Recent Scholarship

February 17, 2021 By: The Editors

A forum for reviews of recent publications and important books we may have missed the first time around. It also includes "Race in the Modernism/modernity Archives: The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond."

April 21, 2026 By: Emily Christina Murphy

In the first flush of text-based, web-published digital humanities projects, modernist literary studies has had a fairly thin representation, excluded largely by an accident of copyright. Literary scholarship from the Victorian period and earlier has relied on open-access text to build digital editions, digitizing, encoding, and circulating texts for scholarly and public audiences.

February 25, 2026 By: Allan Hepburn

© 2026 Johns Hopkins University Press Briony Tallis, the irksome thirteen-year-old writer in Ian McEwan’s novel Atonement (2001), ruins the lives of her sister, Cecilia, and, to an even greater degree, Robbie Turner, by telling a lie. Because of Briony’s untruthfulness, Robbie goes to prison, then to France at the start of the Second World War, where he dies of septicaemia on the beach at Dunkirk. During her decades-long writing career, Briony creates several stories about what happened between...

December 17, 2025 By: Edward Mitchell

In 1973, the Municipality of Istanbul and the State Academy of Fine Arts sponsored a competition among Turkish sculptors. Fifty sculptures, each by a different artist, were to be erected in public spaces throughout the city. The purpose was to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the Republic of Turkey. Due to practical constraints, the number of winning sculptures was reduced to twenty, which were then commissioned and erected in the specified locations. Of these twenty, only four remain in their original sites today. Three were stolen for the value of their metal. Three more were lost due to road work. Several were removed and lost when their sites were redesigned. Another was declared “meaningless” by a district mayor and jackhammered into oblivion.

November 5, 2025 By: H. N. Lukes

The first notable aspect of Jordan Brower’s intensely researched book is that it mentions Theodore Adorno only twice, in passing, and Max Horkheimer not at all (poor Max). We get it by now: the culture industry qua oligarchy of the Hollywood studio system qua corporate personhood was propaganda, and scholars need to get on with more detailed work. As I write, the emergent rallying cry of “Stop the Oligarchy” analogizes more to the Gilded Age than to Classical Hollywood. Yet today’s anti-oligarchy sentiment is often directed at Silicon Valley tycoons, who have consumed much of Hollywood itself through streaming services, wrought a new kind of culture industry by commodifying our very attention beyond ideological propaganda, and are now trying to deaccession government itself. Brower’s account of the studio system provides an important analysis of how such oligarchical sausage once got made at the nexus of entertainment, art, and anti-trust law by charting how literary authors, the publishing industry, and classical studios adapted to each other, in every sense, for better or worse.

August 20, 2025 By: Martin Harries

Impish yet magisterial, Thierry de Duve continues a career’s investigation of what he now calls “Duchamp’s telegram.” The occasion of this telegram is the piece Duchamp dubbed Fountain (1917). From the start, de Duve is clear about what Fountain signifies: it “is situated at the juncture of two art worlds, one in which a urinal cannot possibly be art and one in which this urinal is art” (13). In this book, de Duve, among the most provocative of contemporary theorists of visual art, insistently identifies himself as an art historian. The questions the art historian pursues, with all the gathered evidence of

June 18, 2025 By: Jules O’Dwyer

Beaches occupy an interstitial position between water and land; their contours are rarely fixed but are rather subject to the vicissitudes of time and tide. The liminal quality of the beachscape as a geophysical formation is curiously echoed by its “vexed” and “contradictory” position as a cultural and aesthetic phenomenon (2). For while the beach is the privileged object of the touristic gaze, its longstanding association with otium and leisure, with rest and reprieve, belies its more ambivalent history as a site of colonial and anthropogenic domination. Although the beach has been thoroughly parsed within some traditions of spatial theorizing—notably in essays by French thinkers such as Roland Barthes, Jean-Didier Urbain, and Alain Corbin—it has largely eluded the attention of modernist scholars, due in part to the field’s longstanding affinities with the space of the city. And yet, as Hannah Freed-Thall writes compellingly, the modernist beachscape yields a rich cultural archive and a generative space through which to think questions of emplacement, improvisation, and relationality.

March 26, 2025 By: Paul Jaussen

What is it like to write within a fold? Heather A. Love’s engaging new study argues that canonical modernist literature bends into a cybernetic future. Following Eve Sedgwick and Adam Frank’s transhistorical notion of the “cybernetic fold,” Love asks us to consider modernism as an art of informatics, data sets, entangled human-machines, and dynamic feedback loops, well before such notions had become self-consciously articulated. Combining both media and information theory, her book expands Bernard Scott’s claim that “cybernetics came into being before it had a nam

December 11, 2024 By: Anca Parvulescu

Among the most important books in literary studies in the last decade, Laura Doyle’s Inter-imperiality: Vying Empires, Gendered Labor, and the Literary Arts of Alliance deserves sustained attention. Situated between comparative literary studies, world history, decolonial theory, and gender studies, Inter-imperiality recasts literary history as a counterpoint to the world history of empires. Profoundly interdisciplinary, it makes a forceful case for the relevance of literary analysis to the comparative study of empires—and coloniality.

