Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Merlin as Vicar of Causation

by J J Cohen

Speculative September in NYC culminates, quite naturally, in Speculative Medievalisms II, because all good things lead to medieval studies. But I'm taking the train from DC early tomorrow morning so that I can attend “Speculative Realism: A Conversation with Jane Bennett, Levi Bryant, and Graham Harman” at CUNY followed by Eileen's class "Toward a Speculative Realist Literary Criticism” at the Public School. If my head doesn't explode by the end of those two events, well, then I'm not drinking enough nitroglycerin.

But I hope it doesn't explode, because that would be messy, and I'll be speaking on Friday afternoon and that is difficult when you are acephalic. I hope to see some ITM readers at Speculative Medievalisms, where I'll be linking Geoffrey of Monmouth with Graham Harman via Merlin, naturally enough.

Below, a small taste of my talk "Sublunary." Read up on your object oriented ontology, grab your Latin dictionary ... and go!

----------------

Graham Harman has argued that “Objects hide from one another endlessly, and inflict their mutual blows [“physical relations”] only through some vicar or intermediary” (“On Vicarious Causation” 189-90; pdf here). Merlin's advent suggests a medieval version of this statement that is just as true: “Worlds hide from one another endlessly, and enjoy their mutual embraces [“physical relations”] only through some vicar or intermediary.” Merlin’s birth is the weird result/enabler of an asymmetrical, humanly inassimilable relation. Merlin’s mother is a king’s daughter and a cloistered nun who nightly finds a handsome man in the solitude of her cell. The incubus-demon who fathers Merlin is of unknown biography and intentions. He sometimes touches the ordinary world, but just as often withdraws from terrestrial connection. His desires cannot be reduced to the merely sexual. He wants at times to kiss and hold the nun, at times to converse invisibly on unstated subjects. Merlin arrives, that is, through an abstruse relationship that unites for a while two beings from oblique realms. The angel-demon and the solitary princess never fully touch, or do so askew, in a conjoining that is textually enabled only backwards, through the strange progeny who makes possible and embodies their “shared common space” (Graham Harman’s term for the third object within which two others meet, 190) or “thalamus” (the word used for the nun’s cell, a Greek noun that also means “chamber” “bedroom” “bridal bed” and, metonymically, “marriage”: that is, the space of an unequal, complicated, potentially disastrous, possibly transformative caress). The relation between the nun and the incubus engenders a creature who if not wholly unprecedented is nonetheless unpredetermined.

The text that I am speaking about in this language that weds Object Oriented Ontology to Latin historiography is Geoffrey of Monmouth’s History of the Kings of Britain (c. 1136). Geoffrey’s history is most widely known for having bequeathed to the future the King Arthur of enduring legend. Without Geoffrey this provincial British warlord would be an obscure medieval footnote rather than the progenitor of a still vibrant world. At his first appearance in Geoffrey’s text Merlin is a precocious and quarrelsome young man. As the story unfolds he will reveal surprising abilities, demonstrating that seemingly inert rocks may contain within them bellicose dragons; foretelling grim futures that include incineration, poison, and flowing blood; enabling through his transformative potions an adultery-minded Uther Pendragon to engender Arthur. Merlin alters completely the timbre of the text in which he appears. The History of the Kings of Britain has until the moment of his entrance offered a chronicle of the island’s early days. Its sedate Latin prose describes how Britain was founded and who ruled its civil war loving kingdoms. Wonders and supernatural events before his advent are few. A tribe of giants to kill, a sudden rain of blood, a sea monster and some ravenous wolves are scant exceptions to a martial account of settlement, inheritance, dissent, and political intrigue. Merlin appears just after the first mention of magic in the narrative, in the form of incompetent magi whom the perfidious King Vortigern summons to assist him in finding a way to escape the persecutions of the Saxons. Merlin is not himself a magician; magi are figures of failure in the story. For Geoffrey of Monmouth Merlin is a prophet, a poet, a schemer, an architect and an author, a figure of singular ingenuity rather than of saintly or demonic inspiration. He cannot be domesticated into mere category.

