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.
Print Plus Exclusive

Where the Letters Lead: the Appalachian Prison Book Project

December 29, 2020 By: Katy Ryan

Volume 5 Cycle 4

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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.

Twenty-six years later, I’ve written that essay, edited that collection. I participate in book clubs and teach classes in prison and, with many others, wear a badge and walk a line and try to do no harm and breathe through a world of trauma. Doing this work can feel like walking a rickety bridge over a fiery abyss—of disconnection, complicity, unending grief. And I’m white, so the passage is exponentially smoothed. Also on the bridge making varied crossings are prison workers, contractors, volunteers, family members and friends whose loved ones are incarcerated.[1] Sometimes you see someone falling. Sometimes you lose your step.

In 2004, I taught my first graduate course in prison studies at West Virginia University. As we read fiction, essays, memoirs, and poetry, students were struck by the emphasis, across more than one hundred and fifty years of writing, on the importance of access to books in prison. In “Coming into Language,” Jimmy Santiago Baca describes stealing a textbook in a county jail and falling in love with words, with poetry: “I crawled out of stanzas,” he writes.[2] Assata Shakur recalls the company that reading provided her in state custody: “Me and James Baldwin are communicating. His fiction is more real than this reality.”[3]

I mentioned to students in that class that there were no organizations providing free books to people incarcerated in our state. We did some research and learned there were very few prison book projects in our region. We decided to create one. Joined by community and university members, we spent two years collecting paperbacks, raising money, and finding a donated workspace. We decided to focus on six states—West Virginia, Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, and Maryland—and began to call ourselves the Appalachian Prison Book Project (APBP).

APBP is grounded in the belief that education is a human right and that engaging the community is essential to restorative justice. Dr. Valerie Surrett wrote our mission statement.

In September, Renaldo walked out of prison. Moon right where he left it thirty-seven years ago. It took a pandemic to open the door for this person who has so much to contribute, so much to teach. His level of fortitude and patience, his commitment to education and mentorship, his great heart should not be requirements to be free. It took all of that as well.

A Zillion Words 

Over two hundred letters arrive at APBP each week, many with beautiful artwork on the envelope (figs. 1-2).

Envelope art
Fig 1. Envelope art.
Envelope art
Fig. 2. Envelope art.

Book requests span the spectrum: almanacs, westerns, poetry, how to draw, learn music, do woodwork, start a business, books on indigenous histories, LGBTQ novels, spy thrillers, African American literature, the Divine Comedy, sacred books, Chinese philosophy, legal dictionaries, books in Spanish, joke books. Volunteers try to select books that people really want to read (fig. 3).

Volunteers Gabriella Pishotti, Kristin DeVault, and Beth Staley (left to right). Photo by Raymond Thompson Jr.
Fig. 3. Volunteers Gabriella Pishotti, Kristin DeVault, and Beth Staley (left to right). Photo by Raymond Thompson Jr. 

One person wrote, “I only want books on WV History.” The most requested book is the dictionary. We have mailed more than 50,000 books (figs. 4-5).

Books to be wrapped and mailed. Photo by Raymond Thompson Jr. 
Fig. 4. Books to be wrapped and mailed. Photo by Raymond Thompson Jr. 

APBP is a volunteer-driven organization and one of about forty prison book projects across the country, a network that shares resources and information, including updates on book bans and restrictions. While APBP donates to prison libraries, we work hard to preserve the one-to-one exchange. People tell us over and over how much this matters, as in these letters sent from Tennessee and West Virginia:

I want to tell you that I really appreciate the service you provide to prisoners. It truly reminds me that we are not all forgotten and there are people like yourself that still care. . . . I have always enjoyed reading and my family simply can’t afford to buy me books.

I got your info from a fellow inmate that gets books from y’all. Could you send me some books so I will have something to read? I’m on protective custody and the library hardly ever comes back here to bring us books. I’ll read anything you send to me.

I am currently locked in my cell 23 hours a day, so you can only imagine how much mail means to me :(

Will you please send me a dictionary with a “ZILLION, ZILLION” words in it?! I am 60 years old and have been in prison 23 years, with life to go. But I can read even the smallest of print.

I stayed up and read the book all night. I really did enjoy it and I thank you. I love reading . . . I have one more request, for a Scrabble dictionary. That would stop a lot of fighting here, when they are playing the game.

If I ever get on my feet I will send some stamps to cover some costs. My mom passed away last year and I’ve been having a hard time and the books are very appreciated. :) Keep on doing what you do because you are saving lives for sure. I’d go crazy without a good book to read and our library is very small when we get to use it, which isn’t often.

All the books you have sent me in the past have definitely helped me pass the time and keep my sanity when the prison is on lockdown and we are stuck in our cells all day for days, and sometimes weeks at a time.

