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In the introduction to her 500-page unpublished manuscript, A Mirror for a Star, A Star for a Mirror, held in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the writer, teacher, astrologer, farmer, and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...
Print Plus Exclusive

Queer “Orientations” as Counterblast Manifesto

May 16, 2024 By: Amy E. Elkins

Volume 8 Cycle 3

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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, rather than isolating and containing.[1] Even so, we are surprised halfway through the lecture to find ourselves transported off the battlefield, off the warship—and into the sewing room. In a radical turn, Oswald shifts her reading from the great poets of the past to a new kind of declaration, a “Manifesto for stitchwork written in Dutch for the feminist handwork party”—“a political feminist artist movement that is dedicated to studying, repairing, speaking, patching up, unlearning and mending. We want to restore the disturbed relationship to our immediate surroundings,” she says, “and a damaged world as a whole. The act of repairing textiles plays an important part in this because it is an exercise in slowing down, embodying and transforming. Through this we are connecting with the underexposed long-standing history of women” (Oswald, “Counterblast!”). She argues for the paradox of “optimism and anger” forming the warp and weft of feminist handiwork in “Stitch and Bitch” societies before taking us on a dizzying tour through the patching and mending of the Bayeaux Tapestry and Helen’s stitching of the Trojan War, source texts that would inform the actual “sewing together” of Homer’s epic by his original editor (Oswald, “Counterblast!”).

The counterblast, then, is a sort of feminist pushback and patchwork, a handmade response to potentially life-threatening or even world-ending problems and provocations. And it is also a collective. It queers the manifesto, the epic, and the rhapsode through a collective vision of the sewing circle where “multiple minds” might coexist, repairing and mending with an orientation towards progress (fig. 1; Oswald, “Counterblast!”). How might an orientation towards our damaged world also be a kind of counter-solidarity? Can we imagine a scholarly practice that puts its hands on pressing issues through radical, transformative forms of scholarship that embrace slowing down, queer association, and creative-critical resistance? Or more simply, as Sylvia Plath asks, “What ceremony of words can patch the havoc?”[2]

A group of people sewing
Fig. 1. Image of a sewing circle at the Decorating Dissidence conference, 2017. Image by the author and appears in Crafting Feminism from Literary Modernism to the Multimedia Present (Oxford University Press, 2022).

As I sat down to write this post as the new editor of “Orientations”—with questions such as these at the front of my mind—I received an email from Virginia Woolf scholar Maggie Humm. In her note, she shared that she just finished reading my first book—a study on feminist and queer writing, craftwork, and archives—which prompted her to dig up her own craft archive of feminist and political resistance (fig. 2). Ephemera and lyric sheets from the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp protests include songs and imagery in which, she said, “webs and weaving were major themes. We are the Flow song has the line: ‘we are the flow and we are the ebb. We are the weavers we are the web.’” In the flow and ebb of critical reflection, scholarship strikes me as a deeply woven thing, a product of its processes, a bringing together of various strands of analysis, citation, and critique. How might we, as modernist scholars, make the woven nature of scholarship and the archive more visible for our readers? Do these practices offer new orientations to research?

By expanding the archive of what counts as a scholarly source or a primary document—from Oswald’s lecture-in-verse-as-manifesto or Humm’s protest lyrics—we may queer our intellectual practices, demonstrating the inclusive potential of the collective.[3] In what follows, I offer a set of interwoven provocations for this new chapter of the “Orientations” forum, in the spirit of the counterblast manifesto.

Line drawing of woman on cover
Fig. 2. Greenham Commons Protest Songbook, 1982. From the collection of and used with permission of Maggie Humm.

Feminist Hammers: Dismantling/Repairing

I designed a recent workshop to shift the feminist counterblast from theory to method, testing the potential of process and scholarly collective-making—and collective(ly) making. Hosted by the Interdisciplinary Modernisms workshop at the University of Georgia, my session centered on craft’s dynamic potential for queer subversion, arguing, in part, for the ecological significance of waste or scraps to craft’s upcycled orientations. After my talk, I led a hands-on eco-printed artist’s book workshop. In exploring how modernist feminist and queer writers embraced experiment and play, we paid attention to the reappropriation of tools such as the hammer, needle, or scissors for collaborative and alternately sociable forms of scholarship; Fred Moten, for example, champions a “writing practice” that “improvise[s], where one composes in real time in common.”[4] Sara Ahmed calls noticing (as in, observing sites of inequity or noting areas for improvement) “the feminist killjoy’s hammer.”[5] I handed out rubber mallets and pointed towards a bowl of earplugs; that morning before my talk, I’d picked up bags of plant waste from the University Botanical Garden’s flower curator so that participants could hammer flowers onto linen and cotton pages that I’d dyed with kitchen scraps. They decorated their pages with text before binding their books with needle and thread (figs. 3–4). Not only did our creations raise questions about what constitutes a book, we also played with the processes of craft, pushing ideas of modernist experiment into the realm of queer and collaborative praxis. By calling attention to the possibilities of mark-making—from physical contact as intimacy and feelings of being under pressure to affects of estrangement in political life and interference as an artistic practice—we more rigorously explored the various inroads craft processes offer to our theoretical frameworks.

