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.
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Amateur Hour, or, Feminism Against TERFism

December 14, 2023 By: Rebecca Colesworthy

Volume 8 Cycle 2

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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 in part to the “current second-wave revival,” exemplified in the essay by renewed interest in Andrea Dworkin and a new collection of Susan Sontag’s essays on women. Worse yet, it’s a “deeply boring” style—all anachronistic lamentations about women’s endless suffering, no mobilizing articulations of shared problems and goals that speak to our current moment.

Contra Doherty, I tend to agree with writer and scholar Sophie Lewis that feminism is in “a golden era”—thankfully and necessarily so given the monstrous scale of contemporary attacks on women’s and LGBTQ+ rights, especially trans rights. Calling attention to the absence of any mention of transfeminism in particular in both Doherty’s essay and a response to it by Becca Rothfield, Lewis observes, “The paroxysm of misogyny (including feminist misogyny) currently attempting to stamp out transfemininity—and juvenile transmasculinity—in Britain and the US today is self-evidently one of feminism’s central political antagonists.” Like Lewis, I take it as a given that the oppression of transgender, nonbinary, and gender nonconforming people is a problem for feminism, particularly when that oppression is perpetuated and reinforced by other feminists.[1]

Even more specifically, it’s a problem for feminists in modernist studies, by which I mean two things. Above all, anti-trans feminism—i.e. “gender-critical” or trans exclusionary feminism (TERFism)—is part of the broader sociopolitical context of feminism’s contemporary resurgence in the field of modernist studies and a painful reminder that feminism is always multiple, a site of conflict and contestation rather than an intrinsically “good” thing. Secondly, it seems to me that a certain version of modernism is already implicated in anti-trans feminism. TERFism reads to me as one of a number of contemporary feminist returns to modernism, albeit an aggressively amateur return to a modernism I hardly recognize—one that makes the long history of work on gender in the field all the more important.

Painted signs reading "Trans Rights, because fuck you"
Fig. 1. "Trans Rights Because Fuck You" (2023), prints and photo by Adam Ahlgrim, All Grim Prints.

Gender-Critical Feminism and the Mainstreaming of Anti-Trans Extremism

Most immediately, it bears stepping back to sketch what the authors of a recent Trans Studies Syllabus fittingly call our “Bullshit Times.” In the United States today, the obscenely powerful, ultraconservative Supreme Court, draconian lawmakers, demagogic political leaders, right-wing and mainstream media, and so-called parents’ rights groups are not only propagating reactionary gender norms and anti-LGBTQ+ panic but also institutionalizing fascistic systems of control, dispossession, and discrimination—often in the spurious name of protecting children.[2] In the last few years, the torrent of legislation endangering if not eradicating basic rights, access to resources, possibilities for self-determination, and lives on the basis of gender and sexuality has been staggering: abortion bans and higher pregnancy-related mortality rates, particularly among Native American and Black people; bans on evidence-based, medically approved gender-affirming care for minors and criminalization of their supportive parents and providers; bans on trans youth, especially trans girls, participating in sports consistent with their gender identity; bathroom bans that serve to further exclude trans people from public spaces and daily life, bans on books and teaching and talking about gender and sexuality. As of December 13, the ACLU reported tracking an astonishing 508 anti-LBGTQ bills during the 2023 legislative session, many of them attacking trans youth.

What concerns me here is what concerned Judith Butler in a 2021 Guardian piece: that self-identified feminists are “ally[ing] with reactionary powers in targeting trans, non-binary, and genderqueer people.” An Anglophone movement with roots in the 1970s, trans exclusionary feminism (TERFism) has grown significantly in recent years. In their introduction to a 2022 special issue of Trans Studies Quarterly on gender-critical movements and “post-fascist” feminisms, including TERFism, Serena Bassi and Greta LaFleur explain how “highly visible TERFs like the theorist Sheila Jeffreys, the journalist Julie Bindel, and the popular writer J. K. Rowling articulate the movement’s brand of transphobia by claiming that trans womanhood is a patriarchal invention aimed at infiltrating women’s spaces and undermining feminist movement building from within.”[3] In Britain, TERFism has become alarmingly mainstream, particularly following proposed reforms to the Gender Recognition Act that would have allowed people to self-identify rather than obtain medical assessment for the purposes of legal gender recognition. As Lewis explained in a 2019 NYT op-ed, TERFs “have effectively succeeded in framing the question of trans rights entirely around their own concerns: that is, how these rights for others could contribute to ‘female erasure.’”