After his unexpected advent the rules for how the story may unfold change. Earlier in the History when an earthbound king dreamt of traveling spaces of cloud and air, his fate was to plummet with his manufactured wings to a shattering death (Bladud, who practices “nigromantium” rather than magic, 30). That stretch between earth and moon had not yet opened for narrative sojourn. Merlin, however, born of the meeting of nocturnal radiance with mundane constrictedness, conveys the wheel of Stonehenge across the sea “with incredible ease.” This transmarinal relocation is not accomplished through supernatural agency. There is nothing divine or occult about the movement. Merlin works with the earth’s givenness, its alliance-seeking materiality. The monoliths are swiftly transported via his operationibus machinandis (“feats of engineering” 128) and machinationes (“machinery,” “engines,” “contrivances”). Merlin is an engineer, a vicar of causation who knows that objects launch into motion only through the intermediary agency of other objects. The stones are disassembled, loaded onto ships and carried to their current home for repurposing as a British monument, thus proving the power of ingenuity (ingenium, the Latin word that gives us “engineer”). Significantly, we are never told of what Merlin’s machinationes consist. A materialist but not a reductionist, Merlin knows well that “inscrutable depths” intractably hold the objectal world.

Merlin is likewise a vicar or engineer of diegesis. He moves the narrative, but cannot be absorbed back into it. He remains an essential mystery, a figure who changes everything and at a certain point simply vanishes, but even after his quiet disappearance his presence permeates what follows. Though he never meets Arthur, that king’s ambiguous destiny on Avalon is inconceivable without Merlin’s having set into motion the path of his ambivalent life. The text that Merlin creates is eccentric to what precedes: what sought to be history opens into a possibility-laden new genre, a mode to be christened in the future romance.
Merlin embodies the strange prospects offered by that space inter lunam et terram, between earth's banal givenness and the moon's unreachable allure. This suspended geography might be called sublunary, but by that term I do not mean mundane. The sublunary designates a region neither terrestrial nor empyrean: unregulated by tedious rules about proper history, untouched by diurnal limitations, immune to the stasis that holds heaven. Sublunary means unpredestined by humans and gods, an intermedial sweep where the fixities of doctrine, custom and theology do not necessarily obtain. The wandering incubus who traces this space, celestial but not heavenly, a lover of earthly things but not bound to the small spaces of earth's human dwellers, imbues in his progeny the ability to escape constricted textual spaces as well.

The Job Market

by J J Cohen

The MLA Job Information List went live yesterday.

I'm writing letters for several people on the market this year, so I'd been anxious to see how many medieval and early modern positions would be posted. Answer: not a whole lot. It is still a bit early, so a few more positions will no doubt appear, but by my very quick count there looks to be no more than 10-15 tenure track positions in each time period. Do the math: if 200 people apply for each, then ...

Here's wishing all the best to ITM readers on the market. At this point custom dictates that I should insert some gallows humor to lighten the mood, but really, it's just too depressing to contemplate the number of very good candidates who will not find employment this year.

Monday, September 12, 2011

3 conferences you should attend

by J J Cohen

So I am writing or thinking about writing lectures for three upcoming conferences, each of which could use a medieval and early modernist presence (if that's who you are) and welcome theorists of all kinds as well. Please consider submitting a paper for the second and third; you have plenty of time. I leave it to you whether you think my native element more closely resembles NYC, the Orlando Airport Marriott, or Edinburgh -- but I'd be happy to see you at these events.

1. Speculative Medievalisms II. This Friday! (A great thing about this event is that my talk was due to Ben Woodard two weeks ago, so I'm done.)

2. The International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts on “The Monstrous Fantastic” (Orlando, March 21-25). Me! And China Miéville! And Kelly Link! And a midnight reading in a cemetery! I haven't quite chosen my topic quite yet, but it looks like it will involve zombies.

3. Sensualising Deformity: Communication and Construction of Monstrous Embodiment (Edinburgh, June 15-16 2012). An exploration of monstrosity, embodiment, and the senses. This one looks to be interdisciplinary and very cool. And did I mention it is in Edinburgh? The conference has a great blog and is on Twitter. Not sure what I'll do here but maybe something on agalmatophilia. But maybe not; this one needs more thought.

Sunday, September 11, 2011

5 Days and Counting Until SPECULATIVE MEDIEVALISMS 2

by EILEEN JOY

In 5 days [Friday, Sep. 16th], some of us will be convening in New York City for Speculative Medievalisms 2: A Laboratory-Atelier at The Graduate Center, CUNY, to join in speculating with Anna Klosowska, Allan Mitchell, Kellie Robertson, Drew Daniel, Julian Yates, Liza Blake, Jeffrey Cohen, Ben Woodard, Graham Harman, and Patricia Clough, and you can see the full program schedule, with advance readings [specimen texts], and how to pre-register here:

Speculative Medievalisms 2: A Laboratory-Atelier

This coming week actually brings a whole host of "speculative realist" and "object oriented ontology" luminaries [Graham Harman, Levi Bryant, Timothy Morton, Jane Bennett, Steven Shaviro, etc.] to NYC for a veritable banquet of events, and you can see the detailed line-up of all of those here:

Speculative September NYC

I hope to see everyone soon in New York! [Let me also add here that I will be recording/podcasting the entire event for those who cannot be there.]

