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In the introduction to her 500-page unpublished manuscript, A Mirror for a Star, A Star for a Mirror, held in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, the writer, teacher, astrologer, farmer, and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...
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Woolf, the University, and All Sorts of Brutality

March 26, 2022 By: Carrie Rohman

Volume 6 Cycle 3

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Our first official installment of the Orientations blog is a set of linked posts by Erica Gene Delsandro and Carrie Rohman. These pieces are meant to be read dialogically, with each other and with themselves, their voices filling and overspilling the professional spaces—journals, conferences, departments—available to us.  They are simultaneously feminist reflections on disciplinary and institutional violence and calls to intersectional feminist action. They are offered in the spirit of what Orientations hopes to accomplish in this space.

-Janine Utell, editor, Orientations

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. But in fact, these attentions operate along a clear continuum that is tied together by questions of domination, vulnerability, power, and gendered perceptions of who and what matters. A feminist ethics-of-care is generally understood to resist “hierarchical dominative dualisms, which establish the powerful (humans, men, whites) over the subordinate (animals, women, people of color).”[1] The disquieting truth is that the academy is a highly performative arena in which various endemic abuses exist along a spectrum from the “center stage” to the “behind-the-scenes.” In academia, certain individuals are expected to accept the fact that, to quote a violent animalized metaphor, there is more than one way “to skin a cat,” as they attempt to secure a place in this “prestigious,” patriarchal, white, and cis system.[2]

That disturbing metaphor is deliberately meant to startle us into thinking in more clear-eyed and frank ways about our abusive profession, something that most of us find very difficult to do. It is also meant to shake us out of the complacent acceptance of academic abuse, as what we have to “pay to play.” My recent talk at the 2021 Annual International Virginia Woolf conference, which Erica references in her recommendation that “those of us in the room tear the door off its hinges,” was titled “Still Very Precarious: Reprising Woolf’s ‘Think we must.’” The conference was organized by Benjamin Hagen, and the theme was “Profession and Performance.” The tearing and the skinning in our present posts seem telling “hyperbolic” metaphors, in an academic world where the experiences of women, faculty of color, graduate students, the precariate, the variously abled, queer faculty, and others often reveal an extraordinary disjunction between the idealized profession we have all imagined and the actual profession we inhabit, between what academics say and think they are, and what they actually do to their colleagues. Earlier work by scholars such as Patricia A. Matthew, for example, has shown “how faculty of color always have to do at least two things at the same time as they go about their work: figure out how to cope with (confront, deflect, or absorb) the daily micro-aggressions of the academy while trying to navigate structural obstacles that everyone faces in environments that are either maddeningly indifferent or hostile.”[3]

My plenary talk was inspired by Woolf’s 1938 musings in Three Guineas, where she repeatedly asks us to consider what it will mean for women to follow their educated brothers into the professions. There, Woolf provides a blistering account of the violences of institutions of learning, of colleges and universities; she invokes over and over the image of burning down these hypocritical institutions. In Three Guineas, Woolf writes, “It is true that for the past twenty years we have been admitted to the Civil Service and to the Bar; but our position there is still very precarious and our authority of the slightest” (12). Nearly one hundred years later, this sentiment still resonates. Woolf was more than prescient in warning women about what they would face as they joined the ranks of patriarchal institutions. Our contemporary failures to confront the institutional violences that continue to be reproduced within our profession—that we could argue continue to be central to our profession—exacerbate her prophecies all the more.   

Red door at university building
Fig. 1. Photography by Alexander P. Kapp, CC BY-SA 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13049290

The book Women Who Make a Fuss: The Unfaithful Daughters of Virginia Woolf has served as another important companion text for my own recent thinking about experiences of gendered abuse in our profession. Written by two Belgian philosophers, Isabelle Stengers and Vinciane Despret, Women Who Make a Fuss similarly takes up Woolf’s injunction, “think we must,” in order to ask if women in academia have changed the form of thought in their respective fields. Their book is largely framed around responses from women academics to a letter the two philosophers sent out, a contemporary version of responding to letters, as in Three Guineas. While the primary authors make it clear that experiences of gendered “discrimination” are not precisely the centerpiece of their project, the disillusioning realities of being a female academic inevitably seep into their powerful volume.

