Process

March 2, 2016 By: Walt Hunter

The assignment for this column is “process” or, the writing life. How does interesting and inspiring work come to be?

July 15, 2021 By: Walt Hunter

This column for Process is about poetry that tries to make sense of sharing time together as it passes. For that I turn to John Ashbery, about whom I have never been willing or able to write, except in a very brief and unsatisfying conclusion to my first book. I live with several of Ashbery’s poems ricocheting around in my consciousness, along with stray lines by Herbert, Dickinson, McKay, and Rich. The idea of writing something about his poetry is particularly daunting because it carries a lot of emotional weight. More than anything else, the name Ashbery calls to mind the people who shaped and continue to shape what I know or feel about poetry. So when I think about Ashbery, the situation in which I think about his poetry is, almost automatically, a social one.

February 23, 2021 By: Akua Banful

Sitting in my apartment, in parks, and on my roof, I have tried to keep track of the ebb and flow of the seasons in the relentless monotony of a socially distanced New York. Keeping track has been made all the more difficult by the seasonal monotony that my research asks of me—working on a dissertation about literary representations of the tropics has me fixated on heat even when I do not feel it.

January 7, 2021 By: Janani Ambikapathy

One of the frustrating things about academic writing is the categories set by the institution. These categories slice through histories to abstract people, epochs, and bodies of knowledge from their context and settle them deep into the belly of the institution to be studied as phenomena without cause or provenance.

August 31, 2020 By: Patty Argyrides

In his latest work, contemporary choreographer William Forsythe tries to create, in his own words, a “short-term literacy” in his audience. The piece begins without music in order to isolate the individual phrases of movement: “it might be perceived that there has been a subtraction, which would be music. But in fact, dancers being the musical engines behind any dance, their breathing alone causes you to understand the phrase.” [1] The intention is to create a more skilled viewer who is focused on the movements that make up the dance without the distraction of the music. When music and movement come together in a more traditional way in the second act, the audience is, or so is the idea, more literate in what is presented to them: “suddenly, you are able to read.”

June 5, 2020 By: Ama Bemma Adwetewa-Badu

In the spring of 2019, a new and welcome contact of mine in Ghana sent me a PDF of an anthology he had put together with a number of promising, young African poets. Through conversations with those involved with the making of the anthology, I began to note that these writers and editors are part of my intellectual and creative social-network and members of my living archive. In the days following my reading of the anthology, it struck me that the only reason I was able to have access not only to...

October 9, 2019 By: Hunter Dukes

Always mornings. Early. And there should be coffee. Breakfast will come later, but the best hours are now—when the world is still blanketed, the mind “puddled in dream melt.” [1] There are particular parameters for the page. The margins must be wide. The font Goudy Old Style or Garamond in a squeeze. Carriage returns between paragraphs. No indentation. I once justified my text; now I like the ragged edges. To write The Names (1982), Don DeLillo had to change his method. He began typing single, numbered paragraphs, each on its own leaf: a microclimate that allowed him to “see a given set of sentences more clearly.” This is a logic that makes sense to me. I learned to write from my mother. She taught me to revise a sentence aloud before putting it into print. To move from breath to inscription can be a mystical practice. The look of letters has long astonished, inviting cryptic explanations. The 22 paths connecting Kabbalah’s Sefirot—emanations of the divine Ein Sof—correspond to the letters of the Hebrew alphabet. The Latin “A” is an abstracted, phonetic descendant from an Ox hieroglyph. Flip it over and you can still see the creature’s horns: ∀. These ideas are important for the writers I study. They reveal a profound longing—the desire to rekindle a relationship between text and the body, at once archaic and arcane, and to locate the origins of writing in the sensual world.

May 28, 2019 By: Jacquelyn Ardam

In this conversation about Process, Jacquelyn Ardam and her undergraduate advisee, Cole Walsh, demystify the senior thesis. Cole’s thesis, “Mak[ing] Bright the Arrows: Recovering the Political Poetry of Edna St. Vincent Millay,” examines the poetry of the underserved Millay, whose work with the sonnet, Cole argues, deploys its “memorable speech” to intervene within the isolationist politics of the United States. Here the two collaborators talk about the marginalization of poets within modernism...

