In These Times

February 2, 2017 By: Debra Rae Cohen

In These Times is a space for our community to explore issues of social justice, teaching, and research in uncertain times.

June 6, 2025 By: Harrington Weihl

In the weeks leading up to the 2024 Paris Olympics, coverage was dominated by a number of controversies stemming from the city’s efforts to stage the games: threats of strike from public and private sectors and an attack on rail lines grabbed headlines. But these preliminary and somewhat routine crises were eclipsed by furor over the opening ceremony, which included a runway show featuring drag performers and others staged in the style of a feast.

May 8, 2024 By: David R. Castillo

The deterioration of the information environment in our age of inflationary media has precipitated a crisis of reality: any sort of baseline for what we take to be “facts” no longer exists. Evidence-based information is routinely drowned in a media market that rewards the loudest and most strident voices at the expense of truth and the common good. The powerful AIs employed by social media giants like Facebook (now Meta), Twitter (now X), YouTube, and TikTok have been trained to generate the...

December 14, 2023 By: Rebecca Colesworthy

I have heard proclamations of feminism’s death many times over the years. Nevertheless, it came as a genuine surprise when I encountered it this past July, in an essay on “Sidecar,” the New Left Review blog, by NLR editor Caitlín Doherty. “A decade ago,” Doherty writes of feminism, “a generation of women—now in our late twenties and early thirties—claimed it as a primary political identity, but no longer.” Since then, Doherty argues, feminism has become not a politics so much as a style thanks...

September 13, 2023 By: Charles Andrews

Recently, while sifting through a long and detailed academic book contract, I found a list of items the publisher required me to exclude. A wonderful bullet point mandated that there be “no recipes or formulae or instructions” that “if followed accurately” would be “injurious to the user.” [1] I have enjoyed hearing friends’ reactions to this mandate, several of whom have asked: but, seriously, what is this referring to? Since contracts, much like syllabi, always have ground-rules based on...

June 29, 2023 By: Aimee Armande Wilson

We're all familiar with this scenario: a scholar spends years of her life dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge on a relatively narrow topic, and the reward for this dogged pursuit is the esteem of colleagues and mentions in specialist publications. Then, an event occurs that overlaps with the scholar’s area of expertise. This scholar’s topic now dominates the news cycle. Many would view this as cause for celebration, a chance to share their research with a broader audience. Our hypothetical...

February 16, 2023 By: Lesley Wheeler

I’m sometimes told by people who work outside of universities that being a teacher-writer-editor in an English Department sounds great, and occasionally it is. Yet lately everything “great” about academia sounds ominous: the Great Resignation, The Great Faculty Disengagement, The Great Pause after the Great Pivot. Resignation and disengagement are paradoxical side effects of the profession’s dependence on enthusiasm—employees so dedicated and diligent that they volunteer for unpaid labor. Women...

May 4, 2022 By: Gabriel Hankins

How should modernists think about the current invasion of Ukraine, and the underlying crisis of liberal order, if at all, and what does that have to do with the crisis in historical thinking and legitimation in literary studies more generally? My initial claim in the following is that what we already teach and write, in this centenary of the modernist Wunderjahr 1922, has everything to do with the sudden re-entry of geopolitics into view in 2022. The modernist masterpieces of 1919–1922 were formed and contested one hundred years ago in the matrix of a crisis of liberal order, a crisis that has now returned with only slightly different names, faces, and justifications. That we cannot quite recall this is not only a gap in our understanding of modernist geopolitics, but also a more fundamental failure of historicist reason and legitimation. If we are in fact living through the repetition of certain cyclical patterns of history, ideology, and liberal-imperial order that modernists themselves diagnosed, do we still have the commitment to historicist understanding required to read those problems accurately?

January 6, 2022 By: Laura Hartmann-Villalta

As a scholar of modernism and the Spanish Civil War, I have long been engaged with others’ ideas about engagement—both modernists and scholars of modernism—questioning the intersection of politics and art. As a scholar at the margins of the academy, I have sought to make sense of where my own work might fit, both into the world of scholarship and the wider world in which scholarship takes shape. Now, in my new position as Director of the Engaged and Public Humanities Master’s at Georgetown...

