Modernism’s Contemporary Affects

December 11, 2018 By: David James

A moment in cultural “time,” as Jonathan Lethem has suggested, “is marked not so much by ideas that are argued about as by ideas that are taken for granted,” because the “character of an era hangs upon what needs no defense.” [1] In part, Lethem’s statement helps us to explain why we find “the contemporary” at once so critically slippery and yet practically self-evident. Pushing somewhat more explicitly against Lethem’s own grain, we might also say that he reveals how easy it is to take the very character of contemporaneity for granted, since it will always be impossible to pin down—always remain in a state of perpetual “drift,” to borrow Theodor Martin’s keyword from his ambitious attempt to historicize the present. [2] It can be just as reassuring to take for granted the idea of modernism flourishing beyond mid-century, in ways that facilitate conversations about its continuity and about its potential to describe the “character” of eras in which modernist production has hitherto not been located. Few would deem this inclination for expansion a bad thing, of course. And if modernism’s cartographic and diachronic enlargement arrogates intellectual capital to those objects or conditions it (newly) designates, then this process of adding value is analytically enriching and enabling. That modernism today seems more geohistorically widespread and generically mobile is a testament to how scholars are challenging us to apprehend why and where modernist innovations still happen: what they politically and formally mean in different hemispheric contexts; how they depart from Eurochronological frames of artistic influence and advancement; how the very “language and structure of modernism,” in Simon Gikandi’s words, allowed “a postcolonial experience” to become “articulated and imagined in literary form”; and how specific practices of modernism in the present might continue to effect radical change through oppositional modes of cultural production. [3

December 11, 2018 By: Laura Winkiel

“We have to find meters whose scales are unknown in the world, draw our own schematics, getting feedback, making connections, reducing the error, trying to learn the real function . . . zeroing in on what incalculable plot?” – Thomas Pynchon, quoted in Zadie Smith, “Love, Actually” [1] In her essay, “Love, Actually,” Zadie Smith relates her debt as a writer to E. M. Forster. Though the quote above is taken from Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow (1973), a novel generally considered to be...

December 11, 2018 By: Urmila Seshagiri

What distinguishes modernism’s legacies from the afterlives of other literary or cultural movements? To begin to answer this question, let’s glance back to 1941, when several writers of transatlantic renown composed what we might call obituaries for the modernist arts. Djuna Barnes’s “Lament for the Left Bank,” for example, an elegiac piece published in the American periodical Town and Country, memorialized a Paris made brilliant by overlapping arcs of collaborative innovation: Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes; George Antheil and Ezra Pound; Jean Cocteau, Pablo Picasso, and Coco Chanel. The essay ends with the line, “The dreadful thing is not that all these things were done, but that they are over.” [1] The things that were done and the things that are over: Barnes identifies the tensions that would come to mark modernism’s legacy in the twenty-first century, the dialectical occurrences of cultural continuity and discontinuity, of originality and repetition. For Barnes, Left Bank artists in the 1920s and 1930s did “things”—a single, compact word for modernism’s kaleidoscopic transformations—that were over by 1941, a conviction varied and echoed in other coeval “art-historical post-mortems,” to borrow from Richard Meyers, by Wyndham Lewis, Virginia Woolf, George Orwell, Anaïs Nin, and Cyril Connolly. [2]

December 11, 2018 By: Doug Battersby

Modernism’s singular allure for contemporary novelists and critics alike raises a number of questions, problems, and interpretative opportunities. What do these shared attachments reveal about the legacies of modernism today? What feelings does modernism inspire, and what values do those feelings imply? Why do contemporary novels invoke modernist writing with such urgency, and what conceptions of modernism emerge from these engagements? Should we take seriously the idea that contemporary fiction...