In the US, by contrast, the gender-critical (or anti-gender) movement is largely a conservative beast. Later in 2019, Katelyn Burns reported in Vox that, while unholy alliances had formed between radical feminist groups such as the Women’s Liberation Front and far-right conservatives to oppose trans rights, gender-critical feminism hadn’t had the same traction. Four years later, this remains true. A 2023 poll showed that the vast majority of self-identified feminists in the US support trans rights, with 81% opposing laws preventing trans youth from receiving care and 89% favoring discussion of transgender people in K–12 education.

I was pleasantly surprised to encounter these numbers—probably because I spend too much time on Twitter where they’re quick to swarm. No doubt I’ve also rage-read too many NYT op-eds by Pamela Paul, previously the editor of the NYT Book Review and now a regular Opinion columnist. Lest anyone forget—as if anyone could—Paul published a defense of J. K. Rowling a mere day after the Times received two open letters critiquing the paper’s coverage of trans issues—one from contributors that was also signed by 34,000 media workers and NYT readers and subscribers, including me; and another hand-delivered by GLAAD and signed by over 100 LGBTQ advocates and organizations. Did Paul file her piece earlier? For sure. But it was typical, borderline farcical, transphobic Paul fare. In July 2022, Paul fearmongered about how groups at both extremes of the political spectrum are “working . . . to deny women their humanity”—the far right by “stripping women of fundamental rights”; the so-called far left (“academics, uber-progressives, transgender activists, civil liberties organizations and medical organizations”) by acknowledging that cis women are not the only ones who experience pregnancy and childbirth. Paul isn’t the first cis woman in the US media to worry about women being “shove[d] to the side” by trans inclusion.[4] Yet, as Melissa Gira Grant pointed out in The New Republic, Paul has a bigger, broader audience. In using her platform to cast trans inclusion as an extremist view and spout gender-critical talking points to liberal readers, she “is laying the groundwork for a mainstream case for trans exclusion.”[5]

So what exactly is gender-critical thinking critical of? Bassi and LaFleur sum it up thus: “In all its multiple manifestations, gender-critical discourse ostensibly takes issue with the feminist theoretical notion that sex and gender are social and cultural inventions” (313). “Ostensibly” because, in maintaining that binary sex is real, immutable, and biological, while gender is unreal, ideological, and so on, gender-critical discourse participates in a long history of inventing sex and gender.

The same goes for gender-critical feminism, which Sara Ahmed describes as a “gender conservative movement.” One way this movement operates is by elevating terms such as “sex” and “gender” into catchphrases, “as if they embody truths”—e.g. sex is real; sex not gender. Such slogans get treated as common sense, facts everyone just knows. As Butler reminds us in the Guardian, however, the point of gender studies was never to “deny sex.” No one is, as Rowling proclaimed in a mindbogglingly timed June 2020 tweet, “erasing the concept of sex.” The point has only ever been that it’s just that—a concept. Concepts being things all people use, as Rowling herself says some women use the concept of sex, “to meaningfully discuss their lives.”[6] And yet this admission of its being a concept is precisely what gets negated by TERFs claiming, again and again, sex is real! Sex is binary! Sex is biology!

Not actual biology, which has long contested the notion of binary sex. Nor is there a gender-critical consensus about which biological trait nominally determines and guarantees one’s status as a “real” man or woman. In her blistering review of three recent gender-critical trade books by Bindel, Helen Joyce, and Kathleen Stock, Grace Lavery observes with welcome, characteristic humor, “genitals, chromosomes, and gametes all have a claim to be the holy gender-critical grail.”

Whatever its supposed biological foundation, cis/“true” womanhood is nothing if not under siege according to TERFs, “hence the consistent recourse to the language of vulnerability and extinction—‘butch genocide,’ cis women’s vulnerability in bathrooms, the end of women’s sports, the list could go on forever” (Bassi and LaFleur, 327). Recently, the panic about trans women in cis women’s spaces has extended to chess tournaments—the implication being that women are, fundamentally and immutably, not only physically inferior but also mentally inferior to men. Ultimately, then, for all the freedom to express one’s womanhood in various ways that freedom from gender is supposed to allow, gender-critical feminism reifies “an essentialist story of womanhood as always already under threat: in danger, at risk, and in need of protection” (312). Women, this story goes, are weak, powerless, prone to suffering—and they better show it! How else are others to know, for example, who belongs in a women’s bathroom or locker room? Indeed, how could girls and women not show it, according to this (il)logic? Sex, after all, is real. Its truth will out.