Stengers and Despret highlight the entrapments of academic life, explaining, “We are among those women who have been where Woolf said we must not go, or in any case, not stay, for staying there, seeking to make a career in the university, is to be captured by it (for both young men and women).”[4] Importantly, and as their incorporation of multiple female voices reveals, “Once you are inside, they will look for ways to devitalize you” (Sironi, quoted in Stengers and Despret, 103). “Once you are inside.” This phrase constitutes a powerful nod first to the extraordinary labor that it requires to make it “in” at all, and second to the desperation of the current climate, in which any sort of security in academia seems further and further out of reach, particularly for emerging teacher-scholars. In the discussion portion of the Woolf plenary, which was intended to be as open a response session about our profession as possible, Kristin Czarnecki made the incisive observation that because there are so few positions in the humanities, and because we are therefore always aware of our disposability, we are extra “grateful” to be in our abusive profession. We feel lucky to have a position at all, of any kind, and so we not only take the abuse that is endemic in academic life, but we feel fortunate to be among the abused, to put it bluntly.

Another piquing phrase from the above quotation should get our attention: “They will look for ways.” One of the great ironies of working in the humanities is the extraordinary disjunction between what people in power profess, research, and teach in a public-facing manner and the ways they nonetheless actively abuse their colleagues in deliberate and calculated ways, ways that give the lie to their outward commitments to critiques of power. The abuse of women or other marginalized individuals in our profession often depends upon the “official” narratives being clean, and the unofficial, threatening narratives leaving no trace. An English Department in particular, because of our perceived commitments to progressive views, has to maintain its outward, often false image of supporting female faculty, faculty of color, and other marginalized faculty. And so, the abuse goes underground, in whispered threats that are deliberately off the record. The abuse happens at lunches, in clandestine comments made to you in your office, when no one else can hear, in mechanisms like teaching schedules and course distribution, which can always be explained away as just logistical or utilitarian. In this manner, departments can have it both ways: officially, those who have power appear to champion the progressive work of diverse teachers and scholars, but behind the scenes various attempts to undermine and undercut continue, undetected by the larger community. I had never heard the phrase “academic mobbing” until a wise female colleague and mentor raised it as being common practice in my own department. I encourage everyone to review the scant research on this practice, and to note the fact that competent, successful, and “outspoken” women faculty members are typically the primary targets of this insidious behavior.  In a recent piece in the Chronicle of Higher Education [paywall], Gillian Marshall describes her tenure denial as a racist form of bullying, motivated by her accomplishments: “They were bullying me to get out. They denied me tenure because I am a Black woman, and I am a successful Black woman.” Academics are smart, and they will indeed find ways to make you feel unwelcome, out of place, devitalized, using various mobbing strategies, which are “polite” and “sophisticated” forms of workplace abuse.

The biggest danger in our profession around abusive practices might be the desire to deliberately reproduce institutionalized abuses, once one has reached a position of relative power and is no longer very vulnerable.  Faculty members in powerful positions can even claim that they “had it worse” twenty or thirty years ago, in order to silence those they are abusing, effectively justifying their reproduction of abusive behavior toward colleagues in more precarious positions.  The cliché that the abused become the next generation of abusers applies all too clearly within our own profession. Another danger, if one becomes relatively secure in this profession, is choosing to forget the abuse that is endemic to academic life, effectively becoming absorbed by the system. In this case, one develops a kind of amnesia or denialism about the profession, pretending that it wasn’t and isn’t “that bad,” once one is less structurally exposed to the violences and abuses that often dominate university life. Another ethical and respected modernist colleague noted, during the Woolf plenary discussion, that one must actively and vigilantly try not to reproduce abuse, if and when one steps in to positions of authority within our profession.

