The Discipline

March 2, 2016 By: Kate Stanley

"The Discipline" explores untold histories of literary study in the twentieth century. What futures for our discipline do these new pasts make possible?

December 21, 2021 By: Melanie Benson Taylor

My subtitle deliberately echoes Houston Baker’s pivotal monograph, Turning South Again: Re-thinking Modernism, Re-reading Booker T, which—when it was first published in 2001—fundamentally altered the course of Southern studies. Beginning with a primal reorientation around the experiences of Black slavery and incarceration, the New Southern Studies went on to perform a sweeping reevaluation of its terms, tropes, subjects, and geographies. Arguably one of the more exciting developments (for me, at...

October 7, 2021 By: Thomas Sorensen

Literature is a protean phenomenon. Nobody seems quite sure how to classify it. Is it an object, immutable and self-contained? Or is it an event that happens when a self makes contact with a line of letters on a page? Nowadays, critics regard the text primarily as a resource. “There’s a lot of useful knowledge here,” we say, and our job is to show how this knowledge can help us in real life. Recently, I have come upon a fourth option. What if the text were an organ of perception, an extension of the body that structures our muddled, all-too-narrow picture of reality?

May 13, 2021 By: Kate Stanley

What resources can literature from the past offer when confronting the urgent present-moment reality of climate crisis? What function should the humanities classroom serve when the future of human life seems increasingly precarious? Anne Raine’s post, “Modernism, Eco-anxiety, and the Climate Crisis,” helped catalyze these questions for me by challenging us “to find ways to make climate change our job.” I’ve been trying to figure out how to meet this challenge in a course I’m teaching on literature and climate justice.

February 8, 2021 By: Benjamin Hagen

I had not heard of ProctorU software until October 1, 2020 when I noticed that several folks on Twitter, whom I follow for their thoughts on pedagogy, had retweeted and responded to the same upsetting TikTok video I had come across earlier that same day. The video shows a young woman, crying, explaining that she had just failed an online exam not because she had been unprepared but because her professor’s surveillance software flagged her as “talking” out loud while taking the exam.

December 29, 2020 By: Katy Ryan

In 1994, Renaldo Hudson was on death row in Illinois. As we became friends, I knew where I stood in relation to the place where the plan was to kill him. I was not interested in starting a book club there or teaching a class. I was not interested in writing an essay on the literature of resistance.

November 17, 2020 By: Heather A. Love

In 1926, Gertrude Stein delivered the lecture “ Composition as Explanation” to the Cambridge Literary Club at Oxford University (fig. 1). The talk couches a description of her own evolution as an experimental author within a broader discussion of history, culture, and art as a series of distinct “composition[s].”As Kristin Bergen helpfully explains, the “multivocal term” composition at once designates “the dominant mode of daily life for a given period and also the production of those who...

June 8, 2020 By: Todd G. Nordgren

How did people learn to be queer in an era before stable identities, lifestyles, or representations of sexual outsiders were readily available or, for that matter, before they even existed?

February 5, 2020 By: Kate Stanley

In my first stab at drafting an inaugural post as the new editor of this forum, I went the Raymond Carver route, writing “What We Talk About When We Talk About the Discipline” across the top of a blank page. When that imagined dialogue hung fire for several weeks, I ventured greater specificity, replacing “We” with “I.” Pronouncements still unforthcoming, I searched my hard drive for toeholds. What have I talked about when I’ve talked about the discipline? My Documents folders returned zero hits for the phrase “the discipline.” I tried again, deleting “the” from the search, which revealed that I have only ever used the word “discipline” as a verb or an adjective—most often to describe the reading and writing habits and practices of the subjects of my first book (Ralph Waldo Emerson, Marcel Proust, Gertrude Stein, Henry James, and Nella Larsen). This lacuna was perhaps predictable: in my early career as a graduate student and then an untenured assistant professor, I was more concerned (and more comfortable) with proffering granular descriptions of literary activity in my field than with scaling up grand claims about the literary institution my studies were constituting

June 20, 2019 By: Alys Moody

In the Modernism/modernity Print Plus cluster on “ Modernism’s Contemporary Affects,” Claire Barber-Stetson writes probingly of the relationship between the precarious existence of graduate students and early career academics in English and the rise of global modernism. She sees the expansion of modernist studies, of which global modernism is perhaps the signal instance, as “driven­—at least in part—by more pervasive precarity in literary studies as a profession,” and worries about the various challenges it poses to modernism as practiced in English departments. “It threatens,” she writes, “to dilute the term modernism beyond critical purchase, to leave graduate students without sufficient institutional support, and to divert resources from other fields, periods, and movements, including contemporary literary studies.”