May 26, 2021 By: Samuel Cohen

I teach American literature in the public university system of Missouri, the state whose admission to the union as a slave state caused a national crisis, the state where Dred Scott was judged to have “ no rights the white man is bound to respect,” the state where Michael Brown’s murder turned Black Lives Matter from a hashtag into a movement. My state boasts that it is the birthplace of Rush Limbaugh, who did for talk radio what Rupert Murdoch did for cable news, as well as the place that...

April 22, 2021 By: Alice Kelly

In a striking moment in Joe Biden’s Inaugural Address in January 2021, the new head of state asked the nation to join him “in a moment of silent prayer to remember all those we lost this past year to the pandemic.” This was, he told the millions watching worldwide, his “first act as President.” It was a moment unprecedented in Inaugural Addresses. Biden, in both personally gracious and canny political terms, recognized the need for a moment of collective mourning and remembrance, a small act of commemoration as a necessary part of moving forward as a nation.

March 3, 2021 By: Jennie Lightweis-Goff

Is there any critical concept so abused in our political culture as “emotional labor,” a term seemingly used—like mansplain— to settle scores, to end conversation? Even now, I revise myself. Yes, “wave” language in feminism is more abused, and used to banish the radical histories that produced critique within feminism. Yes, intersectionality is conceptually abused, as a defense or elision of the conservative bona fides of women politicians from Hillary Clinton to Kamala Harris. This wandering away from context seems part of the whole: the rendering of feminism, and feminist language, as an affective and aesthetic position. A personal brand, even.

January 14, 2021 By: Janine Utell

This is about failure: my own failure to think forward, my own failure to see the future. Perhaps this piece can provide an opportunity to reflect on what can emerge from individual failures as well as our field’s reckoning with its wider failures: failure to grapple with racism and white supremacy, failure to support emerging scholars, failure to intervene meaningfully in the dismantling of the university as a site of serious thought and the generation of transformative ideas.

October 13, 2020 By: Cedric Van Dijck

By the time I moved to Cairo to research Forster’s years in Egypt, late in the summer of 2018, I was already familiar with his cabinet of lost artifacts and vanished statues.

May 21, 2020 By: Elizabeth Outka

For the past five years, I have been immersed in research on the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic and the unexpected ways it weaves its way into modernism. My book on the topic came out last October, about two months before a worrisome new illness began to emerge in Wuhan, China. [1] We all want our research to be relevant, to be able to articulate the critical “so what” question we struggle to answer in grant requests and cover letters. But the sudden thrust into an actual version of the sensory and affective climate I’ve been studying for so long has been surreal and unsettling, like a B movie where an author awakes to find her work has come to life. Even as we expose troubling elisions and injustices within the works we analyze, we may still use theory as a buffer between us and the world, and the past as a shield against our present realities. When a radio program recently approached me about an interview on Viral Modernism, they said that their listeners had been overwhelmed by COVID-19 coverage and would find it comforting to hear about a pandemic safely in the distance. I understood what they meant, even if patterns of viral and human behavior threaten to make the past the present.

April 8, 2020 By: Rebecca Colesworthy

Shortly after starting as an executive assistant in development at a nonprofit organization in 2012—my first nonacademic job following a three-year postdoctoral position—I joked to my new boss one night after everyone else had gone home that she should only hire former academics because we have no idea how not to work all the time. She laughed, as I guessed she would. Ever the court jester, I like to think I know my audience and I knew that, while not an academic herself, she could relate. We were there working late together and, from the start, I found that I could identify with the way she identified with her work.