August 22, 2024 By: Shaj Mathew

A century before Edward Said, a robust critique of orientalism proliferated within the so-called Orient. Zeynep Çelik argues this point in an edited collection of journalism, polemic, and scholarship from the late Ottoman Empire and early Turkish Republic. Europe Knows Nothing about the Orient criticizes European knowledge production about Turkey through voices well known—such as Ahmed Midhat, Nâzım Hikmet, Halide Edib, and Tevfik Fikret—as well as those less so, including Şevket Süreyya and Ebüzziya. Translated into English from the original Turkish edition by Gregory Key, Nergis Perçinel, Micah Hughes, İlker Hepkaner, and Aron Aji, these modernist writers do not celebrate the arrival of European modernity so much as critique its transformation of nearly every facet of Turkish life: architecture, tourism, gender, and literature. This light paperback is therefore anything but: it is an essential companion to Orientalism (1978). While Said’s text has generated many memorable critiques, ranging from those of Aijaz Ahmad to Wael Hallaq, Çelik’s intervention gives voice to those who were “orientalized.” If orientalist scholarship constituted epistemic violence, this volume represents a trove of epistemic resistance.

June 19, 2024 By: Michal Peles-Almagor

Allison Schachter’s book Women Writing Jewish Modernity gives voice to the challenges Jewish women writers faced when they turned their pen to prose in the first half of the twentieth century. Scholarship has constructed literary genealogies of Jewish prose writing primarily in relation to male writers, ranging from Sholem Aleichem to Yosef Haim Brenner’s figure of the talush (the modern rootless Jew). Women Writing Jewish Modernity, in contrast, recovers the work of five interwar women writers: Fradl Shtok, Dvora Baron, Elisheva Bikhovsky, Leah Goldberg, and Debora Vogel, and reconfigures Jewish literary history

February 21, 2024 By: Thomas A. Laughlin

Northrop Frye argued that behind every realist narrative was a displaced mythic structure that could explain the deeper meaning of its themes and patterns. Frye’s archetypal theory was in many ways a modernist one. Had not James Joyce and T. S. Eliot themselves sought to unify the seemingly random data of modern experience by indicating for their readers deep mythic structures undergirding their works? Myth was not held on to so much as a system of belief as for its ability to give a kind of formal unity—even if only latently—to the otherwise centrifugal force of the new and diverse material of modern life. In modernism, myth allied with literary form against the messy, debased business of daily existence in post-traditional society. But what if this is the wrong way to tell the story? This is the question posed by Paul Stasi in The Persistence of Realism in Modernist Fiction, which discovers behind modernism not myth but the displaced form of the realist novel.

November 16, 2023 By: Alessandro Giammei

The title of this swift, powerfully written monograph on the archives of the League of Nations in Geneva offers a prodigious portrait of its real object of study: the so-called “interwar” period in European culture. Rather than a mere history of the League itself, A Violent Peace reads like a humanistic treatise on the most magmatic chronotope of western late-modernity: the ironically utopian, painfully bureaucratic, Freudianly fascist years that put into question, arguably for good, earlier concepts of reality, opinion, State, and world.

July 20, 2023 By: Joshua Corey

Lisa Robertson’s 2001 book The Weather is a classic of the post-pastoral, in which the “architecture” of constantly shifting patterns of clouds and vapors supplants the nostalgia of landscape. A note at the end of the book tells us that it resulted partly from “an intense yet eccentric research in the rhetorical structure of English meteorological description.” BBC shipping forecasts, William Wordsworth’s The Prelude, William Cobbett’s Rural Rides, and the cloud sketches of John Constable were among Robertson’s sources, as was the delightfully titled Essay on the Modification of Clouds by the nineteenth-century amateur meteorologist Luke Howard.

January 9, 2023 By: Len Gutkin

With its tight focus on figuration in a hypercanonical trio of authors—Henry James, Marcel Proust, Virginia Woolf —Dora Zhang’s Strange Likeness feels almost deliberately unfashionable. Its fine readings, its deft deployment of narrative theory, its rigorous illuminations of the uses of description and metaphor in modernism, all read in many ways like the work of an earlier and more confident moment in the history of literary studies. It is refreshingly free of the cant that can seem everywhere now: the trumped-up claims for ethical urgency, the desperate engagements with novel and often barely relevant theoretical frameworks, and the confused substitution of criticism for politics. At a moment when not just modernist studies but literary studies writ large are facing institutional eclipse, it is thrilling to be reminded that, in the right hands, the old tools can still do so much. (This is not to imply that Zhang insulates herself from contemporary theoretical developments. In particular, she avails herself of some of the newer ways of talking about emotion that have become popular in recent years.) Zhang goes in chronological order—from James to Proust to Woolf—but I’m going to begin at the end, with Woolf. Zhang picks out a feature of Woolf’s writing that every reader of Woolf will recognize, even if they hadn’t been aware that they had noticed it before. That’s the tendency, in moments of charged epiphany, or baffled love and inarticulate affection, or accesses of transcendence or just the suspicion of transcendence, for Woolf’s free indirect discourse to resort to the demonstrative or the deictic, “This” or “That.” Think of Mrs. Dalloway’s “This moment of June,” or, more idiosyncratically, “She knew nothing; no language, no history; she scarcely read a book now, except memoirs in bed; and yet to her it was absolutely absorbing; all this; the cabs passing; and she would not say of Peter, she would not say of herse

September 1, 2022 By: Matthew Levay

One cannot review Hannah Frank’s Frame by Frame without observing that it is a book marked by tragedy, specifically its author’s passing in 2017. That might have meant the end of the present volume—a lightly edited revision of Frank’s dissertation—had it not been for a few prominent advocates who saw it through to publication, even as they cautioned that, without much opportunity for revision, readers should consider Frame by Frame a work in progress. In his editor’s introduction, Daniel Morgan explains that the book “is basically the dissertation that Frank defended in August 2016,” and “not the book that she would have published,” as Frank had already begun planning extensive changes to the manuscript that she did not live to complete (xxii).