February 28, 2019 By: Walt Hunter

It’s rare to read an account of the process of learning about a new artform or medium from the beginning. Maybe because, at least for me, it’s hard to remember the first time I read a poem or a novel or saw a painting or heard a piece of music. Or maybe because that experience merges uncomfortably with a non-critical stance of “appreciation,” a word that doesn’t deserve some of the pejorative associations attached to it.

January 8, 2019 By: Sarah Dowling

This second batch of writers on the process of finishing their books ranges from meditations on the situatedness of academic writing to blow-by-blow descriptions of the publication process to a call for more inventive and ethical ways of acknowledging one’s scholarly companions. Here you can find writing on the “hard edge of a colonial language,” in Sarah Dowling’s apt description of her work. Helen Rydstrand narrates the difficulty of accepting any work as good enough. Rebecca Colesworthy calls attention to the “not-writing”: the money, time, and resources that condition the long-term development of a book. And Alix Beeston’s “intervallic bridgework” concludes this installment of the Process cluster by pushing the form of the monograph toward a politics of citation.

December 7, 2018 By: Michaela Bronstein

For this two-part installment of Process, I asked eight scholars who had just finished a book—their first or their fourth—to write informally about their experience. Conferences often feature roundtables about writing and publishing, but I thought it might be a good addition to have some personal anecdotes, stories less attached to the mechanics of the industry and more to the quiddities of the book-writing process. A book might arrive as an artifact, but it begins as a dream or a compulsion or a hunch. No review or reading, however generous, does justice to the messiness of the life that seals itself into the final object of the book, as though in anticipation of the spell that may someday release it. The intent here is not so much to demystify as to re-enchant.

September 23, 2018 By: Johanna Winant

This summer, the modernist scholar Johanna Winant and I found ourselves working on a number of converging projects, from book chapters to essays on Stanley Cavell’s philosophy and Donald Hall’s poetry. Below we reflect on the process of writing together, sharing work, and discovering the kinds of friendship that collaboration makes possible

April 26, 2018 By: Walt Hunter

I’m taking over the Process blog from Lesley Wheeler at the moment when I’m nearly finished the process of writing my first book and am waiting for page proofs from the press.

February 26, 2018 By: Lesley Wheeler

My farewell post for the “Process” column is a brief conversation with Jahan Ramazani, University Professor and Edgar F. Shannon Professor of English at the University of Virginia, and a scholar whose work I admire greatly and follow closely. He gives serious attention to strong poets who aren’t always read with such insight, as well as leveling powerful arguments about how verse frames identity, feeling, and nation. In short, his labors help me think through scholarly problems and build syllabi...

December 10, 2017 By: Lesley Wheeler

Archival research possesses a hushed glamor. To realize that Marianne Moore carried around the very book you’re holding—or that Langston Hughes rolled that exact piece of paper into his typewriter late one night and yanked out a poem with the ink still damp—is like being visited by a character you thought you’d invented. Such knowledge can change how you think about art, and it certainly changes how you read.

September 18, 2017 By: Olivia Badoi

There is always some degree of confusion when I tell people that I am getting my PhD in English by writing a dissertation about wordless novels. While I’m used to giving my “elevator pitch” to fellow academics, describing my project to people outside of academia can be more of a challenge:

May 24, 2017 By: Lesley Wheeler

Some writing changes worlds, for better and for worse. The second executive order signed by President Trump, for example, speeds up environmental reviews “For High Priority Infrastructure Projects” such as the Dakota Access Pipeline. The effects of this order on the natural universe and on human culture may be profound.

April 12, 2017 By: Helen Sword

My process of writing this blog post about the writing process was slow, circuitous, and emotionally fraught. I started out with a clear idea of my overall structure—or so I thought—but ended up abandoning it after several hours of drafting, redrafting, and repeated applications of my Delete key. Frustrated, I tried free-writing for twenty minutes: an unstructured word-dump to find out where “writing to think” might get me. Unfortunately, it got me nowhere. By that time I had already spent...