January 30, 2020 By: Damien Keane

A couple of years ago, I published a book that worried the quantitative conception of information, by suggesting that “information” constituted a problem not because it lacked ways of being defined, but because it could be defined at once in so many competing and oftentimes contradictory ways. In the book, I was concerned specifically with radio broadcasting and the wartime literary field; but also, at a methodological level I was not entirely aware of until late in the composition process, with how forms of mediation and needs for remediation had created conditions in which the political charge of description and classification was suddenly, if also temporarily, to the fore. I tried to get at how this seemingly primary issue of definition is, in fact, the product of acts of and disputes about classification through which the “data of culture,” in Lisa Gitelman’s phrase, are put into meaningful sequences and mobilized, used, and managed—a in short, how they are put in formation. [1]

November 21, 2019 By: Anne Raine

When In These Times launched in early 2017, it gave voice to a collective sense of shock, a need to connect scholarship with activism and “engage, engage, engage.” Since then, contributors have offered a range of thoughtful reflections on how to study and teach modernism and modernity in these catastrophic times. But until recently the forum has been unsettlingly silent on the climate crisis—even as temperatures and sea levels continue to rise, record-breaking floods and wildfires proliferate, droughts threaten crops and ecosystems, glaciers continue to melt and coral reefs to bleach, and a million animal and plant species face extinction at heartbreakingly accelerated rates.

August 27, 2019 By: Thomas S. Davis

Austral summer on the Antarctic Peninsula. Eight of us climb out of our zodiac onto the shore of Petermann Island. This place dazzles and overwhelms the senses. The luminous blue icebergs, granite streaked pink with penguin guano, the weakly green cryoplankton spread across the snow. Antarctica is not the white continent of popular imagination. And it isn’t quiet either. The plangent groans of glaciers crawl across the landscape, reverberating through our bodies. Gentoo penguins squawk atop their stone nests, staring helplessly skyward at the skuas eying their young. We are unwelcome, unneeded guests.

April 29, 2019 By: Jonathan Goldman

“We are still learning to be Joyce's contemporaries,” intones Richard Ellmann, the first words of his James Joyce, published in 1959. [1] Sixty years later, Joyce’s most famous book (and second-hardest to read) has become a talking point and prop of two Democrat candidates in the race for the US presidential nomination. Ulysses, over a century since avant-garde magazines started publishing it serially, has been seen trending on Twitter. Have we, have the United States, caught up to Joyce?

March 10, 2019 By: Megan Faragher

When the cold January turned to an even colder February, I would have loved nothing more than to begin teaching Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward as part of my class on twentieth-century utopian literature. But instead of going to class, I put on my wool socks, three layers of clothes, a winter coat, and snow boots to spend hours standing in the frigid Midwestern climes outside the main entrance of my university, sign in my hands, equal parts exasperation and anxiety in my heart. My colleagues and I were one week into what would end up being the longest faculty strike in the state of Ohio and the second-longest in the history of public higher education in the United States. As I prepared for the chill air and tear-inducing winds, I registered the ironic contrast between the day that was meant to be and the day that was. It turned out that the very question that had led me to formulate the utopian literature class—what possible value utopias can offer us in these troubled, uncertain, undoubtedly dystopian times—had become even more starkly personal than I could have ever imagined. Standing in the cold I recognized that if modernist utopian literature meant to push us towards radical changes that could counter an increasingly broken society, this current strike was going to force us to recognize what those changes might be. What, in fact, are our aspirational politics in higher education in these times and how, practically, do our actions push that agenda forward.

November 2, 2018 By: Patrick Deer

November 2018 not only sees the US midterm elections which will allow the American people to respond at the ballot box to the tumultuous and often exhaustingly toxic political environment during the Trump presidency. It also brings the less heralded and seemingly more distant centenary commemorations of the end of the First World War on November 11th, 1918. Yet another world historical milestone to be overshadowed by a relentless domestic news cycle dominated by a politics of distraction and fear that seems to harness racism, misogyny, economic inequality and outright violence to an unprecedented degree.

July 7, 2018 By: Lisa Mendelman

The information superhighway is paved with good intentions. This thought occurred to me earlier this summer, as I drove the Silicon Valley corridor of 101. “The first survivor of Alzheimer’s is out there,” one billboard declared. “Hello marijuana, goodbye anxiety,” announced a second (the company, Eaze, hand-delivers the substance, à la Instacart). “No data left behind,” avowed a third. Perhaps because I was headed to the ALA to deliver a paper on Edith Wharton’s satire of interwar scientific culture, Twilight Sleep, the third struck me as particularly ludicrous and problematic.