The catch is that the nominally self-evident existence of two immutable sexes requires endless state and civilian policing of boundaries and bodies to maintain—of all bodies, as Lydia Polgreen reminds us. Following Florida’s trans bathroom ban in May 2023, Polgreen wrote about her own experience of being misgendered in a bathroom years earlier, warning that such bills are “a step along the path to rigid enforcement of gender norms, roles and presentation.” They also egregiously elide the fact that trans people, far from posing a threat to cis girls and women, are four times more likely than cis to experience violent crime. Trans women and especially Black trans women are disproportionately impacted. According to a 2022 Human Rights Campaign report, Black trans women represented 63% of all known cases of fatal violence against transgender and gender nonconforming people.[7] And yet, rather than derive from this data a source of solidarity and collective power, gender-critical feminism doubles down on trans exclusion in the name of recentering “real,” i.e. cis—and white—womanhood.[8]

Making Trans/Misogyny New

All of this is a problem for feminists in modernist studies. How?

Let’s start with what’s most important. TERFism and transphobia more broadly are primarily a problem for modernist studies as they’re a problem for all scholarly fields: they dehumanize and pose a threat to people in them. I want to be careful not to lose sight of this central fact. It is people with whom I am most concerned—scholars, students, my fellow publishers. As both AAUP and scholar-activists such as Lavery and Ahmed have made clear, anti-trans speech acts such as intentional misgendering and deadnaming are forms of harassment. They undermine and hence render all the more necessary efforts to ensure that our shared workspaces are hospitable to all minoritized scholars.[9] Crucially, to this end, the 2023 Modernist Studies Association conference program included a statement on gender inclusion affirming the “rights and dignity of our transgender and gender non-binary members” and the importance of “using individuals’ correct name and pronoun reference.” In this essay, too, the rights, dignity, and existence of trans people are not up for debate.

Rather, I want to propose that gender-critical feminism constitutes a vitriolic form of what Melanie Micir and Aarthi Vadde call “amateur criticism.”[10] Readers of this site will hardly need reminding that Vadde and Micir juxtapose Kate Zambreno’s Heroines (2012) and Virginia Woolf’s Three Guineas (1936)—two “hybrid work[s] of cultural criticism and feminist memoir”—to argue that both writers “turn to low-prestige genres and use unapologetically emotional voices” to offer a “feminist alternative to the disciplinary fashioning of criticism” (519). This alternative is not only stylistic but also substantive. Vadde and Micir acknowledge that Zambreno’s recovery of women writers “marginalized by what she calls ‘the modernist memory project’” may feel “dated to professional scholars . . . who have either witnessed or worked to bring about feminist, minority, and non-European revisions of the modernist canon” (519, 544 n. 9). I confess, that was my response upon picking up Heroines—haven’t we done this? Haven’t we already remembered modernism differently?

This is the orbit (Vadde and Micir’s term) in which I want to situate TERFism—not because it shares a politics with Woolf or Zambreno but because it shares elements of this amateur playbook. Just as Bassi and LaFleur caution against presuming that feminism is an “incontrovertible political good,” I am interested in the uses and abuses of amateurism to very different feminist ends (320).

Perhaps nowhere has an amateur feminist return to modernism been more prominently displayed of late than in It’s Pablo-matic: Picasso According to Hannah Gadsby, a recent exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum co-curated by the Australian comedian. Gadsby—who uses they/them pronouns and signed the GLAAD letter to the New York Times—studied art history in college but isn’t formally credentialled beyond that. The show builds on their criticism of Picasso for his misogyny in their 2018 Netflix special, Nanette. It was also brutally panned in the New York Times precisely for its amateurism—for abandoning difficulty, foregrounding viewers’ feelings above all, and ignoring “[a]ll the feminist scholarship of the last 50 years.”