June 30, 2022 By: Mary Ann Caws

In 2017, at the Jewish Museum in New York, the exhibition “Florine Stettheimer: Painting Poetry” abounded in marvels for me and many others. Who was missing from the paintings mattered less than the astonishing presence of figures we all cared so about, presided over by Marcel Duchamp, on whose portraits and chess fascination Aaron Tucker expands so intelligently. There was Duchamp often, relaxed and no less brilliant than always.

June 9, 2022 By: Brooks E. Hefner

The last few years have witnessed the loss of a handful of longstanding and influential Black publications. The Chicago Defender ceased its print publication in 2019 (but remains online) and the Johnson Publishing Company—publishers of Jet and (until 2016) Ebony—was liquidated in the same year. These legendary publishers left a profound legacy on African American print culture and these recent changes have occasioned many eulogies and prompted more consideration of the influential history of twentieth-century Black publishing. While there is a rich tradition of scholarship on African American periodicals in the nineteenth century—from abolitionist newspapers and religious journals to international publications and children’s periodicals—scholarship on twentieth-century African American periodicals has not been quite as robust.

March 17, 2022 By: Richard Cavell

Modernity seems very much to be with us still. Yet that explosive moment on either side of 1900 is long over, and what has come after is either a pale shadow of its former self or actively contests it. It is precisely that gap that Johanna Drucker explores in Iliazd: A Meta-Biography of a Modernist, in terms of the book artist Iliazd (1894-1975) and of Drucker herself, who began her project as a graduate student in 1985 and returned to it in 2019 as the Breslauer Professor of Bibliographical Studies and Distinguished Professor of Information Studies at UCLA.

February 24, 2022 By: Richard A. Kaye

This collection brings new attention to modernism’s self-repression—and the repression by critics—of its origins in fin-de-siècle decadent poetics. Examining a tantalizing range of Anglo-American writers, the contributors variously make a case for decadent writing as entwined with modernist achievements. Running through the volume, too, is an emphasis on the ways in which decadent literature determined a queer poetics that stood astride modernism in the writing of familiar writers such as Djuna Barnes, Ronald Firbank, Gertrude Stein, D.H. Lawrence, Mina Loy, H.D., Hart Crane, and Carl Van Vechten as well as lesser-known figures such as Margaret Sackville, Ada Leverson, Bruce Nugent, and Donald Evans.

December 16, 2021 By: Greg Barnhisel

The Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement has done an enormous amount of work to educate Americans and the rest of the world about how deeply embedded white supremacy is in our institutions, including cultural ones like art and literature. It has also demanded that we center the voices and perspectives of nonwhite people. So why is William Faulkner having another moment, right when it feels like we have heard quite enough of white people’s takes on race relations? And why is he still at the top of our pantheon of authors when so many other perfectly suitable successors, such as Toni Morrison, have emerged since Faulkner’s death fifty years ago?

November 22, 2021 By: Hsuan L. Hsu

A Chinese translation of “Rip Van Winkle.” A speech by Ralph Waldo Emerson honoring the Burlingame-Seward treaty. A translation of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s “A Psalm of Life” inscribed on a Mandarin fan. The autobiography and poetry of Yale’s first Chinese graduate, who founded a school for Chinese exchange students in Hartford. Judging by the stature of the figures and institutions involved, we might expect that the archive of nineteenth-century literary encounters between China and the United States would have generated lasting networks of influence.

September 7, 2021 By: Benjamin Hagen

Rachel Sagner Buurma and Laura Heffernan’s The Teaching Archive: A New History for Literary Study “declines to take up arms in the method wars” (9). But let’s not be fooled. This pacifism is not passive. This avoidance of “our metadiscourse” conditions an act of critical sabotage which defuses weapons of mass abstraction—i.e. formalism, historicism, ideology critique, postcritique, surface reading, distance reading, and so on (9). Buurma and Heffernan’s new history neither minds the gap nor suggests liberal, incremental readjustments. Rather, they make the claim—a revolutionary one—that what we “will watch,” “follow,” “see,” and “encounter” in the pages of their study “overturns,” “demolishes,” “scrambles,” “dispels,” and “dismisses” “nearly every major account of what the history of literary studies has been” (1, 6).

June 21, 2021 By: Laura E. Helton

A recurring dispute on Twitter in recent years revolves around claims of archival discovery. Announcements of scholars finding documents “lost in the archive” inevitably provoke exasperated reminders, often from archivists, that such documents had already been found—and perhaps even cataloged. But when Jean-Christophe Cloutier came upon Claude McKay’s last novel, Amiable with Big Teeth, few could dispute that discovery was the correct term. As a graduate student intern at Columbia University’s Rare Book and Manuscript Library in 2009, Cloutier was processing the papers of literary agent and “all-around schemer” Samuel Roth when he encountered the lone copy of McKay’s unpublished manuscript, the existence of which surprised scholars and archivists alike (286).