June 18, 2018 By: Séan Richardson

On a recent episode of the Modernist Podcast, I asked “What does precarity mean to you?” My inquiry came in the wake of the strike action that swept the UK in the early months of 2018, as academics became embroiled in an all too familiar fight to protect their working conditions by halting alterations that would see sweeping changes to pensions. I have returned to this question many times since and realized how flawed it is, for precarity is not an epistemological issue, but an ontological one.

January 31, 2018 By: Nick Fesette

Originally constructed in 1817, Auburn Correctional Facility in Upstate New York stands as the oldest continually functional maximum-security penitentiary in the United States. [1] I doubt that its designers would have predicted that 200 years later the US would come to incarcerate more people than any other country in history. We currently make up only 5% of the world’s population, but confine about 21% of its prisoners.

November 20, 2017 By: David Farley

Modernism has always been bound up for me with travel, with politics, and with protest. I got my first passport and traveled to what was then the Soviet Union in January of 1987. It was the dead of winter and the twilight of the Cold War when we visited Moscow, Leningrad, and the Central Asian Republic of Uzbekistan, where the calligraphic beauty of the Islamic design on the madrassahs in Samarkand echoed the ornate beauty of St Basil’s Cathedral back in Moscow. When I returned home, I read for the first time the Anglophone modernist writers whose obscure and difficult texts spoke to the shock of international travel that had resonated so strongly with me.

September 28, 2017 By: Julie Vandivere

As a scholar of early-twentieth-century literature, I have not found it necessary to address contemporary political issues in my work. However, the election of Donald Trump has forced me to change my thoughts about writing in general and more specifically, about publishing on modernist women writers. In the present academic climate, many who read and teach in the perpetually unpopular field of women writers also contend with heavy teaching loads, difficult family commitments and/or precarious employment.

July 4, 2017 By: Benjamin Tausig

No single word has signaled a repulsion toward Donald Trump—and the impulse to respond to him—like “resistance.” The term emerged immediately after the election, as soon as November 11th (The Advocate: “Count us as part of ‘the resistance’”), 10th (Charles Blow: “Count me among the resistance”), and 9th (Ben Jealous: “The resistance begins today”). One Facebook page, for a group called “Portland’s Resistance,” was launched on the 8th. This last one, presumably created to rechannel a late-night panic, captures something especially visceral. And indeed, it seems that no one ever announced that “resistance” would be the keyword of a new political mobilization. Hillary Clinton did not use the word in her concession speech. There was no massively viral John Oliver clip. Rather, the word seemed to lend itself so well to the coming crisis that, like certain scientific discoveries, it occurred to multiple people independently. Something in the water made its adoption logical.

March 2, 2017 By: Julie Beth Napolin

For the first time in 7 years, I am not teaching full-time. I’m on sabbatical. The morning after the election, there was no place I was supposed to be other than working on my book. I didn’t have to face a classroom and try to digest the election with students, nor did I have to convince them that our conversations were politically relevant. I didn’t have to get my kids off to school and move on with everyday life (I don’t have kids). It was like Johnny Rotten staring cross-eyed into the camera, “noooooo future.” It was just me.

February 10, 2017 By: Kate Macdonald

In January I was teaching speculative and science fiction from the modernist period to show my students how fascism emerges, and how to recognise the ways that literary strategies can instil alienation, fear of the Other, and anti-Semitism and racism. My students were German, and our seminars were held in the north-west German university town of Paderborn, a little east of the Ruhr, where a British Army base

February 7, 2017 By: Melissa Dinsman

In his insightful contribution to “In These Times,” James Gifford takes inspiration from Woolf to state that on or about November 2016 something fundamentally changed (or rather should fundamentally change) in our teaching of modernist studies. That the election marks a shifting moment in the ways in which we, as pedagogues, approach modern literature is a thought-provoking claim

February 3, 2017 By: James Gifford

On November 9th, 2016, I was teaching my last class on Hemingway’s in our time. I had only one North American student in the room, and everyone was silent. It was silence of a kind that my neighbourhood, even deep in the night, never finds.
Print Plus Exclusive

Grievability, COVID-19, and the Modernists’ Pandemic

May 21, 2020 By: Elizabeth Outka

Volume 5 Cycle 1

Tags:

Transmission electron microscopic image
Fig. 1. Transmission electron microscopic image of an isolate from the first U.S. case of COVID-19, formerly known as 2019-nCoV. The spherical viral particles, colorized blue, contain cross-sections through the viral genome, seen as black dots. PHIL #23354: CDC/ Hannah A Bullock; Azaibi Tamin, 2020.