January 9, 2017 By: Lesley Wheeler

The U.S. presidential election of 2016 made many professors think harder about teaching toward a better world. My colleagues and friends found the immediate aftermath especially challenging. If, on November 9th, your students were shocked, sleepless, weepy, angry, afraid—how could you console them, or help them channel their responses constructively? If they were pleased by the election, ready to report you if you said something partisan—how should you behave then? There’s a Professor Watchlist...

September 21, 2016 By: Lesley Wheeler

If I were Edna St. Vincent Millay, I might begin this letter by describing some bit of local foliage I’d enclosed, its leaves pressed among scrawled endearments. But by the time broadband has advanced enough to transmit an actual crape myrtle blossom, it would be very faded, I’m afraid. So a photograph from my front yard will have to suffice.

March 2, 2016 By: Lesley Wheeler

In 2015, the airwaves crackled with debate about the value—or pointlessness—of academic conferences (see, for starters, “The Conference Manifesto” and “A Conference Manifesto for the Rest of Us”). Yet I love the Modernist Studies Association meeting for reliably reenergizing my research and writing. Come November, I’m generally buried under a drift of student essays, plus the holidays are looming, with their burden of extra work and anxiety. It can be hard to see the point in crafting another labor-intensive scholarly essay for a coterie of readers when there are so many administrative deadlines pressing and weepy students knocking, plus a late-capitalist shopping frenzy to orchestrate.
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Process Against Progress

April 26, 2018 By: Walt Hunter

Volume 3 Cycle 2

From Andrei Tarkovsky, Nostalghia (1983).

I’m taking over the Process blog from Lesley Wheeler at the moment when I’m nearly finished the process of writing my first book and am waiting for page proofs from the press. These two things are closely related. Lesley was (though there’s no way she’d know this) the person who helped me begin writing the book in the first place. I was a graduate student with a bunch of dead-end pages and a lot of files of semi-abandoned ideas. I hail-maryed a proposal about Claude McKay’s ballads to a roundtable Lesley was putting together for MSA 12—my first MSA, which somehow involved taking a ferry from Vancouver to Victoria. At that point I’d been working with some of McKay’s early poems from the Jamaican newspaper The Daily Gleaner, as well as two photographs of McKay that accompanied them. The roundtable was memorable for me: it was where I first met MSA frequenters Helen Sword, Beth Frost, Meta Jones, Derek Furr, and Linda Kinnahan. Later, that short roundtable paper became a seminar paper, an article, a chapter, and then the basis for my dissertation.

Later still, I discovered, with some disappointment at myself, that the article didn’t really fit in the final version of the book. Not at all. This felt strange because I knew it wasn’t exactly a false start. And I still stood behind (stand behind) the argument. I’d been irritated by the way McKay’s sonnets and ballads weren’t viewed as experimental or avant-garde or even “modernist” in the sense that critics of modernism sometimes defined those terms. (Dorothy Wang has written about this question while thinking about contemporary Asian American poets.) Writing about McKay taught me that I liked pushing at the boundaries of definitions, periods, and disciplines. When I saw, in Jamaica, the ravaged bauxite fields that had decimated the land and flowers and the people he memorialized in his first few books, then writing about McKay also taught me that poetry was inseparable from large-scale, global processes of extraction and exploitation.

For a long time, not knowing what to do with the work I’d done, but knowing that I had an interest in poetic form and historical capitalism, I kept the pages in the manuscript, trying to make them fit despite the fact that my attention shifted later and later in the century. Finally, while writing in the 110-degree July heat in the California desert, I moved on. I cut nearly ninety pages from the manuscript, including the piece on McKay. I felt like I had a new lease on the book, but also that I’d somehow failed the process.

Valuing Process

In this first blog piece, I want to give some space to the different valences and values of process. But process is notoriously hard to record. Some processes encode an unmanageable historical time: processes of historical capitalism or of climate change, for instance. In fact, the word process often appears as a kind of placeholder for what seems to be ungraspable in the concrete. There’s a suspicious, vacant-eyed neutrality to the term, one that disguises the people who create, continue, and benefit from (or fall prey to) processes. At the same time, thinking about processes, in addition to people who carry them forward, helps to decenter attention to human agency alone, to partake in the kinds of social analysis that Marx elaborates in Capital.