Woman working on craft
Fig. 3. Workshop participants at the University of Georgia’s Interdisciplinary Modernisms Workshop.
Women working on crafts
Fig. 4. Workshop participants at the University of Georgia’s Interdisciplinary Modernisms Workshop.

And yet, what struck me most about this workshop, and others like it I’ve led or in which I’ve participated, is the way the room buzzes. Our academic work often happens in isolation, and our gatherings are often weighted with the pain of precarity or current events as we attune ourselves to the intersecting challenges of working in higher education today. In bringing folks together in new ways, we feel the energy of the collective more acutely, emboldened (rather than threatened) by our individual and communal pursuit of knowledge. When Janine Utell launched this forum in 2021 with “A Provocation, A Welcome, An Invitation,” she reflected on her experience writing and publishing feminist modernist scholarship alongside a growing sense of “modernism’s attention” to community and praxis. Calling upon Sara Ahmed’s queer phenomenology, Utell imagines a space for the “radical openness and feminist practice” of the “pedagogical, the theoretical, the practical, the activist” as productively disruptive intersections.[6] In the workshop at UGA, I used plant waste to help us more deeply consider the ecological duration of craft, how decay and agency might shift depending on the surface, and to experiment with tactile or haptic ways of knowing. This forum offers similar potential for experiment and play, for scholarship that queers the project of modernist studies itself through multiple points of entry, varied practices—including the counterblast of the feminist hammer.

Dancing, Howling, Raging

Developments in the field such as weak theory, diasporic counter-archives, and low theory's revaluation of “eccentric archives” suggest the value of “counterintuitive forms of resistance” (to quote Jack Halberstam in The Queer Art of Failure). “Orientations” foregrounds how modernists embraced trans-aesthetic forms of resistance while also creating spaces for surviving frenetic times. These interventions—into feminism, queer theory, transnationalism, materiality, and embodiment—also extend to larger questions about the politics of aesthetics, phenomenology and the archive, and the necessary fluidity of the literary and artistic canon. My own scholarly investments would ask us to not only think about these topics, but to consider the forms our scholarship might take. Siri Hustvedt puts it this way: “I dance, romp, howl, whimper, rage, lecture and spit on the page now.”[7] As the incoming editor, I encourage work that bridges the gap between form and content, that demands an orientation towards the queer forms scholarship itself might take—pieces that dance, howl, whimper, and spit (fig. 5).

Film still with two women's faces
Fig. 5. A film-still from “The Weaver’s Handshake,” a film-essay by the author.

Therefore, part of my aim as editor is to expand our sense of method in feminist scholarship, to queer questions around what counts as academic inquiry and argument, and to foreground collaboration as a radical praxis. This approach asks us to sometimes work counterintuitively, to deliberately tinker with scholarly teleology in ways that make our arguments and interventions more lively, inclusive, open, and enduring. Alix Beeston and Stefan Solomon, for example, champion “the feminist possibilities of incompletion” by engaging “fragmentary, lost, or vanishing artifacts and archives.”[8] Or Octavio R. González, reading through Rosemary Garland-Thompson’s protomaterialism, turns to “a solution in the form of a liquid structure of feeling” for inclusive social configurations of the misfit in literary modernism.[9] He devotes the entire first chapter of his book to “Methodology,” developing “immanent reading [as] a way to stay close to troubling misfit structures of feeling” (González, Misfit Modernism, 41).

I admire the queer commitment of these approaches—the ways in which scholars push their own modes of inquiry beyond the well-trodden paths of traditional academic writing. “Orientations” has been a warm and fascinating home for analysis, visual theory, and archival studies that write in conversation with a range of approaches, from work on neuroqueerness and the personal in queer theory to writing on literary analysis alongside social media activism and modernist burnout. By embracing the liminal and ephemeral potential of queerness, past contributors have made fascinating inroads to new ways of seeing pedagogies of the closet, modernist dreamworlds, and queer friendship as archival recovery. I aim to continue supporting this kind of work, while also encouraging readers and prospective authors to weave their own multimedia, experimental, and cross-genre practices into the fabric of queer and feminist inquiry.