For the past five years, I have been immersed in research on the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic and the unexpected ways it weaves its way into modernism. My book on the topic came out last October, about two months before a worrisome new illness began to emerge in Wuhan, China.[1] We all want our research to be relevant, to be able to articulate the critical “so what” question we struggle to answer in grant requests and cover letters. But the sudden thrust into an actual version of the sensory and affective climate I’ve been studying for so long has been surreal and unsettling, like a B movie where an author awakes to find her work has come to life. Even as we expose troubling elisions and injustices within the works we analyze, we may still use theory as a buffer between us and the world, and the past as a shield against our present realities. When a radio program recently approached me about an interview on Viral Modernism, they said that their listeners had been overwhelmed by COVID-19 coverage and would find it comforting to hear about a pandemic safely in the distance. I understood what they meant, even if patterns of viral and human behavior threaten to make the past the present.

Grievable Lives, Grievable Deaths

Despite the unsettling echoes, the research also prepared me in surprising ways, offering a road map through the jarring reality shifts of our pandemic’s early days. As the months wore on, I found that Judith Butler’s concept of grievability began to echo through every news report on COVID-19, granting an essential lens through which to see this moment and some of its terrible implications. In my book, I had adapted her theory to help explain why the First World War dominates the cultural memory of the modernist era, rather than the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic, even though the pandemic killed far more people. In Frames of War, Butler posits how governments during wartime may deem certain lives less grievable and then use this calculation to justify various political ends. This process, she details, involves constructing a frame that cordons off a particular reality, a demarcation between those whose suffering matters and those whose suffering is discarded:

The frame does not simply exhibit reality, but actively participates in a strategy of containment, selectively producing and enforcing what will count as reality. . . . Although framing cannot always contain what it seeks to make visible or readable, it remains structured by the aim of instrumentalizing certain versions of reality. This means that the frame is always throwing something away, always keeping something out . . . [The] frame seeks to institute an interdiction on mourning: there is no destruction, and there is no loss.[2]

We see such processes working against various groups throughout the First World War, such as the way troops from India or workers from China were positioned by British commanders as more disposable, creating an encapsulated and seemingly normalized frame in which their lives and deaths didn’t register in the same ways as white British soldiers.

The war itself also became a framing device, one that obscured the other mass tragedy that unfolded as the battles ended. The death and suffering brought by the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic—which infected 500 million people, killed between 50 and 100 million of them, and in which the United States lost more people than it did in all the wars of the twentieth- and twenty-first century combined—didn’t count in the way the First World War did. The war was what seemed real, and war deaths were what seemed important. Flu deaths were difficult to spin into stories of victory or needful sacrifices. The disease suggested bodily vulnerability and weakness, not a masculine power struggle or a larger political goal. Its source was invisible, amoral, uncontrolled, yet the agent was influenza, something that seemed like an ordinary and familiar antagonist. Amid the war’s dominance and visibility, the pandemic’s catastrophe became a shadow trauma, its deaths less grievable. Within modernist studies, we often still operate within this inherited frame. I had been teaching Mrs Dalloway for years before I thought to connect Clarissa’s influenza to the era’s second mass death event.   

The Framing of Grievable Lives in COVID-19

Our own pandemic moment is different, of course; we did not begin at the tail end of the worst war our era had ever seen. We will remember COVID-19, but it remains to be seen how it filters into cultural memory or whether we will use this experience for constructive ends, most obviously by preparing better for the next outbreak. What saturates our screens every day, though, is the glaring evidence of the insidious frames that are structuring our pandemic, of realities being created or reinforced that shape what suffering and deaths we see, what lives are deemed grievable, and what lives are not.