April 6, 2021 By: Ramsey McGlazer

Ben Conisbee Baer’s Indigenous Vanguards is about the education of modernist educators. But the book is also itself an education, combining range with rigor to alter our understanding of modernism and its limits. Baer focuses mainly on the interwar period and on primary education as it figures in the work of Alain Locke, Léopold Sédar Senghor, Aimé Césaire, D. H. Lawrence, and Tarashankar Bandyopadhyay, among others. Baer’s readings are riveting, and they will inform research in fields including postcolonial studies, Marxism, critical and political theory, and comparative literature.

February 17, 2021 By: Christopher Bush

We are pleased to be able to share here a selection of articles on race and modernism from past print issues of Modernism/modernity. Reflecting the history of the journal, many of these focus on the Harlem Renaissance, but we’ve also included articles on the Caribbean and Brazil as well as a more broadly comparative treatment of race...

December 15, 2020 By: Sara Silverstein

In her stateless exile, Hannah Arendt read Franz Kafka. He was “rather uncannily adequate to the reality” of statelessness, she wrote (quoted in Stonebridge, 29). In 1933 Arendt had fled Germany through a house that sat on the border with Czechoslovakia (24). She ate dinner and left by the back door, into a legal void that exists on the fringes of the accepted world order of sovereign states and citizenship (24).

June 8, 2020 By: Patrick Fessenbecker

© 2020 Johns Hopkins University Press Sam Rose’s compelling new book Art and Form begins with the observation that modernist formalism has suffered severe blows to its reputation since its heyday in Clement Greenberg’s aesthetics, but argues that many of its critics have been attacking straw men. The supposed doxa of formalist aesthetics—that there is an autonomous realm of aesthetic experience, that this realm is radically separated from the world and available only to the sophisticated, and...

March 26, 2020 By: Marta Figlerowicz

© 2020 Johns Hopkins University Press As I read Affective Materialities: Reorienting the Body in Modernist Literature, my mind wandered to a 1929 essay by Theodor Adorno. The essay considers the late quartets of Ludwig van Beethoven and the early compositions of Franz Schubert. Adorno describes the transition between the two composers as follows: He who crosses the threshold between the years of Beethoven’s death and Schubert’s will shiver, like someone emerging into the painfully diaphanous...

January 3, 2020 By: Susan Laxton

French surrealism at mid-twentieth century was marked (some would say, marred) by André Breton’s new-found interest in esoteric knowledge—a period, argues Gavin Parkinson in his latest book, in which surrealism “willingly entered a critical and theoretical wilderness with its advocacy of magic and occultism in its art, poetry and theory, and its insistence on the ‘indispensable condition of enchantment’—the impenetrable nucleus of resistance to human inquiry that exists within any system of knowledge” (322). Parkinson’s justification for what he calls surrealism’s “journey into obscurity,” is an accomplished revisionist account of what has been treated as surrealism’s most misguided moment, one that Parkinson has successfully complicated—and recuperated—with the movement’s engagement with metaphor, symbolism, regional medievalism, and abstraction, as articulated by Breton’s concurrent assessment of fin-de-siècle French painting (323).

September 17, 2019 By: Ignacio Infante

The figure of Miguel de Unamuno (1864–1936) looms large in the development of modern Spanish literature, as thoroughly demonstrated by Leslie Harkema’s Spanish Modernism and the Poetics of Youth. By carefully tracing the literary and cultural impact of Unamuno’s writings, letters, and public lectures from the 1890s to the 1930s—four crucial decades for the development of Spain as a modern nation—Harkema presents an important and necessary critical rereading of the literary history of Spanish modernist and avant-garde movements. At the core of Harkema’s book lies a sophisticated critical examination of Unamuno’s work and influence that successfully overcomes old clichés and previously established commonplaces about the influential Basque polymath (poet, novelist, academic, politician, philologist, and philosopher, in no particular order), while at the same time newly presenting Unamuno’s philosophical and literary conceptualizations of youth in relation to a complex constellation of key networks of literary and cultural production in modern Spain.

June 13, 2019 By: Kinohi Nishikawa

© 2019 Johns Hopkins University Press The endpapers of Liesl Olson’s new book are disorienting. We see a map of a city bisected by lines and organized into grids. Heavier lines punctuated by circles indicate public transportation routes and their stops. A jagged shoreline appears at the bottom, cutting off the geometric exactness of the lines. But the lines grow less dense toward the top of the papers, indicating where the suburbs begin (or end) on the map. In the lower nook of the binding...

February 15, 2019 By: Alix Beeston

At the Oxford University Press stall at last year’s Modern Language Association Convention in New York City, Louise Hornby’s Still Modernism: Photography, Literature, Film was propped up next to Moving Modernisms: Motion, Technology, and Modernity, a collection of essays edited by David Bradshaw, Laura Marcus, and Rebecca Roach. Accidental, perhaps; mischievous, I hope: an editorial assistant with a twinkle in her eye.

December 4, 2018 By: Etsuko Taketani

During World War II, Malcolm Little, who would eventually become the charismatic minister and spokesman for the Nation of Islam, Malcolm X, dissembled his true feelings toward war so successfully that he was banned from service. He found clever ways to avoid the draft. Malcolm Little played a “pro-Tokyo Negro” and acted crazy. He spread the word that he “was frantic to join . . . the Japanese Army,” and hoped that his words would reach army intelligence soldiers in Harlem (1). He whispered into the ear of the army psychiatrist in the induction center, “I want to get sent down South. Organize them nigger soldiers, you dig? Steal us some guns, and kill up crackers!” (1). His dissembling performance got Malcolm Little exactly what he wanted: a military classification of 4-F, not acceptable for military service, on his registration card.