December 20, 2018 By: Morgan Day Frank

“If it’s secret and elite, it can’t be good,” intones Luke McNamara, played by Joshua Jackson, the guy from The Mighty Ducks and Dawson’s Creek, in the final moments of the now forgotten movie, The Skulls (2000). The line is presented as a hard-earned revelation. Though McNamara, a scholarship student at Yale, is at first seduced by the secret society Skull and Bones, taking a vertiginous journey into its hidden world of power and luxury, he eventually comes to the sobering realization, after surviving a series of near-fatal altercations with its leaders, that the society’s anti-democratic tendencies “can’t be good.” The fact that such a banal revelation is presented as a revelation at all suggests the exhaustion of this bit of common sense. We’ve become tired—as worn out as McNamara is in the scene—of the lesson that secret society stories teach, the lesson that exclusive student organizations are nefarious while the universities that house them are meritocratic and transparent.

October 3, 2018 By: Angus Connell Brown

When a convener adds Things Fall Apart (1959) to their syllabus something strange happens. If all goes well the class will read Chinua Achebe’s novel together, discussions will grow around the colonial history of Nigeria, and textual details will emerge from their conversation. Two systems will touch: context and close reading will intersect. The imperial damages and fugitive traditions of world history will come into contact with the New Critical leftovers of contemporary criticism. What’s...

July 4, 2018 By: Lavelle Porter

The epigraph implies origin. As a literary device it often announces source material for a text, and it is a place where, presumably, the reading experience begins. The epigraphs I have placed above are modeled after the form that Samuel R. Delany uses for his 1995 novella “Atlantis: Model 1924,” which has two literary excerpts at the beginning of each chapter. [1] Four of the five chapters of “Atlantis: Model 1924” contain epigraphs from Robert Hayden’s poem about the trans-Atlantic slave trade, “ Middle Passage.”

April 11, 2018 By: Rachel Sagner Buurma and Laura Heffernan

From this day forward, every time you see the name Roberto Busa invoked as a—or the—founding scholar of either quantitative or computational method in the humanities, we want you to mentally search and replace with another name: Josephine Miles.

January 4, 2018 By: Kate Stanley

What can the acknowledgements page of an academic book reveal to us about the discipline of literary studies? Scholarly acknowledgment is often characterized by the special fulsomeness of its intimate enumeration of gratitude. It’s easy to experience a kind of vertigo when moving from the cozy intimacy of these expressions of thanks to the rigorous delimitations and impersonal critical surveys of the introductory material that follows. What would it mean to close the gap between these modes—to uncordon acknowledgment from prefatory convention so that it infuses more overtly within a monograph’s critical investigations? How might the work of denoting scholarly debts extend beyond a demarcated page to shape the sensibility of a book as a whole?

August 30, 2017 By: Séan Richardson

In the Spring of 2016, I received confirmation that I had been awarded funding to undertake doctoral study that coming October. Overwhelmed, I physically jumped for joy, promptly thumping my skull on the shelf that rested shortly above me. Usually, we bang our heads due to frustration brought about by inertia, but I think about this literal knock as a transitional moment, one which allowed me to cross the battle lines drawn by my desk, seceding from the administrative camp and joining the ranks of graduate school

June 8, 2017 By: Sara Bryant

An early letter from Willa Cather to Zoë Akins in 1914 consists almost entirely of blunt feedback to the aspiring writer. Some representative lines, "This story, my dear Zoe is written to be smart. . . . There’s either got to be real feeling in a story, or an intellectual interest of the highest order. . . .

March 15, 2017 By: Christopher Findeisen

In Mary McCarthy’s 1952 academic novel The Groves of Academe, the protagonist Henry Mulcahy is let go from Jocelyn College, a self-described sanctuary of academic freedom in a world haunted by the specter of Joseph McCarthy. The facts of the matter are undisputed: Mulcahy writes an article for Marxist Quarterly about dialectical materialism in James Joyce, donates money to the Henry Wallace campaign, attends a meeting given in support of dissenting political opinions, and then is informed by his employer that his contract with the college will not be renewed.

December 1, 2016 By: Mark Cooper

As we completed our book on the US research university amidst the political tumult of the last several months, we resisted the urge to add laments, policy recommendations, or vision statements to the growing pile. Instead, we sought to reframe familiar arguments about the university by calling attention to its media, which are so often looked past (or through) by critics of higher education.

May 26, 2016 By: Jonathan Goodwin

Laura Heffernan’s introductory post describes work being done in what she calls the “new disciplinary history.” I have an interest in using quantitative methods to practice disciplinary history. In this post, I explore some of these methods using the archives of Modernism/modernity. The quantitative analysis of a journal has a long history. Sociologists of science, for example, have long used citation patterns to reveal the disciplinary structure of a field.