These frames operate on multiple levels. In the United States, the early days of the outbreak in Wuhan were marked in much of the media largely by indifference—worrisome, but a crisis happening elsewhere, often blithely framed and dismissed as a failure of authoritarian government or less advanced medical facilities. As the virus spread and pandemic conditions began to emerge, the sense grew that we should do something, but it largely took the form of protecting ourselves: since the virus could come here, we had to act. While it is abundantly clear that countries did need to act, and more decisively and dramatically than they often did, that self-protective focus ignores not only how a virus undoes borders, but also how such solipsism obscures the loss and suffering experienced elsewhere, when it subtly or overtly suggests a reality where other lives are less grievable.

It’s not just governments who make grievability calculations; most of us make them too. As the virus spread, another element of grievability quickly emerged, one that intersected in troubling ways with a subtle blaming of the vulnerable. Those most at risk, we were told, were the elderly, those with weakened immunity, and those with certain pre-existing conditions—which is certainly vital information. The way this information was presented and absorbed, however, often carried the air of “so you don’t need to worry,” or “so THAT’S a relief.” These attitudes rightly prompted a host of responses from people in those groups pointing out how damaging and cruel such dismissals are.

The troubling sigh of relief when someone believes they are not in a threat category is often prompted by fear, as people seek to establish buffers between themselves and their mortality. And fear may morph into victim blaming, into assumptions that health and even age are somehow a matter of personal responsibility: perhaps those who are infected simply made bad choices. Something related is at work when we hear someone has died of lung cancer and ask, “was she a smoker?” None of this is to say that personal choices don’t matter: right now, we should all wear masks, wash our hands, avoid crowds, and socially distance—but those steps are not always open to all, nor do they provide complete protection or mean that those who get sick are to blame. Anxious, uncertain, scared of death for ourselves and our loved ones, the reflex can be to make other deaths more distant, other lives less grievable; if she smoked, wasn’t it her fault? If they have pre-existing conditions, shouldn’t they have taken better care? And perhaps the elderly are ready to die, or their loss is not as tragic, since they have already lived? These thoughts, often not fully conscious or articulated, may problematically frame what we see. 

Racism, Grievability, and COVID-19

COVID-19 is highlighting ever more monstrous forms of these impulses and their repercussions. Every day, more data reveals a stark racial and economic divide in COVID-19 deaths and infections in the United States and the United Kingdom. Black and brown people in those countries are dying at significantly higher rates than whites. Low-wage workers, who are often unable to self-isolate or work from home, are at much greater risk for both exposure and job loss. A recent study revealed that 80% of hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Georgia are African Americans. That figure is an indictment. As Ibram X. Kendi observes in his searing article in The Atlantic, “Stop Blaming Black People for Dying of the Coronavirus,” such monstrous statistics are not the result of personal choices made by the sick. Embedded in these numbers are centuries of unequal treatment, of discriminatory legal systems, of unequal access to health care, housing, employment, education, and more.

That these deaths and these statistics are in danger of being ignored or forgotten is tied to a government or culture’s pre-existing frame in which certain groups have already been deemed ungrievable. Butler describes the insidious assumptions that may underlie this process: “ungrievable lives are those that cannot be lost, and cannot be destroyed, because they already inhabit a lost and destroyed zone; they are, ontologically, and from the start, already lost and destroyed, which means that when they are destroyed in war, nothing is destroyed” (Frames of War, xix).  Lives, she notes, “cannot be apprehended as injured or lost if they are not first apprehended as living” (1).  If we substitute “pandemic,” for “war,” the statement still applies: long-standing patterns of blaming the poor, the elderly, and the sick for their conditions, of dismissing minority populations as responsible for their own suffering, are woven into the move now to pretend that the pandemic is not still raging, that these deaths don’t reflect on or affect whatever “us” is in power. The manifold ways in which low-wage workers and minority populations (and the elderly, and those with pre-existing conditions, though in different ways) have often been relegated to a “lost and destroyed” zone simultaneously puts them at greater risk and positions them as less grievable.  