September 18, 2018 By: Robert Jackson

This book investigates a flood that sprawled across forty percent of the United States (and some of Canada), killing hundreds (and perhaps thousands, since African American deaths were not included in any “official” count), displacing nearly one million people—including 300,000 African Americans who were placed in makeshift camps, which the Red Cross called “concentration camps” and which reproduced a particularly American racial logic—and stimulating an enormous range of intellectual and aesthetic production from the Mississippi Delta blues of Bessie Smith to the Berlin radio broadcasts of Walter Benjamin. The 1927 Mississippi flood, Parrish argues at length, and quite compellingly, should be understood as one of the central events in the history of modernism.

April 18, 2018 By: Greg Barnhisel

Even taking into consideration penicillin and the atomic bomb, bureaucracy may be the most consequential and pervasive of twentieth-century humanity’s gifts to ourselves. (Global warming we gave to all species.) Yes, administrative gears ground in ancient Rome and classical China, but in the 1900s bureaucratic organizations and institutions of every type spread like kudzu. Sociologists such as William Whyte and Max Weber documented how, over the first half of the century, bureaucracies proliferated beyond the church, the military, and the government, coming to colonize every aspect of modern life.

January 31, 2018 By: Nan Z. Da

Here is a get-over-yourself model of literary character. Flat protagonists are those that do not become more filled out or more compelling to others over the course of the novel even though they occupy the most space. Marta Figlerowicz takes a wonderful risk in giving her book this name because the flatness of the protagonists she tracks is not a dimensional reduction (as in: keeping them flat to study them from a distance, paring down their attributes until only the most essential—usually, historical materialist—ones remain, or turning them into the new objects of an anti-depth hermeneutics).

January 19, 2018 By: Emily Christina Murphy

Zelda Fitzgerald and her husband F. Scott Fitzgerald appeared on the cover of Hearst’s International magazine in 1922, held up as icons of the Jazz Age, of youth, talent, and burgeoning literary celebrity. This image remains one of the most recognizable of the couple. However, alongside this iconicity, Zelda Fitzgerald’s various diagnoses of mental illness have prompted critics both sympathetic and unsympathetic to remember her primarily in terms of the tragedy of her life—whether as the mad wife who brought about the downfall of her brilliant husband, or as the victim of patriarchal control and pathologization.

November 17, 2017 By: Vicente Lecuna

This book explores the relationships between modernism, modernization, and dictatorship, and in the process repoliticizes the discussion of a crucial period in Venezuelan modernity. Blackmore approaches these relationships through Raymond Williams’s notion of a dominant cultural formation, that “sense of reality shaped by the complex interlocking of political, social, and cultural forces that permeates a whole body of practices, expectations, and aspects of life” (19). Relying on detailed historical research and archival work, Blackmore conducts a complex and nuanced examination that does not avoid the subject’s many sensitive nerves.

August 25, 2017 By: Jesse Matz

How modernism transformed the conditions of history is the subject of Robert S. Lehman’s excellent Impossible Modernism, a book that should change the way we do history in modernist studies. Lehman surveys recent and current historicist work in the field and rightly argues that “[i]n their eagerness to read modernism historically, critics have rarely paused to consider how history is read by modernism” (xv).

April 29, 2017 By: Ian Whittington

Reading through these two excellent new volumes situated at the intersection of radio studies and modern Irish literature, one feels presented with two very different instantiations of the radio listener. On the one hand, we have the dial-twirling shortwave enthusiast, stationed in (perhaps) Cork, and tuning in to transmissions Irish in affiliation but emanating from Dublin, Addis Ababa, New York City, Belfast, Geneva, London, and Berlin—transmissions that dazzle by their variety and that impart an awareness of their connectedness in dispersal.

March 2, 2017 By: Scott W. Klein

Our understandings of aesthetic periods along national and generic lines are often highly contingent. Anglophones may know a good deal about seventeenth-century Dutch painting, but almost nothing about eighteenth-century Dutch poetry. Italian opera looms large in the received history of nineteenth-century

February 1, 2017 By: Ria Banerjee

Queer Bloomsbury is a book in two parts, and as such, evokes two different responses. “Part One: Ground-Breaking Essays” consists of lightly-edited reprints of essays by Carolyn Heilbrun, Christopher Reed, George Piggford, Bill Maurer, and Brenda Helt ordered chronologically from Heilbrun’s 1968 “The Bloomsbury Group” to Helt’s 2010 “Passionate Debates on ‘Odious Subjects.’”

November 15, 2016 By: Marvin McAllister

In Birth of an Industry, Nicholas Sammond traces “the connections between the animated blackface minstrel, the industrialization of the art of animation, and fantasies of resistant labor” (xii). His core argument is that early animators developed unruly, cartoon minstrels in response to their increasingly depersonalized workplace. On a broader scale, the project works to situate animation within “a larger and longer history of racial iconography and taxonomy in the United States” (4). To make his case Sammond navigates a historically grounded racial matrix of minstrel shows, vaudeville acts, as well as other complex and contradictory representational forums.

September 16, 2016 By: Mark Goble

Bill Brown has had things on his mind for quite some time. In The Material Unconscious: American Amusement, Stephen Crane and the Economics of Play (1997) , he used Crane’s fiction to explore the disquietingly everyday objects which populate their imagined worlds, not just as descriptive details of the modern, but as strange historical presences telling stories about technology, race, and the lived experience of capitalism that few had found there before.