December 11, 2018 By: Beth C. Rosenberg

In A Room of One’s Own (1929) Virginia Woolf famously writes, “Chloe liked Olivia,” a line that anticipates, and even directs, feminist literary scholarship through the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. [1] Woolf’s modernist feminism, in A Room and a range of other literary essays, calls for a female literary lineage as well as histories of the anonymous women whose stories have never been told. How then, after almost a century, has Woolf’s vision fulfilled itself? In what ways has her work reached global and contemporary audiences, and how have these audiences used modernist feminism to talk about their current political and cultural circumstances? How do we begin to construct a female literary canon that is based on the affective responses of one writer to another? The overwhelming international popularity of Elena Ferrante’s metamodern Neapolitan quartet, which includes My Brilliant Friend (2011), The Story of a New Name (2012), Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (2013), and The Lost Child (2014), illustrates the affective impact of Woolf’s feminist ideas. [2] Ferrante does in fiction what Woolf calls for in theory as she amplifies the implications of female friendship, matrilineal lineage, women’s anger, and anonymity. Through an appropriation of modernist feminist tendancies, both in content and form, Ferrante explores the psychological and subterranean currents of female consciousness and gives voice to Shakespeare’s sister, the female writer who comes into existence through the work of anonymous women. Ferrante, herself one of those anonymous women, continues the female lineage Woolf argues for. The inner worlds of the women in Ferrante’s realist prose remind us of Woolf’s call to remember the interior lives of women; yet Ferrante’s novels are very much products of post-fascist Italy and 1970s Italian feminism.

December 11, 2018 By: Claire Barber-Stetson

A feeling of insecurity has infiltrated daily life in the United States. This general unease clouds the perception of many, preventing them from—or, allowing them to avoid—interrogating the reality of their situation. Important to remember always, but especially today, is that some people have permanent access to safety, while many live perpetually adjacent to or outside of it. As a result, they lack the support that would enable them to act confidently, without fear. For good reason, insecurity has a predominantly negative connotation, yet this feeling also holds positive potential for those who exist in positions of safety. Rather than closing themselves off, restricting interactions with other people and ideas, they can respond by seeking out new experiences and affiliations from which they can reflect back on the zone of safety. From this vantage point, safety’s limitations become easier to recognize and change more accessible.

December 11, 2018 By: Neil Levi

What would it mean to talk about certain strands of contemporary artistic production as in some strong, even emphatic sense, modernist? Instead of obeying Fredric Jameson’s periodizing imperatives and submitting to his privileging of the hypothesis of the break over that of continuity, we might use the model of Alain Badiou’s notion of an ethic of truths to account for how certain artists and works exhibit a fidelity to the event of modernism. [1] A contemporary modernism would not merely imitate modernist models; instead, it would treat the innovations of Bertolt Brecht, or James Joyce, or Gertrude Stein as events whose implications required continued investigation. A change in political, economic, and technological conditions would not compel us to accept that art can no longer be modernist but would suggest that it must be modernist differently. [2

December 11, 2018 By: Kevin Brazil

In a 2015 discussion on the state of Ireland’s literature, the inaugural Laureate for Irish Fiction, Anne Enright, observed that “since the crash a lot has been disrupted. There’s a resurgent modernism in writers like Eimear McBride and Sarah-Louise Bennett.” [1] In attempting to answer the first question we should always ask of contemporary writing—why does this author write the way she does?—Enright connected the economic restructuring imposed upon Ireland by the EU in 2010 to a widely noticed shift in the texture of Irish fiction. The transformations of the relationships between capital, state, and citizen that resulted from the quaintly termed “Economic Adjustment Programme for Ireland”—what gets rather too loosely described as neoliberalism—are hardly unique to Ireland, and few would disagree they are one of the distinguishing experiences of our time. However, in seeking to describe what is new about Irish writing since the crash, Enright compares it to something old: modernism. While McBride has accepted her “continuity” with a “European” tradition of “diaspora” modernist writing, Bennett has rejected Enright’s description of her work as a kind of modernism, preferring instead to characterize it as writing which tries to avoid “falling into a shape that already exists”: “The term ‘new modernism’ is meaningless, but we are always looking for parity it seems, rather than being alert to what is distinct and fertile.” [2] Bennett shows a prickly and refreshing frustration with critics who assimilate unexpected appearances of what has never existed before to the comforting familiarity of the modernism that has, and she pinpoints how the “new” acts as a homogenizing force when applied to the evaluation of culture. This, of course, was Baudelaire’s point at modernism’s primal scene in 1860s Paris, and it was intended as a damning one.