March 2, 2016 By: Laura Heffernan

In the Spring of 2001, while a graduate student in Philadelphia, I inherited the instructorship for a Temple University continuing education course called, accurately if awkwardly, “Books You Wish You’d Read.” Everything about this gig screamed “easy money,” starting with the course title’s modest past perfect promise — no one, it seems, was expecting me to transform adult students into readers of the classics; all I had to do was turn a few classics into books they had read.
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New Disciplinary History

March 2, 2016 By: Laura Heffernan

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In the Spring of 2001, while a graduate student in Philadelphia, I inherited the instructorship for a Temple University continuing education course called, accurately if awkwardly, “Books You Wish You’d Read.” Everything about this gig screamed “easy money,” starting with the course title’s modest past perfect promise — no one, it seems, was expecting me to transform adult students into readers of the classics; all I had to do was turn a few classics into books they had read. Things, however, were not what they seemed. On the first day, the longest-standing members of this class, which had been meeting for over a decade, handed me a stapled list of Books They No Longer Wished They Had Read. Having long since worked through the sacred grove of classics with some other bygone graduate student they were now into the literary thicket: Frederick Rolfe’s Hadrian the Seventh, Alan Sillitoe’s Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, Elizabeth Bowen, early Dickens, Kingsley Amis. After a respectful and brief consideration of my field of expertise, they opened the term as they had every previous one: with a vote on what books they’d like to wish they’d read this term.

In 2001, my BYWYR class seemed unrelated to my graduate education, which involved reading Eagleton’s “The Rise of English” in proseminar, studying high modernism and the Great Divide, and teaching Penn freshmen how to write about what literature does rather than what it says. I was training in a serious discipline; BYWYR was more of a longstanding book club that happened to occur under the auspices of Temple University — the students paying their nominal fee each term as way to offload the labor of organizing themselves, finding a meeting space, and remaining open to new members. And yet I couldn’t assimilate BYWYR to any of the sociologies of middlebrow readers or Marxist accounts of working-class adult education students available to me in 2001— the members of this group weren’t particularly class-aspirational, they weren’t into genre fiction, they weren’t Janeites. Their unexpected and haphazardly chosen reading matter coupled with their idiosyncratic interpretive interests in plant life, in domestic safety (one guy was an insurance adjustor), in conducting thought-experiments to change the race of protagonists — left them in a kind of no-man’s-land between professional critics and the readerships such critics traditionally defined themselves against.

Conference Poster
Conference Poster for "Rewriting English: Guari Viswanathan's Masks of Conquest at Twenty Five," Heyman Center, Columbia University (2014).

Fast forward 15 years and that Books You Wish You’d Read class has wormed its way into how I think about the history and present of English. This shift of perspective is partly due to my own widened experiences: my early academic conception of the discipline gradually crowded out by the days and years I’ve spent practicing it in several very different universities. But disciplinary history has grown up, too — and has become more capacious in its middle age. The last few years have seen a wave of new disciplinary historical work that is newly expansive in matter and methods, including the 2014 MLQ special issue Lessons from the Past: The History of Academic English, Disciplining Modernism edited by Pamela Caughie, or Sean Latham and Gayle Rogers’s Modernism: Evolution of an Idea. And a few anniversaries of groundbreaking earlier work have reminded us of the origins of this turn. Guari Vishwanathan’s Masks of Conquest turned 25 in 2014 and was hailed with a day-long conference at Columbia University, and in 2012 the University of Sydney published a second edition of Leigh Dale’s 1997 monograph The English Men: Professing Literature in Australian Universities with an updated title, The Enchantment of English. So, too, has disciplinary history sprung up in less strictly disciplinary venues, such as John Marx’s and Mark Cooper’s Humanities After Hollywood or Public Books.

All of these new disciplinary histories, different as they are in field and scope, converge on one key question: what counts as evidence when we’re studying the history of our discipline? This recent work enlarges our sense of the figures, practices, places, and documents that comprise our past by asking a few versions of this key question:

First, what sorts of institutions count? Though disciplinarity by definition is extra-institutional, our ways of studying it have generally been bound to specific kinds of institutions. When Gerald Graff wroteProfessing Literature in 1987, he apologetically drew most of his evidence from “research oriented departments of English at major universities.” But how has the discipline been practiced at other colleges, universities, and extramural programs? Alexandra Lawrie’s The Beginnings of University English turns to university extension schools of the 1890s to argue that the formalist methods we associate with IA Richards and the New Critics were invented by lecturers like RG Moulton to teach contemporary novels to new reading publics. Lawrence Jackson’s The Indignant Generation is, among many other things, a history of the first generation of African-American literary critics to enter universities such as Syracuse and Hampton. And Elizabeth Renker looks again for The Origins of American Literature Studies not just at research universities like Johns Hopkins, but small liberal arts colleges, enormous public universities, and historically black colleges and universities. Elite institutions have loomed large in our genealogies, but scholars like Lawrie, Jackson, and Renker remind us that they haven’t governed intellectual work in other kinds of places.