May 24, 2016 By: Allan Hepburn

A brilliant and timely book, The Extinct Scene joins the growing list of scholarly works that deal with Anglo-British modernism in the middle of the twentieth century, such as Tyrus Miller’s Late Modernism (1999), Marina MacKay’s Modernism and World War II (2007), Leo Mellor’s Reading the Ruins (2011), Peter Kalliney’s Commonwealth of Letters (2013), and Gill Plain’s Literature of the 1940s (2013). These works establish continuities from the interwar years through the Second World War and into the era of British decolonization.

March 2, 2016 By: Paul Saint-Amour

The final chapter of Caroline Levine’s Forms begins by asking what the formalist cultural studies of the future might look like. Levine’s answer: “it could look something like David Simon’s superb television series, The Wire.” Notice, not like an analysis of The Wire but like The Wire itself, which Levine goes on to treat as an exemplary “theorization of the social” (133). Rather than analyze the show’s most sympathetic characters, she says, the formalist critic might do better to emulate their “canny formalism” (150).
From the Print Journal

Sounding Irish Radio at Midcentury

April 29, 2017 By: Ian Whittington

Volume 2 Cycle 2

Tags:

Book Cover: The Wireless Past
The Wireless Past: Anglo-Irish Writers and the BBC, 1931–1968. Emily Bloom. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017. Pp. xii + 224. $80.00 (cloth).

Reading through these two excellent new volumes situated at the intersection of radio studies and modern Irish literature, one feels presented with two very different instantiations of the radio listener. On the one hand, we have the dial-twirling shortwave enthusiast, stationed in (perhaps) Cork, and tuning in to transmissions Irish in affiliation but emanating from Dublin, Addis Ababa, New York City, Belfast, Geneva, London, and Berlin—transmissions that dazzle by their variety and that impart an awareness of their connectedness in dispersal. On the other hand, we have the idealized Third Programme listener of the mid-century BBC, at domestic ease in (perhaps, again) Belfast, attending closely and in the best tradition of appointment listening to familiar voices made new by the sense of their sudden, newfound proximity via the wireless. The former model is embodied by Damien Keane’s Ireland and the Problem of Information: Irish Writing, Radio, Late Modernist Communication, the latter by Emily Bloom’s The Wireless Past: Anglo-Irish Writers and the BBC, 1931–1968. If Keane’s work rewrites rather dramatically the established geographical and formal dimensions of the Irish cultural field, Bloom’s work pries that field open by slower but still sure degrees. Both make important contributions.

What is remarkable, in comparing these two strikingly different texts, is how many parallels one finds at work in their logics. One senses that a new conceptual framework is cohering around literary radio studies: one that takes seriously the intermedial contexts of broadcasting and of literature, one that is attuned to the simultaneous and overlapping publics radio and literature created at local, regional, national, and international scales, and one that understands radio to be neither an agent of hard determinism (subjecting its listeners to either the pummeling authoritarian tones of the dictator or the come-hither vocals of the crooner) nor of radical autonomy. Present, too, in both of these texts, is an archival consciousness that is at times reverent (as in Keane’s acknowledgement of the work of historians, librarians, and archivists in remedying the longstanding informational vacuum surrounding Irish political culture at midcentury [5–6]) and at other times rousing (as in Bloom’s rallying cry for greater access to extant radio archives that are all too often hidden away from public sight [21–23]).

The differences that emerge between these works are not, however, superficial, even if at times they seem to represent different theoretical languages trying to address the same problems. Keane approaches the titular “problem of information”—which he describes as a simultaneous surfeit and deficit of information structured by global material inequalities—by treating all forms of textual production as part of the same contested field of relations. Thus the first chapter juxtaposes the broadcasts and League of Nations speeches of Taoiseach Éamon de Valera during the Ethiopian Crisis of 1935–36 with Walter Starkie’s travelogue-cum-Italian-apologia The Waveless Plain (1938) as two versions of interwar Irish political self-positioning. In the former, de Valera—informed by a network of diplomats and civil servants—navigates multiple media in order to advocate for a protective withdrawal from an international order increasingly hostile to Ireland’s interests. In the latter, Starkie uses aural media (his violin, the radio) as metonyms by which to conjure an organic fascist society, but neglects to address that society’s structural mediation through government-mandated institutions and practices like the distribution of wireless sets. In each case, Keane’s attention is on the often-obscured material and institutional contexts which subtend conventional debates about what counts as literary or political writing, and which in effect bind them beyond all disentanglement.

Ireland and the Problem of Information: Irish Writing, Radio, Late Modernist Communication. Damien Keane. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2014. Pp. x + 195. $69.95 (cloth); $29.95 (paper).

Subsequent chapters deepen Keane’s analysis of the mediated matrix of information that structured Irish cultural production around the war years. Chapter 2, “Dirty Work in New York,” traces the careers of Shaemas O’Sheel and affiliated figures in New York, circa 1914–40, as they oscillated between the convergent poles of political and literary writing. New York’s special position in the history of Irish politics, as incubator of revolutionary sentiment and refuge of exiles, reinforces Keane’s theme of border crossing, even if (as he admits) the chapter does not directly address broadcasting. Instead, the chapter highlights how cosmopolitanism is always locally enacted and inflected and how the adjacency of aesthetic and political discourses can prompt slippage not just between those discourses but also along a political spectrum. O’Sheel, for example, used his base in New York to publish nationalist Irish poetry as well as essays and pamphlets against the British Empire; that some of these essays and poems emerged through the patronage of George Sylvester Viereck, a right-wing pro-German publisher in the interwar period whose books were often sponsored by a German government keen to destabilize Britain, indicates that assertions of autonomy (political and aesthetic) often hinge on heteronomous networks of power.

