstance that makes this artifact a vestige of mass culture, everyday life, and artistic creation.

Fig. 1. “Appointment book, 1982.” Alice Walker Papers, MSS. 1061, Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University.

Walker’s calendar is housed with her papers in Emory University’s Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library. Scholars are familiar with Walker’s response to A Room of One’s Own in her essay, “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens.”[3] In it Walker seeks the voices of African American women writers, those whom Woolf does not address. Walker had taught the fiction of Zora Neale Hurston, Nella Larsen, Toni Morrison and others in courses on Black Literature in America at Wellesley College and the University of Massachusetts at Boston in the spring of 1972.[4] Turning to her Woolf Calendar, we can see Walker as a consumer of the ephemera indexing the commodification of modernist writers like Woolf.[5] In this calendar, Woolf’s presence becomes a backdrop for Walker’s negotiation of daily life. Sara Crangle has pointed out that such minutia fill Virginia and Leonard Woolf’s “engagement” and “pocket diaries” housed at the University of Sussex.[6] These calendars record the Woolfs’ collective management of their home and business life, what Crangle calls their “domestic economy” (“Woolfian Domestic Economies,” 142). Years later, Walker’s calendar fulfills a similar role, albeit with Woolf at the periphery. As such, Woolf’s presence becomes inseparable from considerations of Walker’s calendar as an artifact. Ultimately, it dramatizes the process by which the emergence of the new means the cancellation of what came before.

Archival Remnants

The image in figure 1 almost crosses Woolf out, but not quite. The calendar pairs the photograph of Woolf at Monks House with lines from A Writer’s Diary that date from 1926: “And the truth is, one can’t write directly about the soul. Looked at, it vanishes.” The sentiment too becomes emblematic of the calendar from which it comes. It is a remnant of process, evidence of lived reality and the navigation of space. Walker refers to The Color Purple as “Purple” (underlining in the original) on November 11. On July 12, she documents that the novel “has sold 10,725 copies.” There is also a glimpse of her family life as her daughter adds her birthday. Calendars structure writers’ lives. Cristanne Miller has addressed Marianne Moore’s calendars as a resource, and scholars have mined Sylvia Plath’s 1962 Letts Tablet Diary, its contents ranging from daffodil sales to radio broadcasts.[7] In Walker’s case, we may want more evidence of her responses to the Woolf photographs and quotations. We cannot know whether they served as tacit inspiration, as ultimately what take precedence are the events arranged, information quickly collected, and numbers added.

The partially cancelled image of Woolf is Walker’s reaction to her predecessor. Amy E. Elkins has argued that the en dehors garde, an avant-garde that is more inclusive, is an art of the overturned, the reverse of that we have known. In “Craft as Negative Space,” Elkins takes the example of turning over H. D.’s tapestries, finding that “[t]he negative turns an image en dehors. The negative and positive together are necessary, but so often we only focus on the positive, the finished thing over the thing-in-process.” She concludes that “[a]n en dehors garde archive reveals the literary objects forgotten on the flip side.” This expanded archive was what Woolf sought in A Room of One’s Own, but Walker’s accidental defacement of Woolf’s photograph also draws attention to the ways that Walker transcends Woolf.

Women’s College Fiction

While Woolf had not been a student at either Newnham or Girton, the Cambridge colleges where she gave the lectures that became A Room of One’s Own, Walker had attended two women’s colleges. She studied at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia before completing her education at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York. It was at the latter that Walker took Contemporary Writers and the South with the poet Muriel Rukeyser in 1964.[8] In Rukeyser’s class, Walker composed a short story called “The Trip,” which is in her archive at Emory.[9] A version of this story, recounting a women’s college student’s experience returning to Georgia for her father’s funeral, was later published as “A Sudden Trip Home in the Spring,” and dedicated to “the Wellesley class.”[10] Expanding the story, Walker added the protagonist’s critique of the limited sense of the modernist literary canon at the women’s college she attends. In doing so, Walker may have been drawing on her recent experience teaching texts by African American women writers at Wellesley, redefining the textual landscape that students encountered.

Early in “A Sudden Trip Home in the Spring,” Sarah Davis confides to a classmate she is “thinking . . . of the child’s duty to his parents after they are dead” (251). Sarah is recalling Richard Wright, and realizes, “I forgot . . . they don’t teach Wright here” (252). She persists, speaking almost to herself: “‘why Tears Eliot, Ezratic Pound, and even Sara Teacake, and no Wright?’ She and Pamela thought e.e. cummings very clever with his perceptive spelling of great literary names” (252). While Sarah fills her dorm room with images of Gauguin and Picasso paintings, she is frustrated with her inability to paint or draw African American men. Following her visit home, she comes to understand that she should turn to sculpture, and “shall soon know how to make my grandpa up in stone (261; italics in original).[11] Her modernism becomes physical and material, seeking to capture strength and endurance. The texts that Walker taught by women writers told such stories.