In some respects, this is also Doherty’s critique of the current second-wave feminist revival—that it pretends the last fifty years didn’t happen in “substituting fifty-year-old theses for an effort to analyse present conditions” and marketing them as “timely” and “urgent.” Foremost among these theses is a definition of womanhood in terms of “not just the experience of suffering but . . . the constant verbalisation of pain.” What’s born of such a notion of womanhood is a “negative feminism: participation credentialled on the basis of suffering.”

Though Doherty doesn’t discuss gender-critical feminism, it, too, effectively reads as second-wave revival that disavows decades of feminist work in favor of constantly verbalizing feelings of pain. In a 2018 blog post, UK-based scholar Natalia Cecire calls attention to the proprietary and generational structure of “the transphobic cis ‘feminist’ claim to true and sole ownership of misogyny and injury.” This claim, Cecire writes, is “a claim to expertise and the respect that expertise is due, a claim made by way of ‘personal experience,’ since in fact transmisogynists can only hold their position if they ignore the vast body of scholarship on sexuality and gender.” They must also invalidate the experience of trans women, clinging to the wildly solipsistic notion that (as Ahmed puts it) “trans women cannot be women because they were socialised as men and benefited from male privilege.” Trans women can never get credentialed on the basis of their suffering.

This proprietary TERF claim on suffering can further take the form of a reclamation, of a return to a perpetually recent past. A common gender-critical refrain is that certain notions of sex and gender, transgender people, and/or trans healthcare are new. Consider, for example, this first sentence of a March 2023 essay by a senior editor of the self-described “radical American journal,” Compact: “Until the past few years, it wasn’t controversial to know or to say that there are two sexes, which are immutable; indeed, it was, and is, part of the background of our collective reality.”[11] One might assume that those of us who don’t see our experiences, expertise, or ethics reflected in this “collective reality” are the ones with “controversial” ideas—but no. The moral authority of both the underdog and the universal has been claimed, leaving the rest of us not outside or marginalized so much as nowhere, while also supposedly wielding some newly seized power to silence and censor what nevertheless remains real and immutable.

Not only are certain notions of gender supposedly new but they are also cast as a product of postmodernism, with the implication that the pre-gender past to which TERFism hearkens is a modernist one. In her review essay, Lavery memorably reflects, “The commitment to novelty, to asserting the uniquely ‘postmodern’ dimension of a question that long precedes modernism stands out as perhaps the most ruthlessly incompetent dimension of this work.” Other familiar foes appear in gender-critical writing: poststructuralism, deconstruction, Judith Butler (“gender-critical enemy number one,” as Lavery notes). I follow Lavery, however, in homing in on “postmodernism” amid this morass of empty signifiers. If “reality” matters most to gender-critical feminism, its reliance on tired clichés about post/modernism matters to me. Having lived through the first round of culture-war freakouts about postmodernism, I cannot help but think, haven’t we done this already? How are we still doing this?[12]

Gender-critical feminism’s anti-postmodernism reads as a holdover of what political theorist Wendy Brown characterized as a “modernist reaction to postmodernism” nearly thirty years ago in her now classic 1995 book, States of Injury.[13] There, Brown argued that, while anti-postmodern feminism claimed to be political, it “betray[ed] a preference for extrapolitical terms and practices: for Truth (unchanging, incontestable) over politics (flux, contest, instability)” (37). For TERFs today, this Truth is the Truth of Two Sexes, according to which (to quote Lavery) “roughly half of all people simply are male and the rest are female.” In Brown’s well-known analysis, the dominant mode of modernist/anti-postmodern feminism—and of late twentieth-century identity politics and liberal politics more generally—was Nietzschean ressentiment, a “wounded attachment” to hurt that vengefully seeks out and “produces a culprit” to blame and hurt in turn (68). As we’ve already begun to see, TERFism manifests such ressentiment in its scapegoating of trans people for the ills of patriarchal oppression and what Lewis, echoing Brown, describes as its “wounded attachment to the suffering-based femaleness it purports to celebrate.”

Brown’s suggestion that such wounded attachments—to Truth, to a stable “I” to authorize experience, to a uniquely female experience of suffering—are characteristically modernist has always stuck with me, making me bristle and feel oddly protective, defensive of this thing called modernism. I initially read States of Injury in college, shortly after it was published. “That’s not the modernism I know,” I thought. Now, thirty years later, the past TERFs idealize still isn’t one I readily recognize.