The Modernist Pandemic

Issues surrounding grievability infused the pandemic the modernists experienced as well, echoing some of the inequalities, indifference, and blind spots we see today. For many writers and artists, the pandemic lay outside the frame of reality, its deaths a deflating foil to the war’s more important losses. In 1918, William Faulkner’s military training had been delayed due to the flu quarantine, and before he could get deployed, as he lamented, “the whole thing was over.”[3] Robert Graves suggested an influenza death would be humiliating after the war; struck with his own serious case, he wrote “Having come through the War, I refused to die of influenza.”[4] Ernest Hemingway relegated the pandemic to an afterthought one of the few times he mentioned it; in To Have and Have Not, he killed off the wife of a dissolute minor character in the outbreak. Willa Cather, who did write of the pandemic in One of Ours, praised in her letters the “glorious part” that those who died in the war (“God’s soldiers”) would play in the afterlife, and lamented that “more of our boys have died [of the flu] in camp at home than have been killed in France.”[5] Her main character in One of Ours echoes this sentiment on his way to war; those who died in the pandemic, he thinks, “were never to have any life at all, or even a soldier’s death. They were merely waste in a great enterprise.”[6] Certainly many, including Cather herself, came to see the war as also a vast and senseless waste of life, but the war and its deaths were still framed as both grievable and important. 

Interior of Red Cross House.
Fig. 2. Interior of Red Cross House at U.S. General Hospital during influenza epidemic, New Haven, Connecticut (ca. 1918). Library of Congress, digitally enhanced by rawpixel. Public domain CC0 image. ID: 2301123. 

Racism, Grievability, and the Influenza Pandemic

As I researched my book, I saw the extent to which perceived grievability is governed by what is left out, by the silences and gaps in knowledge, by lost voices. So many people who might have written about the flu died in the outbreak, or were so weakened that simply surviving became a full-time job. The experiences of minority populations, of recent immigrants, of the economically disadvantaged are not well represented in the interwar anglophone literary archive, for a range of reasons—in particular how time and space to write and access to publishing were governed by a host of economic, legal, and health care access issues that themselves reflected centuries of discriminatory practices. For writers already exposing and fighting racial and economic inequalities, the pandemic may also not have registered as significant; although Nella Larson nursed flu patients 24/7 during the outbreak, she turned to other issues in her fiction.[7]

Like COVID-19, the influenza virus hit different populations with varying degrees of severity, often spreading more quickly in crowded areas, and in the United States, devasting indigenous nations. It’s possible, as researcher and physician Vanessa Northington Gamble reports, that black populations in the United States suffered fewer fatalities in the influenza pandemic, though the reasons are unclear, and given the lack of reporting and research more generally on minority communities, caution is warranted. What is clear, however, as Gamble describes, are the widespread racist assumptions embedded in medical literature and research at the time, descriptions that echo in depressingly familiar ways today. Black American lives had, when the 1918 pandemic struck, already been deemed less grievable by the prevailing white culture, their poorer health blamed on inherent weakness and their own behavior. Gamble cites, for example, how a statistician for Prudential Life Insurance had earlier argued against offering policies to black communities because “the excessive mortality rates in African Americans were due ‘not to the conditions of life, but [to] race traits and tendencies.’” As Gamble observes, he viewed “immorality, general intemperance, and congenital poverty as race traits.” W. E. B. Du Bois countered such claims, pointing out that the higher mortality rates were in fact “an index of social conditions” and that “improved sanitary conditions, improved education, and better economic opportunities” were the solutions.[8] A similar blame game is going on right now, as the very title of Kendi’s article exposes.

Uneven Visions of Grievability

The flu literature I studied also reveals how perceptions of grievability and the awareness of suffering may be uneven within the same observer. People may be acutely aware of the invisibility of one group while missing how another is left out of the frame. In Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, Clarissa—recovering from her bout with influenza that has damaged her heart—brings to visibility the pandemic’s long-term costs and the ways this suffering has been hidden along gendered lines. Clarissa knows that as an aging, middle-aged woman, she has become largely invisible to many. Her own poor health is seen by herself and others as a weakness, interfering with men of action whose important masculine pursuits are disrupted by wives who must “be taken to the seaside. . .to recover from influenza.”[9] Even in the broader critical conversation on the novel, the fact that the two central characters are parallel survivors of the two big mass death events of the early twentieth century is often missed; Clarissa’s illness isn’t typically seen in historical terms in the way that the war veteran Septimus Smith’s mental health often is. Woolf represents this very invisibility and yet also makes Clarissa’s body visible and central, the lingering traces of her illness echoing throughout the novel.