Teaching Materials

When Walker taught Black Literature in America at Wellesley in 1972, she ordered her course books—Larsen’s Quicksand (1928), Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937), Ann Petry’s The Street (1946), Gwendolyn Brooks’s Maud Martha (1953), Paule Marshall’s Brown Girl, Brownstones (1959) and The Timeless Place, The Chosen People (1969), Morrison’s The Bluest Eye (1970), and Walker’s own The Third Life of Grange Copeland (1970)—from Hathaway House bookstore.[12] Walker brought these books not only to the classroom, but also to the bookstore where Plath paid a quarter in 1947 for Robert Frost’s poems, and where Anne Sexton, who lived in nearby Newton, once worked on her way to becoming a professional writer.[13] Bookstores provide an anchor for the consumer life of books, and the materials of college courses. They are a part of the economy of curricula, influencing a new generation of students.[14]

The Woolf calendar that Walker inscribed a decade after she taught at Wellesley was a different kind of commodity. It is a relic of celebrity or fan culture, one that readers might purchase, knowing it was produced for a popular audience. Jeremy Braddock has addressed the ways in which Claude McKay’s archive collects Nancy Cunard’s celebrity, and we see a similar case here in Walker’s ownership of Woolfiana. While McKay curated more of a collection as such, Walker’s calendar also had a functional role. In it, she documented the practicalities of art in the present.    

The photograph that Walker marked in her calendar approaches its subject indirectly. In profile, Woolf is focused. We cannot know her thoughts, but we may wonder what the image would look like if it were taken from a different angle, and if the setting or other people were visible. Holding what may be the cloth back of a chair, Woolf returns us to the material. The calendar’s impression of Woolf and Walker’s accidental encounter is intertwined with mass production and celebrity. We care about this artifact because it draws both women writers of notoriety together, converging aesthetically in purple ink, archiving art and life. 


Notes

I would like to thank Amy E. Elkins and Elizabeth J. Donaldson for their feedback on drafts of this piece.

 

[1] The calendar was designed and edited by Martha H. Starr and Elizabeth W. Hill (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1981). The photograph is acknowledged in the calendar as: “Virginia Woolf photographed at Monk’s House.” It had previously appeared in George Spater and Ian Parsons, A Marriage of True Minds: An Intimate Portrait of Leonard and Virginia Woolf (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977). “Appointment book, 1982,” box 214, folder 8, Alice Walker Papers, MSS. 1061, Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University.

[2] See Karen V. Kukil, Woolf in the World: A Pen and Press of Her Own, Smith College Libraries.

[3] Alice Walker, In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens: Prose (New York: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1983).

[4] Alice Walker, “Wellesley College: Black Literature in America, 1972,” box 92, folder 9 and “University of Massachusetts, African American Literature: Black Women Writers, 1972,” box 92, folder 8, Emory.

[5] See Brenda R. Silver, Virginia Woolf Icon (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1999), and her treatment of Woolf’s twenty-first century presence in “Virginia Woolf Icon” in The Edinburgh Companion to Virginia Woolf and the Arts, ed. Maggie Humm (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010): 392-413.

[6] Sara Crangle, “Out of the Archive: Woolfian Domestic Economies.” Modernism/modernity 23, no. 1 (2016): 141-176.

[7] Cristanne Miller, “The Marianne Moore Digital Archive and Feminist Modernist Digital Humanities.” Feminist Modernist Studies 1, vol. 3 (October 2018): 257-268; “Daily Diary of Sylvia Plath,” 1962, box 19, folder 2, Sylvia Plath Collection, Smith College.

[8] “SARAH LAWRENCE COLLEGE FACULTY REPORT. Report of ALICE WALKER.” 10 June 10 1964, box 216, folder 3, Emory.

[9] Alice Walker, “The Trip,” box 88, folder 10, Emory. See also Evelyn C. White, Alice Walker: A Life (New York: Norton, 2004), 109.)

[10] Alice Walker, “A Sudden Trip Home in the Spring.” The Complete Stories (1994; London: Orion Books, 2005), 248-261.

[11] Bethany Hicok has addressed the role of the women’s college in modernism, particularly with regard to Marianne Moore. See Degrees of Freedom: American Women Poets and the Women’s College 1905-1955 (Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 2008).

[12] A copy of the order form, filled out in November of 1971 remains in Walker’s papers. Alice Walker, Wellesley College: Black Literature in America, 1972, box 92 folder 9, Emory.

[13] Sylvia Plath, Letters of Sylvia Plath Volume 1: 1940-1956, ed. Peter K. Steinberg and Karen V. Kukil (New York: Harper Collins, 2017), 109. For the books in Plath’s library, see Peter K. Steinberg’s catalogue on LibraryThing. On Sexton see Diane Wood Middlebrook, Anne Sexton: A Biography (1991; New York: Random House, 1992), 26.

[14] Regarding Walker’s course, see also White, Alice Walker, 222-223 and Maria Lauret, Alice Walker (New York: Palgrave, 2000), 9.