Two chapters on the years of the Emergency highlight both the stakes of Irish non-belligerence and the inadequacy of the term “neutrality” to describe the complex relationships that existed between Ireland and the Continent from 1939 to 1945. Chapter 3, “The Irish Free Zone,” triangulates three writers in its examination of two translations of Louis Aragon’s poem “Zone Libre” by Patrick Browne and Louis MacNeice, respectively. Aragon’s poem is a triumph of what he called “contraband” writing, in which ostensibly apolitical poems written under Vichy rule could serve as vehicles for politically dissident interpretations (77). Browne and MacNeice each remake the poem in their own fashion: for MacNeice, Aragon’s subtly liberatory poem offers a meditation on “dialectical sociability,” the potential for poetic transmission to effect the exchange of information, while Browne uses it to consider how that flow of information might be managed and how the process of channeling enacts manipulation (94, 106–7). Chapter 4, “Radio Pages,” delves into Francis Stuart’s wartime broadcasts from Germany and challenges his retrospective claims to have focused exclusively on apolitical topics like literature, despite his rights as an Irishman to speak from Berlin—a double assertion of neutrality, both aesthetic and political. Keane pointedly argues that Stuart—like Starkie and O’Sheel before him—rests his claim to autonomy on an erasure of the material implication of both literature and broadcasting in political networks of mediation. In Stuart’s case, this entails ignoring the entire apparatus of the Nazi propaganda industry that enabled his broadcasts and for which assertions of Irish artistic and national autonomy were easily mobilized to score political points; it also entails ignoring the fact that the only reason Stuart’s broadcasts are available to researchers at all is because of their capture by Irish and Allied monitoring services, a process that inscribes them further within a history of political communication.

Keane’s analysis is refreshing in several ways: like Bloom’s, it frees radio as a medium from the grip of a narrow form of radio studies by insisting on its imbrication with multiple other media, from novels and poems to memoranda, vinyl flexi-discs, wireless monitoring reports, and speeches. Furthermore, in recasting midcentury Irish writing around the problem of “information,” it undoes the simple binarism of Emergency-era neutrality and belligerence, so often troped as shorthands for insularity and cosmopolitanism, respectively. Instead, Keane situates Irish cultural production within a field of available positions that scales from the local to the international, in which neutrality in the Second World War might be the product of acute sensitivity to the unfolding of geopolitical events. In doing so, Keane taps the brakes on the rush, among some modernist scholars, to embrace the transnational as always affording newer and better connections than are possible within local and national frameworks. As Keane frames the issue, the decades surrounding the war (and subsequent increases in national/global interpenetration among media systems) scrambled older logical connections between proclaimed outlook and practical political effects. That is, the “position-taking” of the years 1930–50 that was then, and is so often now, read in terms that align cosmopolitan modernism with aesthetic and political autonomy was very often conducted in a charged political field in which autonomy was wielded for political ends (as Peter Kalliney’s Commonwealth of Letters [2013] has recently demonstrated in an adjacent context) and politicization could warp the terms of the literary field.

Bloom’s take on the relationship between literary production and broadcasting at midcentury presents itself in a manner less radical than Keane’s; and yet its readings are nonetheless incisive and illuminating. Although The Wireless Past is a less peripatetic book than Ireland and the Problem of Information, Bloom’s four writers of focus—W. B. Yeats, Louis MacNeice, Elizabeth Bowen, and Samuel Beckett—are united by the fact that they are all Anglo-Irish writers whose lives led them to “persistently or permanently” leave Ireland for parts elsewhere (2). They also, importantly, went beyond the basic broadcast “talk” to test the expressive potential of radio at the BBC, whether through elaborately staged readings of poetry, imagined dialogues with dead writers, vivid propaganda features, or acoustically rich radio plays. The focus of this volume on their contributions to the BBC therefore reflects not only the Corporation’s heightened role as literary patron and site of experimentation, but also the writers’ frequent distance from Ireland itself. This is a spatial and cultural distance from Ireland’s emerging postindependence identity that Bloom treats frankly in her conclusion, acknowledging that Anglo-Irish writers were as often bulwarks against nationalist Catholic participation at the BBC as they were the vanguard for all Irish writers (176–77).

For Bloom, radio offered these writers a means of connecting modern literary practice to the past, by recalling and remediating the Bardic traditions of Ireland, classical and nineteenth-century forms of literary expression, and the problem of self-formation through memory and acoustic archiving. It is precisely this traffic between the past and the present that structures Bloom’s analysis: the radiogenic texts of Yeats, MacNeice, Bowen, and Beckett operate through complex processes of citation, allusion, echo, and repetition in order to weave new arts out of the sonic past. Radio involvement enacts a kind of literary-historical chiasmus in this reading, depending on the presumed attitude of a given author to tradition: just as the wireless transmissions of cultural nationalist Yeats reveal him to have more in common with his cosmopolitan descendants than one might at first realize, so too do Bowen, MacNeice, and Beckett reveal stronger ties to Irish and British literary heritage through their broadcasts.