At the same time, Woolf reveals Clarissa as notoriously blind to the suffering of many others. She laments that her husband can no longer see her as anything but a weakened patient (“He would go on saying ‘An hour’s complete rest after luncheon’ to the end of time, because a doctor had ordered it once”), but in the next thought she notes that he was already off to help protect “the Albanians, or was it the Armenians?” whom, as her husband had told her “over and over,” had been “hunted out of existence, maimed, frozen, the victims of cruelty and injustice.” Clarissa cannot even keep the countries straight, the genocide ungrievable to her, for “no, she could feel nothing” (Woolf, Mrs Dalloway, 117).  Clarissa’s own upper-middle-class privilege is on display here, and this attitude—alongside the gendered ways her own body and illness are perceived—reflect the inherent political nature of grievability.

Modernism in the Time of COVID-19

How, then, might modernism help reveal the issues of grievability amidst COVID-19? How might these works allow us to ask, as Butler urges us to do, “about the conditions under which it becomes possible to apprehend a life or set of lives as precarious, and those that make it less possible, or indeed impossible” (Frames of War, 2)? The modernist era may help reveal both the blind spots we have inherited and the tools we need to effect change. Awareness of how and why the pandemic has dropped out of cultural memory (both at the time and within modernist studies) might help us to see what our own frames often leave out. The silences and the residues of pandemic suffering may alert us to precarious lives that both the authors and we ourselves may have missed and allow us to uncover how such lacunae are formed. Modernist writers also offer other tools, like how to read for atmosphere, for the widespread and the amorphous, for the subterranean forces that extract costs from bodies and minds and communities, costs that might arise from a global pandemic, systemic racism, environmental degradation, and more.  The response to the modernist pandemic may show how, in our current moment, we can get ourselves, our students, and our leaders to interrogate the ways existing frames determine recognition—and how we might change those frames.


Notes

[1] Elizabeth Outka, Viral Modernism: The Influenza Pandemic and Interwar Literature (New York: Columbia University Press, 2020).

[2] Judith Butler, Frames of War: When is Life Grievable? (London: Verso, 2010), xiii.

[3] Ruth Winchester Ware, “Thomas Wolfe’s 1918 Flu Story: The Death of Ben in the Context of Other Literary Narratives of the Pandemic,” The Thomas Wolfe Review, 33 (2009): 69–70; William Faulkner, letter to mother, 7 Nov. 1918, repr. in Thinking of Home: William Faulkner’s Letters to his Mother and Father, 1918-1925, ed. James Watson (New York: Norton, 2000), 104.

[4] Robert Graves, Good-Bye to All That (1929; repr. New York: Doubleday, 1985), 285.

[5] Letters from Cather to Frances Smith Cather, 11 Nov. 1918; and to Elizabeth Shepley Sergeant, 3 Dec. 1918 in The Selected Letters of Willa Cather, ed. Andrew Jewell and Janis Stout (New York: Knopf, 2013): 260–261, 264.

[6] Willa Cather, One of Ours (New York: Knopf, 1922), 319.

[7] George Hutchinson, In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006), 119.

[8] Quoted in Gamble, 115; the statistician is Frederick Hoffman, Race Traits and the Tendencies of the American Negro (New York: American Economic Association, 1896), 5, 311–12; W. E. B. Du Bois from The Health and Physique of the Negro American (Atlanta, GA: Atlanta University Press, 1906), 76, 89–90.

[9] Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway (1925; repr. New York: Harvest, 2005), 103.  I discuss Woolf and the pandemic at length in Viral Modernism, as well as T. S. Eliot, W. B. Yeats, Cather, William Maxwell, Thomas Wolfe, Katherine Anne Porter, Arthur Conan Doyle, and H. P. Lovecraft.