Scholars like Sara Ahmed continue to challenge us to speak of abuse and harassment in the institution. And to put a finer point on it, Ahmed suggests that “we need to damage institutions.”[5]  Again, the tearing and skinning seem extreme metaphors; but they are apt. Ahmed’s work on complaint in the university, for instance, shows how devastating, how gutting, how destructive university culture often is for female and female-identified academics, for academics of color, and for others.[6]

My own road into the academy was filled with false idealism. I likely over-idealized the intellectual life, because it was not a life I had any connection to in my personal history, in my family history. I genuinely believed that academia, particularly the humanities disciplines, were relatively progressive and “just” enclaves. Poor dear, Virginia Woolf might say of me. We need to learn to talk about our own hypocrisies, as humanities workers. We are better off when we begin with a clear-eyed view of the institutionalized exploitation in our profession, even though it will take decades at minimum to begin to change it. I believe that all of us, but perhaps especially early-career teacher-scholars, graduate students, those in precarious positions, are better off when we all have a more honest view of the institutions we are captured by.

This post is therefore my way of concurring with the sentiment, “The university is not what you think it is” (Stengers and Despret, Women Who Make a Fuss, 137).  The content of this sort of post is not typically published or given in conference lectures. Indeed, this content is usually exchanged between women and other marginalized faculty members in private, over texts and telephone calls, in hallways, offices, or in bathrooms, on long walks, and after hours. One anecdotal reality from these exchanges seems worth mentioning here. I personally know multiple women and queer folks across all phases of their careers in academia who want to leave the profession, some of them full professors, some of them outside of the tenure system altogether. I don’t personally know a single cis-gendered man who has made it “inside” our profession, who actively wants to leave the profession. That is anecdotal, but I think it is very telling. And what does it say about scholarly and intellectual production, about how our students are being taught, about the character of academia itself, that it is mainly white cis men who feel at home in the university, even in 2022? No wonder Woolf was so concerned. How sad that she was so prescient.

Documentation is a feminist project, according to Ahmed (Living, 26). In order to bolster documenting gendered abuse in academia, with hopes for a more just, equitable, and productive system in future, I will be co-editing a volume of essays about gendered abuse in academia with Mary K. Holland (SUNY—New Paltz, co-editor of #MeToo and Literary Studies: Reading, Writing, and Teaching about Sexual Violence and Rape Culture). Our volume aims to feature diverse personal narratives from teacher-scholars across all academic disciplines, in order to witness and learn from their accounts. Our call for abstracts, due by April 1, is here.

The personal is structural, the personal is theoretical, the personal is professional. Again, Ahmed gives us the energy and wisdom to keep working: “Documentation is a feminist project; a life project. . . . When did you put the pieces back together? Perhaps when you put the pieces back together you are putting yourself back together. We assemble something. Feminism is DIY: a form of self-assembly” (Living, 26–27). As Erica rightly notes, bristles as praxis “can tear down as well as build up.” Let’s witness and honor the moments of feminist snap in academia. Let’s challenge the reproduction of gendered abuse in our profession, together. Let’s speak up, let’s speak out, and let’s try to make our profession less damaging.

 

Notes

[1] See the introduction in Josephine Donovan and Carol J. Adams, eds. The Feminist Care Tradition in Animal Ethics (New York: Columbia University Press, 2007).

[2] Woolf is explicit about these violences in Three Guineas. See, for instance, her discussion of the “iniquity of dictatorship, whether in Oxford or Cambridge, in Whitehall or Downing Street, against Jews or against women” in Virginia Woolf, Three Guineas (New York: Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1966), 103.

[3] Patricia A. Matthew, Written/Unwritten: Diversity and the Hidden Truths of Tenure (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2016), xv–xvi. 

[4] Isabelle Stengers and Vinciane Despret, and collective, Women Who Make a Fuss: The Unfaithful Daughters of Virginia Woolf, trans. April Knutson (Minneapolis: Univocal Publishing, 2014), 52.

[5] Sara Ahmed, Living a Feminist Life (Durham: Duke University Press, 2017), 140.

[6] See Sara Ahmed, Complaint! (Durham: Duke University Press, 2021).