December 11, 2018 By: Alys Moody

About halfway through Ben Lerner’s Leaving the Atocha Station (2011), the protagonist, Adam Gordon, declares that he has “achieved a new emotional state, or a state in which emotions no longer obtained.” [1] In this state, he reports, “I now felt nothing, my affect a flat spectrum over a defined band.” At the same time, he comes to experience a sort of meta-affect, “a kind of euphoria at my sudden inability to feel” (Lerner, Leaving the Atocha Station, 103). Immediately, Adam finds, he is a better poet. In this state of indifference, he feels, “for the first time, like a writer, as if all the real living were on the page” (104). He can at last imagine becoming the poet he wanted to be, the poet he thought would most impress the women to whom he was now so indifferent, “a poet who alone was able to array the fallen materials of the real into a song that transcended it” (104). He buys new notebooks to accommodate his poetic outpouring and feels a sudden invigorating certainty in his aesthetic vocation.
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Modern Insecurities, or, Living on the Edge

December 11, 2018 By: Claire Barber-Stetson

Volume 3 Cycle 4

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A feeling of insecurity has infiltrated daily life in the United States. This general unease clouds the perception of many, preventing them from—or, allowing them to avoid—interrogating the reality of their situation. Important to remember always, but especially today, is that some people have permanent access to safety, while many live perpetually adjacent to or outside of it. As a result, they lack the support that would enable them to act confidently, without fear. For good reason, insecurity has a predominantly negative connotation, yet this feeling also holds positive potential for those who exist in positions of safety. Rather than closing themselves off, restricting interactions with other people and ideas, they can respond by seeking out new experiences and affiliations from which they can reflect back on the zone of safety. From this vantage point, safety’s limitations become easier to recognize and change more accessible. 

This essay confronts the feeling of insecurity that lurks behind expansions of modernism as a field and concept with the rise of the new modernist studies. The new modernist studies expanded previously limited horizons by productively highlighting the contributions of artists and texts that had gone without recognition; however, it threatens 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.[1] This expansion is driven—at least, in part—by more pervasive precarity in literary studies as a profession, and its consequences reveal the need to drive change within familiar ways of thinking and educating our students.

Expanding Modernisms

Debate has raged around the definition of “modernism” and its worth as a critical concept since its emergence. Despite continued attempts to define the term, scholars of modernism have not arrived at a consensus about its meaning or the texts that fall under its auspices. In fact, many have responded by embracing the flexibility of the term and stretching its limits, as Susan Stanford Friedman does in Planetary Modernisms: Provocations on Modernity across Time (2015). Like Friedman, they look in unconventional times and places for the “instances of transformational rupture and rapid change” that characterize modernity.[2] Such “expansions” in “temporal, spatial, and vertical directions”[3] fall under the rubric developed by Douglas Mao and Rebecca Walkowitz, and the new modernist studies has flourished by embracing incoherence and expansion. David James and Urmila Seshagiri “counted no fewer than forty geographically distinct subcategories of modernism” while researching their 2014 PMLA article, and the field has grown since.[4] This movement has opened new avenues for discussion; however, as scholars of modernism and students of history, we must ask, “When does expansion become colonialism?”

It is easy to dismiss concerns about the dilution of modernism as they can easily re-inscribe the same hierarchy against which we have been rebelling. By accepting continued expansion, we refuse to reckon with the broader consequences of continued dilution. At this moment, we need to pause and interrogate the local context within which modernist studies is operating. Who is defining modernism, and for what purposes?

Neoliberal imperatives toward unity are still active within the industry that is modernist studies, despite the continued drive to embrace multiplicity. This industry benefits from there being some definition to modernism; this is how it consolidates an audience and thus sustains itself. Yet it earns more from controversy around the term and expansion of it. In consequence, more books and articles are published, more conferences organized, and more scholars trained. The concept constitutes and is constituted by the people and texts that participate in the industry; the more participate, the more activity takes place off which certain parties can profit.

Fig. 1. Ian Hacking at the 32nd International Wittgenstein Symposium in Kirchberg am Wechsel, Austria, August 2009. Photo by Ludvig Hertzberg; image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Ian Hacking calls this the “looping effect”: both the category (modernism) and the categorized (modernist texts, authors) are “moving targets because our investigations interact with the targets themselves and change them.”[5] The process of classification itself requires categories to evolve, to change the people and texts they classify, and to be, in turn, changed by that which they classify. Friedman acknowledges this same process in “Definitional Excursions” (2001), pointing out that “[d]efinitions mean to fence in, to fix, and to stabilize. But they often end up being fluid, in a destabilized state of ongoing formation, deformation, and reformation that serves the changing needs of the moment” (497). In “the moment” that Friedman recognizes, time and space overlap in a predictable but important way.