The activity of social critique, consolidated by modernist thinkers, depends on privileging process as the object of analysis. This political attention to process dovetails with the aesthetic embrace of process in modernist texts. Plenty of modernist writing is marked by its hospitality to the abandoned work, the wrong idea, the derelict page, the ever-still-in-process picture.

To think of process as an end in itself raises difficult political questions. Claims to respect procedures produce violence on a global scale, as refugees and immigrants languish in detention centers, airports, boats, and war zones. Process was no doubt part of what brought about Walter Benjamin’s death; “correct procedure” is often the alibi for all kinds of obstruction to change. When processes are abstracted from the specific contexts in which they appear, and from the people who need to use them, the results are fatal.

For the literature scholar, process is recorded most fluorescently in the draft and the archive. The publication of drafts can be scandalous, as in the case of Elizabeth Bishop’s poems: I think the scandal comes from the reification of that which, by all accounts, was intended to be part of the process rather than a product itself. There’s no reason to think of process only as a key to understanding the product, though—as if the early draft of a poem has that clue that reveals the decisions hidden by the anthologized favorite. Process, in the way I’m treating it here, also means those works that disappear, precisely because they don’t seem relevant to the final product.

Books ultimately appear in the world as artifacts, as solid objects, as settled facts: they’re the physical relics of years of thinking and feeling. But this doesn’t feel quite right to me. Isn’t it more accurate to say that a book is a process rather than a thing? The edges of a book extend into the past and the future in a way that makes its vulgar materiality a little dubious. Maybe they even blur out sideways into alternative routes and arguments not taken. In later entries, I intend to talk about craft in academic writing, to reflect on the quiddities of small decisions about syntax and style, and to ask you about your process as well. I’ll have some cameos from colleagues who want to think about process, too. 

Process, Ruin, and Possibility

It’s a disorienting task to move away from work you’ve already written. In the hypervaluation of productivity today, we’re conditioned to look on work that doesn’t fit somewhere—in an article, in a talk, in a blog, in an email exchange, in a twitter thread—as excess or waste instead of as part of the process. The sense that there’s an opportunity cost to writing that we end up discarding is damaging for scholarship. It’s related to the aim to have a final word rather than an opening gesture. For every epiphany, though, there’s a letting go. And one modernist lesson might be that process isn’t progress, isn’t lost time or time to degree. “Successful” writing becomes immediately or eventually or hopefully visible. But it’s the process where the revolutionary ideas are, the ones that fail and then stick around. 

Writing is filled with ruins. To keep writing (forward) is mostly to keep poking (backward) around in them. The problem is that our ruins are only our own: it would be better, though uncomfortable and weird, if we could wander around in the failed attempts of others as well. Not for empathy or schadenfreude, but for the unexpected trouvailles. I have notebooks and files of failed ideas—they’re next to a small set of useless DVDs on the top of a large IKEA shelf—but the difficulty with that description is not really that they’ve failed or refused to make sense. Maybe instead there’s still some perception of academic writing in the humanities as tied to the individual rather than the collective work of people learning from each other.

Many writers are good at sharing ideas that are half-baked—my first MSA paper on McKay certainly was—but not that great at sharing work that just didn’t work. While I’m curating this blog, I have a request: do you have writing that you’ve abandoned, turned against, or deliberately forgotten? If you’re willing to send me some of your wrong moves, and to share them with others, get in touch with me. A future blog post will feature a roundtable on the topic of lost, abandoned, or otherwise “wasted” writing.

The act of writing feels full of shame because it goes awry so often: for me at least, sharing that procedural embarrassment might help generate something like friendship. In the composite language of our collective process, maybe we’ll find something unexpected. I’m a little skeptical of the idea that we get smarter or better at writing, rather than simply more accustomed to certain modes of thinking, forms of syntax, and styles of argument. That’s the professional—but what about, instead, the processional, the song before the ceremony begins?