Who Buried Feminism?

As an Xennial undergrad in the late 1990s, I double majored in English and women’s studies. I knew the work of Virginia Woolf heading into college. Reading H.D., Jean Rhys, Gertrude Stein, Nella Larsen, and Stevie Smith further initiated me into what I half-jokingly call “girl modernism.” The latter wasn’t limited to “women writers.” Baudelaire and Freud featured prominently. Above all, the modernism on which I was reared was messy and capacious, always already bound up with issues of corporeality, desire, subjectivity, identification, social norms, and the creative, constitutive power of language. Gender was, as Lavery puts it, a question, a source of reflection and a site of struggle, even if the term “gender” wasn’t always at writers’ fingertips. As Lynne Stahl notes in the Washington Post: “it’s the terms that are novel, not the ways of being they describe.” But as she also suggests, some ways of being might be, if not entirely new, then more readily accessible, conceivable now. And if some are new . . . so what? Things change. People change. Genders and, yes, even sexes change.

So has modernism. From its origins in various manifestos and movements, modernism has been made and remade. So, too, in modernist studies, what’s old has often made new again, sometimes as if for the first time. Scholarly trends—including feminism—come and go and come back again. This is what scholars do: we make and remake our objects and fields, especially under the pressures of a scholarly market that endlessly calls for novelty, but also in response to issues both “in” and “outside” of the academy—problems such as cis/sexism and trans/misogyny that may not change as much as we might like.

Susan Stanford Friedman, who passed away earlier this year, described our continual efforts to frame and reframe our objects of study as “definitional excursions.”[14] We all take them in ways that are informed by our institutional and disciplinary contexts. Brown’s “modernism” closely corresponds to Enlightenment modernity and bears the mark of her grounding in the social sciences. Mine bears the mark of my grounding in feminist literary studies, including the work of Friedman. While I wasn’t able to attend her memorial at the MSA conference in October, I will say here: it’s impossible to overestimate the influence of Friedman’s work on my education in both modernism and feminism. I wrote my undergrad thesis on H.D.’s prose following the height of its recovery by Friedman and others. Over winter break my senior year, I visited H.D.’s archives at Yale University’s Beinecke Library and pored over the letters she wrote during her analysis with Freud in the 1930s. “Book means penis evidently,” she had written to Bryher and I scribbled in my notes, unaware that all those letters would be published just a couple years later in a volume edited by Friedman.[15]

In her classic 1975 essay, “Who Buried H.D.?,” on which my section title riffs, Friedman critiqued H.D.’s male critics for reading her poems as “a product of her unresolved penis envy,” symptoms of her supposed feelings of inferiority that were found lacking in turn.[16] Friedman, however, argued that the phallus was a faulty measuring rod for H.D.’s creativity, showing how the poet “used myth to confront the most contemporary and timeless problems in women’s lives” (808). In Friedman’s reading, the women in H.D.’s work suffer by dint of their sex in a sexist world. Yet, Trilogy and Helen in Egypt also “attempt to transcend the divisions into male and female as they reach for a vision of individual identity, society, and religion based on an androgynous union of the strongest and most creative aspects of the traditionally ‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’” (811).

In the fifty years since, further work in gender, queer, and trans studies has established new vocabularies and frameworks for conceptualizing such modernist attempts at transcendence—and transition. Susan McCabe’s 2021 joint biography of H.D. and Bryher identifies the couple as “genderqueer,” exploring how they “claimed a nonbinary view of their bodies, history, and the cosmos.”[17] Meanwhile, Lavery, in her latest book, Pleasure and Efficacy, as well as feminist theorist Mari Ruti, who also passed away this past year, have claimed a nonbinary view of psychoanalysis, developing trans affirming readings of penis envy as a universal condition.[18]