As we read letters and learned to navigate a labyrinth of mail policies, we wanted to go inside prisons with books. To learn how, in 2014 we organized the Educational Justice & Appalachian Prisons Symposium at WVU. The event brought together scholars, activists, prison staff and administration, students, lawyers, and leaders of higher education in prison programs. The opening panel featured three incarcerated men who spoke about the power of education. The symposium led to our first book club in prison.

Book clubs consist of fifteen incarcerated members and four to six APBP volunteers who meet every other week to discuss books and work on writing projects. Members decide together on what to read. Discussions are expansive, full of humor and insight. Two book clubs created collections of their phenomenal writing and art.

To go through the gates is to be made newly aware of John Wideman’s observation in Brothers and Keepers: “Power was absurdly apportioned all on one side.”[4] Toting in books for mothers who may have lost custody of their children; doing a workshop, knowing most of the writers will be unable to share their work or name publicly; analyzing a poem when what most needs to be said cannot be said: it can feel like capitulation, like not enough. At the end of his memoir, R. Dwayne Betts acknowledges, “The truth is the names in this book represent real people, and whatever I say fails to open the cell doors that close behind them.”[5] Many of us struggle with this limit but find hope and context for this work in renewed calls to defund the police, abolish prisons, and protect black lives. Criminal justice scholar Breea Willingham offers this perspective: writing “allows imprisoned women to create their own discourse within an oppressive system and in an oppressive space. Though their writings may not dismantle the system, they create a space where the women find their voice and educate themselves.”[6] We have learned not to underestimate that space.

Inside members set a high standard for literary analysis, application, clarity, and for caring what the person next to you is trying to say. Kevin wrote this after reading Brothers and Keepers in my first Inside Out class:

I became more conscious of the world around me. . . . The literature that I read in class led me to have certain conversations with my family that helped me cope with things that happened in my life. I was for sure able to heal.

Those of us who teach have been changed by these conversations. I used to think content was the most important part of my literature courses. Now I know only the connections between us will do justice to liberating content.

The Work

Prisons are the backend (and also, given discrimination upon release, at times the frontend) of law enforcement mechanisms that demonstrate racism at every juncture, what James Baldwin called the “criminal power” of the system.[7] The scale of the US prison experiment involves the oversurveillance and confinement of Black and brown people, LGBTQ people, people with histories of trauma, of unemployment, those who are poor, with disabilities, struggling with addiction. None of these categories sum up the individuals and communities who are trying to manage and survive a system that exceeds prison gates.[8] To understand who ends up under correctional supervision or in custody, why, and what happens, the public needs access to the analyses and creative work of impacted people.

Despite scarce resources, constraints on communication, and constant noise, people in prison write: memoirs, essays, novels, zines, legal briefs, poems, songs, academic articles, journalism, plays, podcasts, and many, many letters. Betts explains, “An ink pen was the only way to carve a voice out of the air and have others hear it while in prison.”[9] A large part of APBP’s work is learning to hear these voices.

The literature of imprisonment teaches us how to read—and how, to borrow from Edwidge Danticat, to read dangerously.[10] Not unlike slave narratives, a tradition often explicitly invoked by imprisoned writers, these texts call for readers’ active response to injustice and direct attention to authority, intertextuality, and veiled omissions. James Forman, Jr. has called for a reckoning with political and legal systems that goes “beyond the New Jim Crow.”[11] An analytical overreliance on an earlier period’s form of racist repression, he argues, can lead us to insufficiently attend to people with violent charges, to victims of violence, and to the forces that land a million white people in prison. The constant reconfiguration of the racist heart demands praxis attuned to the scope of what it means to be “caught” in America.[12] Literary studies in turn are challenged to generate readings that account for the contemporary carceral regime. We cannot understand Susan Burton’s Becoming Ms. Burton or Donna Hylton’s A Little Piece of Light with only the tools we need to read Harriet Jacobs’s Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl. But we need those tools.

An imprisoned activist recently tweeted, “If free world scholars are not willing to engage the work of imprisoned intellectuals, from where will they get their information, the factual basis, of their work? Do they expect the departments of corrections or the police to provide accurate information or analyses?” It is an urgent question in our country: Where do you get your information?

Students and colleagues who have not been affected by incarceration often respond in the same way when they first go inside prison: “I had no idea.” They are not talking about the barbed wire or gun towers; they are talking about the people. Confronting the depth of this not-knowing compels us to think about the collusion of K-college education with mass incarceration. Going inside confers onto members of higher education a responsibility to change these relations—to teach the history of convict leasing, to eliminate criminal background checks, to support Pell grants for imprisoned students and scholarships for those released, to create avenues for people to publish and speak without retaliation, and to bring into focus the conditions that give rise to abuse, harm, injury, and premature death, in and out of prison.