Global Modernisms

In this particular time and space, we are caught up in a trend that has grown out of the new modernist studies: global modernisms. Literary critics employing this approach integrate multiple national, linguistic, and/or cultural contexts in their research. (This group includes Friedman, despite her aversion to such an affiliation.) They actively identify areas of convergence among texts, aesthetics, or social concerns conventionally associated with modernism and those that have grown in other times and places. Mark Wollaeger and Matt Eatough’s The Oxford Handbook of Global Modernisms (2012) captures and consolidates a number of such examples; however, Wollaeger explicitly asks in his introduction whether it is “productive” to bring such disparate paradigms under the rubric of modernism.[6]

To answer this question, it is necessary to examine what this practice produces: Wollaeger and Eatough’s volume—and global modernisms, more generally—makes a space in which critical inquiry that formerly occurred under the auspices of comparative literature can thrive. This relationship is made obvious in the frequent appearance of the word “comparative” in texts like this one, and a significant but ambiguous convergence exists between this approach and another, called “comparative modernisms.”

Methodologically, these approaches are oriented toward the future that scholars like Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak envisioned for comparative literature: one unlimited by national boundaries. In Death of a Discipline (2003), she characterizes the origin of comparative literature as “the result of European intellectuals fleeing ‘totalitarian’ regimes.”[7] In such cases, literary study provided a zone of safety, and bridging transitional institutional boundaries became a form of resistance aimed at protecting threatened voices and knowledges.

Since that moment, comparative literature departments have lost ground and funding; yet, the rise of global modernisms reveals a growing need to renegotiate the purpose and boundaries of English departments across the country. As Wollaeger clarifies, “the majority of contributors [to The Oxford Handbook] work in departments of English” (4).[8] Many such scholars are now developing projects and teaching classes that seem to contradict the traditional mission of an English department: reading and teaching Anglophone literature.[9] Not all global modernist projects compare texts across languages, but many do. Since a hallmark of comparative literature was formerly “the skill of reading closely in the original,” how are we to support students who can succeed in global modernisms within English departments (Spivak, Death of a Discipline, 6)?

Many modernists produced by these departments are unprepared for the current market. They have been trained primarily in English using Anglophone texts. Programs like that at my alma mater, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, have language requirements so minimal that some graduate students never even take a language class while enrolled. In such situations, students who venture into other national and cultural contexts to develop a true global dissertation project must leverage pre-existing knowledge or chart their own course within a limited graduate curriculum. It is up to them to find resources that they may not yet know they need.

Fig. 2. Siegfried Sassoon wearing military uniform with the collar badges of the Royal Welsh Fusiliers and hat, May 1915. Photo by George Charles Beresford; image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Scholars in other fields are also facing heightened pressure from globalization and cultural de-valuation of education in the humanities, with graduate students forced to go to ever-greater lengths to prove themselves within constricting budgets and timeframes.[10] These forces undergird the movement toward global modernisms, even as we may argue that the drive for expansion comes from within modernism itself. And these forces continue to gain strength: three of the top tenure-track jobs in modernism for the 2016–2017 job market advertised for scholars specializing in global modernisms, and the trend toward new modernist literary approaches still dominates the job list.[11] Scholars continue to take up this challenge, but they are going to even greater lengths—see, as an example, Alys Moody and Stephen J. Ross’s Global Modernists on Modernism: An Anthology, which contains translated texts from Peru, Madagascar, Zaire, Iraq, and Georgia, among others.[12] Traditional English departments are not structured to support students when we ask them to chart such geographically, linguistically, temporally, and culturally diverse paths; thus, they are often left to fend for themselves, with predictable consequences. If we persist in this ideological direction, then we need to re-envision the support structures available to graduate students of modernism. If not, then we predestine greater numbers of students to an insecure graduate education, where they struggle to understand and then access the resources needed to succeed within today’s new modernist culture.   