I offer these examples not to redeem a “good” modernism, magically free of misogyny and bad binaries, but rather to join other scholars in affirming that our current moment has a long history—both for better and for worse. Not only is the question of gender not new but the gender-critical claim that it is new is not new. In The New Woman, Emma Heaney traces the transmisogynist “framing of trans women as new . . . and impossible to understand” back to the late nineteenth century, showing how it has continually occluded the fact and variety of trans feminine existence.[19] Lewis and Asa Seresin have identified antecedents of contemporary TERFism in earlier forms of “fascist feminism,” decades before the 1970s cultural feminism in which it’s rooted.[20] Scholars in early modern (#EMoTrans) and premodern studies are doing invaluable work in yet earlier periods, charting histories of both trans life and gender diversity, on the one hand, and of cisnormativity and its links to white supremacy and colonialism, on the other.[21]

To some degree, my aim here is simply to insist on how much this scholarly work of documenting and exploring trans life matters, if with the painful awareness of how little it matters to gender-critical feminists. Ezra Horbury and Xine Yao note that, in UK academia, “the legitimacy and authority to speak on trans studies is justified via deliberate ignorance of trans studies.”[22] In Material Girls, for example, Stock, a philosopher by training, brandishes the novelty of her “recent professional turn to sex and gender,” presenting herself as an anti-elitist everywoman whose “outsider status” in the fields of gender and trans studies only better equips her to diagnose their failures.[23]

I’m mindful of my own outsider status. For all my relevant scholarly and professional credentials, including my work as an acquisitions editor in gender and sexuality studies, I would be the first to acknowledge that I am not an expert in trans studies. I say this not as a point of pride, to excuse my deficiencies, or to suggest, as Woolf also does in Three Guineas, that it gives me a privileged vantage point. In the face of a flood of anti-trans activism, legislation, and publications—including, disappointingly, by the same university press that published my monograph—I have been doing a lot of what Cecire calls “emergency education”: informal, on the fly, in real time. I write this essay as an amateur of sorts, not self-authorizing so much as self-questioning, self-doubting. More than anything, though, I’m angry, horrified by the anti-trans bigotry being spread by feminists when the truth is that patriarchy will bury us all, cis and trans. There is no liberation for women without trans liberation. Of that I am certain.

 

Notes

[1] For a short overview of transfeminisms (and the relationship between trans and feminism), see Susan Stryker and Talia M. Bettcher, “Introduction: Trans/Feminisms,” TSQ 3.1–2 (2016). doi.org/10.1215/23289252-3334127.

[2] On the image of the child in the current panic over trans people, see Max Fox, “The Traffic in Children,” Parapraxis 1 (Dec 2022): parapraxismagazine.com/articles/the-traffic-in-children. See also Jules Gill-Peterson’s Histories of the Transgender Child (Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press, 2018), which begins thus: “A libel placed on the very existence, a vicious question mark snaked around being, is what passes for a rational object of ‘debate’ among adults every day in the media, online, in schools and clinics, and in the social milieu in which trans children must find a way, despite all odds, to survive, to grow, and to endure” (vii).

[3] Serena Bassi and Greta LaFleur, “Introduction: TERFs, Gender-Critical Movements, and Postfascist Feminisms,” TSQ 9.3 (2022): 313, doi.org/10.1215/23289252-9836008. While the acronym TERF stands for trans exclusionary radical feminist, I follow LaFleur and Bassi and others in using TERF and TERFism descriptively to name trans exclusionary feminism more broadly.

[4] Cameron Awkward-Rich has argued that, despite TERFism’s frequent focus on trans women, it’s transmasculinities that “become a problem for imagining trans-inclusive feminisms” and get perceived as posing a threat of annihilation to cis women. He notes how, in 2014, Michelle Goldberg, now Paul’s colleague, admitted on a podcast to feeling troubled by the “shift in language” in reproductive justice activism after publishing a New Yorker article about the “dispute between radical feminism and transgenderism.” See Awkward-Rich, “Trans, Feminism: Or, Reading like a Depressed Transsexual,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 42.4 (2017): 819–41.  Katha Pollitt also fretted about “erasing women from the fight for reproductive rights” in The Nation in 2015.

[5] See also Jules Gill-Peterson in The New Inquiry about how an “intensely-avowed emotional attachment to liberalism” becomes a means of laundering anti-trans extremism.

[6] For a screenshot, see Jordan Moreau, “Rowling Gets Backlash Over Anti-Trans Tweets,” in Variety, June 6, 2020.

[7] The atrocious misrepresentation of trans women as likely perpetrators also conveniently disregards and distracts from the actual common threat to cis girls and women. Historian and former competitive swimmer Johanna Mellis points out in the Guardian that, “historically and currently, the common perpetrators of sexual assault, abuse and harassment in sport are cisgender men.”