Next, do students count? The Pedagogic Criticism workshops that Ben Knights and Robert Eaglestone have organized for the past few years at the Senate House in London began by asking how disciplines are made “in the dialogues of the corridor and classroom as much as in the monograph or learned journal.” Of course, the dialogues of the corridor and the classroom can be more difficult to record and study than the scholarly debates featured in monographs and journals, but the Production of University English research project has a solution for this: they video-record English classes to see how the discipline emerges in the daily work of teaching and is practiced not only through speech and writing but non-verbal types of communication as well. The PUE project brings students into the frame of what we know and what we do as a discipline today, but how can we see the role that students have played in our past? The University of Birmingham’s Student Archive promises to do just this: they’ve collected students notes from the 1940s to the present. (Among other things, the archive makes possible a student-centered history of the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies.) If disciplinary histories have imagined students as passive audience or ideal listener, these exercises in documentation and archive-building reimagine them as co-practitioners with their own interests and modes of attention.

Extension school class
Extension school class conducted by "Mrs. Ranney" in Cortland, NY (1919). Division of Rare Books & Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.

Do the unprofessional parts of our professional practice count? In Loving Literature: A Cultural History, Dierdre Lynch argues that the discipline of English has had a harder time than most in historicizing its basic assumptions and practices because the discipline itself confounds the structuring distinctions — between office and home, expert and amateur, knowing and feeling — that shape modern professionalism. So far, we’ve dealt with this “boundary confusion” by investigating what we know and ignoring what we feel. While many histories trace the eighteenth-century emergence of “literature” as an object of knowledge, we’ve failed to consider how this rise of “literature” as a specialized form of writing also “created a new object for people’s affections,” thus leaving unhistoricized our injunction to love literature as well as study it. Lynch’s book and others like it — Carolyn Dinshaw’s How Soon is Now?, Nancy Glazener’s Literature in the Making — pull eighteenth and nineteenth-century readers into the history of the discipline as a way to reflect upon some of the less-acknowledged aspects of our professional practices.

Finally, does counting change what counts? This is the question that arises when DH meets DH — when the computational methods and data sets developed by digital humanists are focused back on the field of disciplinary history. Digital methods, far from flattening our object of study, are bringing a much broader and differently parcelled literary history into view — one that will surely nudge new critical histories into the picture. And some recent DH work has begun to focus specifically on critical history itself, most commonly by analyzing trends in language within large scholarly reference databases such as JSTOR’s Data for Research. For example, Andrew Goldstone and Ted Underwood have topic-modeled more than a century of scholarship in PMLA to see how certain groups of words likely to occur together (“topics”) have risen or fallen in popularity over time. Jonathan Goodwin has created co-citation network graphs to track who is cited (and with whom) in journals from a range of fields, including literary theory and modernist studies. And, in a similar vein, Dan Edelstein has created a range of visualizations of scholarship on the Enlightenment to grasp the shifts that have defined the field. Such approaches, Underwood and Goldstone write, are particularly good for finding disciplinary “assumptions that change quietly, without explicit debate; entrenched patterns that survive the visible conflicts; long-term transformations of the terrain caused by social change.” But so, too, have DH scholars been inspired to find new disciplinary heroes: in their recent article on “Network Analysis and the Sociology of Modernism,” Hoyt Long and Richard So look back to Shakespearean statistician Caroline Spurgeon as a forerunner, and Underwood cites RG Moulton’s 1903 position as “Professor of Literary Theory” in the University of Chicago’s “General Literature” department as indication that, alongside literary study’s signature particularism, there has also been synthesis and generalism.

English Literature lesson
English Literature lesson from 1908-1909, likely completed by Florence M. Read, fourth President of Spelman College, while she attended Mt. Holyoke College as an undergraduate. Courtesy of the Spelman College Archives, Florence M. Read Presidential Collection.

All of these disciplinary histories have repopulated our past, enlisting new documents, practices, people, moments, and schools to serve as evidence for how and what we know. So arresting are they that it’s with reluctance that I turn to the broader frame – the question of why now we are redrawing our boundaries and retracing our genealogies by folding in what once seemed – like the Books You Wish You’d Read crew— invisible or undisciplinary. How we historicize this moment is important, for it will determine whether we read this genre today as elegy, proleptic mourning, a gathering of resources to face a precarious future, or joyous jettisoning of debilitating disciplinary narratives. And, let’s face it, disciplinary history wouldn’t be recognizable without the anxious self-reflection native to the mode. For now, though – for this year of the “Discipline” column— let’s linger and enjoy the new views.