Igniting Feminist Fires

Maggie Nelson encourages us to rethink care as a “source of texture and amplitude,” arguing that “art is characterized by the indeterminacy and plurality of the encounters it generates, be they between a work and its maker, a work and its variegated audience, or a work of art and time.”[10] I’m curious about the nature of care in scholarship, an ethic modeled brilliantly in previous posts on professional abuse by Carrie Rohman and by Erica Gene Delsandro on how to “foster coalitions inclusive of difference” as a process of feminist “bristling.” How we might care for others through our sites and methods of inquiry, through the queer expansion of our ways of knowing? In our various queer orientations, we might also think about the work of citation itself as a practice of kinship and care. These encounters remind us of the collective yet again, the sewing circle adept at stitching together seemingly disparate objects and ideas. As Ahmed writes, “To create new meaning is to create new ways of being together” (Feminist Killjoy, 184). Readers can look forward to scholarship that foregrounds new ways of being together—both through our readings of queer modernism but also through our modes of analysis and presentation.

"Orientations” has, since its beginning, been a forum for engaging with the work of Sara Ahmed in meaningful ways, even as Ahmed’s own work has pushed forward with inspiring, varied brilliance. In her newest book, she lights a match: “Books can be feminist fire; how we ‘catch fire’. I think of all those feminist fires being lit, lit up, imaginations ignited, desires enflamed, rage too” (Feminist Killjoy, 185). “To write in fire is to write fire,” she continues, imbuing criticism with its own self-generating intensity, “how fire and heat can be used to melt old shapes, make new shapes” (185). It’s my hope that “Orientations” will construct “our own buildings when the world does not accommodate us,” even as we “find ways to send the work out so that it can be shared, catch fire, our imagination” (186).[11]

Readers will notice the paradox of destruction and rebuilding, unweaving and repair, that runs through the reflections assembled here. This queer archival fever speaks not just to issues of flourishing but to the role of scholarship in imagining more humane, livable worlds. Taking over “Orientations” from Janine feels like a spark—something to both inherit and tend, but also to keep burning bright.[12] I welcome you to get in touch!

Woman standing next to fire with text inserted above her
Fig. 6. Digital Collage with Composite Poem by the author with lines from Jack Halberstam, Langston Hughes, Audre Lorde, Heather Love, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, and Virginia Woolf.
 

Notes

[1] Alice Oswald, “Counterblast! (a manifesto for poetry),” University of Oxford Podcasts, audio, June 16, 2023.

[2] Sylvia Plath, “Conversation Among the Ruins,” in The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath (New York: Harper Perennial Modern Classics, 2018), 21.

[3] On my use of queer as a verb, a few critical interlocutors that have inspired my thinking: for her ongoing commitment to queer theory as woven scholarship, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s definition of queerness as "the open mesh of possibilities, gaps, overlaps, dissonances and resonances, lapses and excesses of meaning when the constituent elements of anyone's gender, of anyone's sexuality aren't made (or can't be made) to signify monolithically.” See Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Tendencies (Durham: Duke University Press, 1993), 8. In addition to Sara Ahmed’s blending of feminist and queer theory as mutually-constitutive orientations, I’d also point to bell hooks’s framework for “‘queer’ as being about the self that is at odds with everything around it and has to invent and create and find a place to speak and to thrive and to live.

[4] Adam Fitzgerald, “An Interview with Fred Moten, Part 1,” LitHub, August 5, 2015.

[5] Sara Ahmed, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook: The Radical Potential of Getting in the Way (New York: Seal, 2023), 179.

[6] Janine Utell, “‘Orientations’: A Provocation, A Welcome, An Invitation,” Modernism/modernity Print Plus, November 30, 2021.

[7] Siri Hustvedt, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women: Essays on Art, Sex, and the Mind (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2016), 134.

[8] Alix Beeston and Stefan Solomon, ed., Incomplete: The Feminist Possibilities of the Unfinished Film (Oakland: University of California Press), 17.

[9] Octavio R. González, Misfit Modernism: Queer Forms of Double Exile in the Twentieth-Century Novel (University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2020), 42.

[10] Maggie Nelson, On Freedom (Minneapolis: Graywolf Press, 2021), 64, 21.

[11] See fig. 6 for a creative offering inspired by these feminist fires.

[12] My gratitude to Janine Utell for passing the torch on “Orientations” and for years of invaluable guidance and feedback. Also, my thanks to two brilliant friends—Alix Beeston and Victoria Papa—for their helpful feedback on this post.