It also requires rethinking concepts. To give one example, in Forced Passages, Dylan Rodriguez warns against the generic use of “prison writing” to categorize writing produced in captivity.

To the extent that “the prison” becomes a homogenizing modifier, designating the institutional location of the writer's labor, the genre equilibrates state captivity with other literary moments and spatial sites in civil society, or the free world . . . The academic and cultural fabrication of “prison writing” as a literary genre is, in this sense, a discursive gesture toward order and coherence where, for the writer, there is generally neither.[13]

Rodriguez recommends instead “radical prison praxis,” an approach alert to the white-supremacist logic of immobility and the “militarized physiological domination over human beings.”[14] This kind of solidarity changes not only how we do things; it changes the “we.”

Openings

APBP builds at the crossroads of research, teaching, direct service, and activism, ethical realms that can be reinforcing or in conflict. The people we have come to know through this work refuse to discount their lives and continue to care and to create. When Celeste, a founding book club member, was transferred, she worked for two years to start her own book club. Kevin published a memoir, a series of reflections and letters to his eight-year-old son. Maurice created the APBP logo (figs. 6-7).

APBP logo by book club member Maurice
Fig. 6. APBP logo by book club member Maurice.
Letter sorting to prepare for book collection.
Fig. 7. Letter sorting to prepare for book collection.

Magical Charlie is keeping a daily journal of his experience living through a pandemic in prison. Ya’iyr is writing poems wrenched from desolation and driven by Black love.

Last year, APBP was able to pay tuition costs for WVU Inside-Out classes. Inspired by the community that emerged from these classes, we are working to create a path to an Associate of Arts degree for incarcerated students. In November, Renaldo Hudson talked to my graduate class about his imprisonment and release, his work to create change, and where he finds joy.

We are partnering with the Mellon Foundation’s Million Book Project, directed by Betts, to bring books into prisons. We are creating a collection of letters and artwork sent to APBP over the years (fig. 7). We are establishing a protocol for initiating and reviewing advocacy efforts with and on behalf of diverse stakeholders. This last commitment emerged from APBP’s public stance against exploitative prison tablet contracts.

Everything we do revolves around books. APBP has always been powered by a love of reading. One measure of our work is books mailed, classes taken. But the real measure is freedom. The road is long. We are taking deep breaths. Opening every letter.

 

Notes

[1] See Victoria M. Bryan, “The Prison Oppresses: Avoiding the False Us/Them Binary in Prison Education,” Critical Perspectives on Teaching in Prison: Students and Instructors on Pedagogy Behind the Wall, ed. Rebecca Ginsberg (New York: Routledge, 2019), 157-165.

[2] Jimmy Santiago Baca, “Coming into Language,” Doing Time: Twenty-Five Years of Prison Writing, ed. Bell Gale Chevigny (New York: Arcade, 2011), 103.

[3] Assata: An Autobiography (Chicago, IL: Lawrence Hill Books, 2001), 155.

[4] John Wideman, Brothers and Keepers: A Memoir (New York: First Mariner Books, 2005), 84.

[5] R. Dwayne Betts, A Question of Freedom: A Memoir of Learning, Survival, and Coming of Age in Prison (New York: Avery, 2009), 207.

[6] Breea C. Willingham, “Black Women's Prison Narratives and the Intersection of Race, Gender, and Sexuality in US Prisons,” Critical Survey, Vol. 23, No. 3 (2011), 57.

[7] James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (New York: Vintage, 1992), 23. Also see, D. Quentin Miller, A Criminal Power: James Baldwin and the Law (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2012).

[8] For the extensive reach of prison, see, for instance, Brett Story, Prison Land: Mapping Carceral Power Across Neoliberal America (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2019).

[9]  R. Dwayne Betts, A Question of Freedom: A Memoir of Learning, Survival, and Coming of Age in Prison (New York: Avery, 2009), 123.

[10] Edwidge Danticat, Create Dangerously: The Immigrant Artist at Work (New York: Vintage, 2010), 10.

[11] James Forman, Jr. “Racial Critiques of Mass Incarceration: Beyond the New Jim Crow,” Racial Critiques (February 26, 2012), 101-146.

[12] With “caught,” I allude to Marie Gottschalk, Caught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of American Politics (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015).

[13] Dylan Rodriguez, Forced Passages: Imprisoned Radical Intellectuals and the U.S. Prison Regime (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2005), 84.

[14] Dylan Rodriguez, “The Disorientation of the Teaching Act: Abolition as Pedagogical Position,” Radical Teacher 88 (2010), 8.