Unsafe Modernisms

Modernist scholars know the affective power of insecurity—not just from their daily lives in academia, but also from the texts they study. This feeling is particularly poignant and palpable in literature written by soldiers during the First World War. Siegfried Sassoon highlights it in Counter-Attack and Other Poems (1918), addressing both its causes and consequences in a series of reflexive poems.[13] When viewed with an eye toward safety, the poem “Sick Leave” serves as the conceptual lynchpin of the collection.

In it, Sassoon’s speaker reflects on the complicated but familiar paradox whereby being wounded could make a soldier safe. The poem begins with the image of a physically comfortable sleeping soldier, “dreaming and lulled and warm,” which contrasts markedly with the scenes of filth, death, and fear that populate the earlier twenty-four poems (Sassoon, Counter-Attack, 43). Soon after, “In bitter safety I awake, unfriended,” he tells us. With this seeming oxymoron and its grammatical relationship with “unfriended,” Sassoon complicates the emotional experience of being safe—lauded by a woman in an earlier poem—with concerns for those who remain in danger. In fact, the feeling of safety appears to cause more pain for the narrator than the literal danger or physical consequences of being at the front. Sassoon reminds us here that personal safety always comes at a cost to someone else.

Continued pursuit of the new modernisms toward global modernism is likely to produce an affective state of bitter safety akin to that which Sassoon presents here. On its face, the move seems positive—extending a field of study to integrate artists and texts from diverse traditions. However, it does not account for the implications for other fields, for the institutional model we now inhabit, and for graduate students developing dissertation projects as part of this model. We are due for a radical reorientation of modernism, and one way to facilitate this paradigm shift may be to acknowledge explicitly and institutionally the importance of crossing national boundaries fluidly—not only in the study of literature, but in life itself. Such a move would acknowledge a priori “the irreducible hybridity of all languages,” a quality on which conventional modernist texts like Joyce’s Finnegans Wake (1939) are founded (Spivak, Death of a Discipline, 9). For, in reality, much of what we understand modernism to be is anathema to the traditional mission of an English department.

In earlier poems, Sassoon suggests that the bonds between soldiers are so strong because they feel abandoned by those who are supposed to protect them, advocate for them, care for them.[14] Assuming we are committed to the new modernisms, we need to consider what the benefits are for us, as scholars, teachers, and mentors, in maintaining existing departmental boundaries versus redefining them. How truly innovative can we and our students be within this space? What possibilities may open up for modernism, literary studies, and new scholars in these fields generally if we alter our practices and paradigms accordingly?


Notes

[1] This argument is specifically made by David James and Urmila Seshagiri, “Metamodernism: Narratives of Continuity and Revolution,” PMLA 129, no. 1 (2014): 87–100, 90.

[2] Susan Stanford Friedman, Planetary Modernisms: Provocations on Modernity across Time (New York: Columbia University Press, 2015), ix, 4.

[3] Douglas Mao and Rebecca L. Walkowitz, “The New Modernist Studies,” PMLA 123, no. 3 (2008): 737–48, 737.

[4] Friedman does still criticize modernist studies for being “insufficiently planetary” (Planetary Modernisms, 3).

[5] Ian Hacking, “Kinds of People: Moving Targets,” Proceedings of the British Academy 151 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 285–318, 293.

[6] Mark Wollaeger, introduction to The Oxford Handbook of Global Modernisms, ed. Mark Wollaeger and Matt Eatough (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 3–22, 3.

[7] Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Death of a Discipline (New York: Columbia University Press, 2003), 3.

[8] The same trend is also visible in A New Vocabulary for Global Modernism, ed. Eric Hayot and Rebecca L. Walkowitz (New York: Columbia University Press, 2016).

[9] This term was the keyword of choice for job searches in modernism from 2014 through 2016; however, it has largely given way to “global.”

[10] For more on this topic, see Séan Richardson, “In Search of Lost Time: Precarious Research in the UK, ” Modernism/modernity Print Plus 3, no. 2 (2018).

[11] Information accessible through the Chronicle for Higher Education or the MLA’s Job Information List.

[12] Alys Moody and Stephen J. Ross, ed., Global Modernists on Modernism: An Anthology (New York: Bloomsbury, forthcoming).

[13] See Siegfried Sassoon, Counter-Attack and Other Poems (London: William Heinemann, 1918).

[14] See Siegfried Sassoon, “The General” and “Does It Matter?” in Counter-Attack and Other Poems, 26, 28.