[8] Bassi and LaFleur write, “the gender-critical politicization of a true womanhood under threat by trans politics is not only genealogically coherent with multiple conservative moral panics and resilient fascist tropes but also with the longue durée of liberal, bourgeois, white feminist exclusions perpetrated along racial and class lines” (317).

[9] See Lavery,  “Grad School as Conversion Therapy,” and “The Gender Critical Movement Is Undermining Academic Freedom,” given as a talk at UCL in May 2022 and subsequently made available on her website. See Sara Ahmed, “You Are Oppressing Us!”(on her blog) and “Against Students”(on The New Inquiry), for analysis of how free speech and academic freedom get weaponized to obscure power dynamics and justify harassment.

[10] Melanie Micir and Aarthi Vaddde, “Obliterature: Toward an Amateur Criticism,” Modernism/modernity 25.3 (Sept 2018): 517–49.

[11] Nina Power, “Welcome to TERF Island,” Compact, March 22, 2023.

[12] Samuel Catlin has argued that, in the US, “theory” has long been the “favorite target” of the right (and the left, to a degree), whether it goes by the name “deconstruction,” “critical race theory,” or “gender theory.” Catlin’s argument absolutely applies here, too. Across national contexts, gender-critical feminism sows panic about not only gender—whether called gender theory, gender ideology, gender identity, or gender studies—but also abstraction, about how gender “abstracts from things in themselves” (Catlin). Hence, Bindel’s subtitle promises to show us “The Real Route to Liberation,” Stock’s to explain “Why Reality Matters,” and Joyce’s to shed light on what happens “When Ideology Meets Reality.” See Samuel Catlin, “Who’s Afraid of a Little Theory?” Gawker, June 14, 2022. Though the Gawker archives are, unfortunately, no longer available online, a PDF of the essay is available via Catlin’s Academia.edu page.

[13] Wendy Brown, States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995), 37.

[14] Susan Stanford Friedman, "Definitional Excursions: The Meanings of Modern/Modernity/Modernism," Modernism/modernity 8.3 (2001): 493–513.

[15] “H.D. to Bryher,” in Analyzing Freud: Letters of H.D., Bryher, and Their Circle, ed. Susan Stanford Friedman (New York: New Directions, 2002), 280.

[16] Susan Friedman, “Who Buried H.D.? A Poet, Her Critics, and Her Place in ‘The Literary Tradition,’” College English 36.7 (1975): 805.

[17] Susan McCabe, “Writing H.D. and Bryher in double dimensions’ – an invitation to H.D. & Bryher: An Untold Modernist Love Story,” Feminist Modernist Studies 4.1 (2021): 24. doi.org/10.1080/24692921.2021.1892284.

[18] Grace Lavery, Pleasure and Efficacy: Of Pen Names, Cover Versions, and Other Trans Techniques (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2023) and Mari Ruti, Penis Envy and Other Bad Feelings: The Emotional Costs of Everyday Life (New York: Columbia University Press, 2018).

[19] Emma Heaney, The New Woman: Literary Modernism, Queer Theory, and the Trans Feminine Allegory (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 2017, xvii. The full text is available open access.

[20] Sophie Lewis and Asa Seresin, “Fascist Feminism: A Dialogue,” TSQ 9.3 (2022): 463–479, doi.org/10.1215/23289252-9836120.

[21] See the resources gathered under “Trans Archives Against Authoritarian Histories” on the aforementioned Trans Studies Syllabus for Bullshit Times. The syllabus was written by Toby Beauchamp, Sawyer K. Kemp, Ava L.J. Kim, Damian Vergara Bracamontes, and Mimi Thi Nguyen is hosted on “The Abusable Past,” a digital venue associated with the Radical History Review.

[22] Ezra Horbury and Christine “Xine” Yao, “Empire and Eugenics: Trans Studies in the United Kingdom,” TSQ 7.3 (2020): 445–454, doi.org/10.1215/23289252-8553104. A preprint of the article is available online, in the UCL repository; the passage I’ve quoted is on page 1.

[23] Kathleen Stock, Introduction, Material Girls: Why Reality Matters for Feminism (London: Fleet, 2021), n.p.