Yeats is paradigmatic of this process of mediated exchange across time: though often skeptical of mass media, he understood radio to offer the listener a more intimate relationship to lyric poetry than could be obtained at a public reading, on account of the domestic, often familial conditions of wireless reception. This enthusiasm for the medium, Bloom contends, played a key role in Yeats’s late-career shift towards a more public view of his role as a poet (29). Through BBC programs like “The Poet’s Pub” and “The Poet’s Parlour,” and through broadside publications by the Cuala Press that reanimate older ballad forms, Yeats continued to reach out to new audiences for poetry even as the media landscape continued to shift (62). For MacNeice—the subject of Chapter 2—radio was not simply a means of extending the reach of his poetry, but of forging entirely new modes of sonic expression and in doing so, to “shape active, engaged sonic citizens” (68). In MacNeice’s case, it is the recurrent trope of the echo that figures a connection to the past; through the repetition of words, intertextual references to past works, and acoustic echo effects generated in the studio, MacNeice’s radio works thematize the return of the sonic past through radio. Not that MacNeice uncritically accepts all media advances as necessarily capable of bringing the past into the future; rather, as Bloom argues, MacNeice often invokes tradition in order to signal its rupture in the present (92–93). (It is worth noting here that, in elucidating MacNeice’s sophisticated understanding of the medium of radio, both Bloom and Keane bolster the case for MacNeice as one of the midcentury’s foremost practitioners of the medium, and hint that yet more work might be done on him, particularly with regard to his less-studied later-career works.)

For Bowen, whose Second World War literary broadcasts form the core of Chapter 3, novelists of the past functioned to focalize the relationship between literature and the public at a time of both increased readership and heightened pressures on the industry (in the form of paper rationing, censorship, and bombed warehouses). Bloom here emphasizes Bowen’s preoccupation with uncanny hauntings; in this case, it is the specter of literature itself that haunts the mediascape of the war. But as much as Bowen exhibits a fondness for those novelists—Anthony Trollope, Jane Austen, and Fanny Burney—whose lives and works she reanimates in radio form, Bloom insists that her subject is not interested in simplistic nostalgia, but rather a remediation of past forms that can induce a critical receptivity in her audience. The past, Bowen’s radio works insist, must be made to address the future, rather than mapped uncritically onto it. Bloom’s excellent closing analysis on A World of Love (1954), Bowen’s late-career return to the Ireland of The Last September (1929), offers a poignant reading of the troubling acoustics of radio in an Anglo-Irish context: the tolling of Big Ben over the BBC airwaves in that novel signals the complex binds between Anglo-Irish identity and imperial institutions of mediation at midcentury (113–16).

Beckett—who also features in the coda to Keane’s book—has attracted considerable attention for his radio work and his obsession with language and memory. And yet, Bloom argues, his plays have not often been read as meditations on the problem of the sound archive as mnemonic prosthesis. By turning her attention to the radio play All that Fall (1957) and the stage play Krapp’s Last Tape (1958), Bloom attempts to remedy this gap, arguing that both works address the growing obsolescence of audio media at midcentury and their transformation into an imperfect archive for the spoken word (128–29). Bloom illuminates Beckett’s treatment of the recorded past through judicious reference to Jacques Derrida’s Archive Fever, which posits the archive both as the product of a will to preserve and as something threatened by a will to destruction. The acoustic past in these two plays by Beckett is an archive persistently haunted by the threat of erasure. By mapping these plays alongside Beckett’s own encounters with recorded sound, Bloom both grounds Beckett’s existential questions in their material history and reveals the existential questions at the heart of our attempts to preserve the past.

The strength of Bloom’s analysis is her subtle handling of the complex set of interrelationships between publics, institutions, and nations. Broadcasting, for all its unidirectionality, has never been a monologic medium, and never less so than in the Anglo-Irish context at midcentury: aesthetic prerogatives jostle against institutional ones; Northern Irish broadcasters with unionist sympathies at the Belfast BBC butt heads with London-based bureaucrats looking to woo listeners in the Republic; and governmental agencies like RTE and the BBC compete with private entities like Radio Luxembourg and Radio Normandy (14). Rather than determining aesthetic and political outcomes, media like radio instead afford a range of possible effects; in mapping these varied and contingent effects, Bloom demonstrates a keen ear for the relation between texts and contexts at a range of scales.

Towards the end of The Wireless Past, Bloom offers a careful reading of MacNeice’s unduly slighted autobiographical poem Autumn Sequel (1954), a reading that doubles as a rallying cry for an intermedial approach to studying texts both in the past and in the present. What has been missing in criticism of Autumn Sequel, writes Bloom, is a full awareness of its enmeshment in nonprint networks of circulation, including its history of wireless transmission and its attempts to evoke the world of midcentury broadcasting. “[I]nterpreting radiogenic aesthetics,” she writes, “involves combining the practices of close reading and archival research to understand the radio contexts within literary texts, as well as maintaining an awareness of contemporary resonances in new media: a process that may very well allow for new forms of ‘close listening’ in literary criticism” (170). In their attention to the contested and multiply mediated fields of literature and politics and their sensitive handling of a neglected trove of transmissions both textual and acoustic, these two monographs enact precisely this kind of intermedial attention and bode well for the present and future of midcentury Irish cultural studies.