Friday, September 09, 2011

EXCITING NEWS: Featured Speaker Line-Up for 2nd Biennial Meeting of the BABEL Working Group

Figure 1. from Marget Long, Bad Light (work-in-progress)

by EILEEN JOY

The Conference Committee for the 2nd Biennial Meeting of the BABEL Working Group, "cruising in the ruins: the question of disciplinarity in the post/medieval university," to be held in Boston from 20-23 September 2012, and co-organized by Northeastern University, M.I.T., Boston College, the BABEL Working Group, postmedieval, and punctum books, is pleased to announce that we have just finalized our list of featured speakers and we're especially excited about the "pairings" we have put together. The speakers have been chosen both for their very different disciplinary and field differences but also for certain affinities that we feel they [might] share. The idea is to see what sorts of serendipitous occasions might arise when scholars working in very different fields simply "bump" into each in a shared plenary session in which they have all been asked to talk about their current work and projects, and maybe also to think a little about the uniqueness of their respective disciplines. The final line-up, then, is as follows:

Plenary Session #1:


Lindy Elkins-Tanton (Director, Department of Terrestrial Magnetism, Carnegie Institution for Science), former Assoc. Professor of Geology at M.I.T., Assoc. Editor of the Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, and currently working on NSF-funded projects on continental dynamics (Siberian Flood Basalts and the end-Permian Extinction) and on the chemistry and physics that control planetary evolution in the first tens of millions of years of the solar system. She has also been involved in spacecraft missions, including the SAGE Venus lander and the International Lunar Network.

Plenary Session #2:

Jane Bennett (Chair, Department of Political Science, Johns Hopkins University), author of Thoreau’s Nature: Ethics, Politics, and the Wild (1994), The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings, Ethics (2001), and Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things (2010).

David Kaiser (Germeshausen Professor of the History of Science and Department Head of MIT’s Program in Science, Technology, and Society, M.I.T.), author of the award-winning book, Drawing Theories Apart: The Dispersion of Feynman Diagrams in Postwar Physics (2005) and How the Hippies Saved Physics: Science, Counterculture, and the Quantum Revival (2011), which charts the early history of Bell’s theorem and quantum entanglement. His edited volumes include Pedagogy and the Practice of Science: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives(2005), and Becoming MIT: Moments of Decision (2010). He is presently completing a book entitled American Physics and the Cold War Bubble.

Plenary Session #3:

Carolyn Dinshaw (Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis and English at New York University) + Marget Long (MFA, Rhode Island School of Design); Dinshaw is author of Chaucer’s Sexual Poetics (1989), Getting Medieval: Sexualities and  Communities, Pre- and Postmodern (1999), and the forthcoming How Soon is Now? Medieval Texts, Amateur Readers and the Problem of the Present (Duke Univ. Press), which looks directly at the experience of time itself, as it is represented in medieval works and as it is experienced in readers of those works. Long works with photographs, video, and text to explore questions of historiography, representation and the physical experience of photography itself. Her work has been screened and exhibited at Anthology Film Archives, Exit Art, Art Institute of Chicago, Contemporary Artists Center, Cinders, American Cinémathèque, DGA Video in Los Angeles, and in a solo show at Safe-T Gallery in Brooklyn. Recent projects include A Daguerreotype Sideways: Re-Visiting Mathew Brady’s Studio @ 359 Broadway, 2009-2011 and Bad Light. Her current book project is a cultural history of the flashcube called Revolutionary Forces.

Sans façon (Glasgow, Scotland), a collaborative art practice between French architect Charles Blanc and British artist Tristan Surtees who undertake diverse projects, both temporary and permanent, predominantly exploring the complex relationship between people and place.

The more full description and Call for Papers for the conference can be found here:


Right now, we're asking for session proposals by 15 December 2011, but we're happy to take individual paper proposals as well. Some time after the 15th of December, we'll send out a new CFP asking for proposals for specific sessions and also for individual proposals.


Figure 2. from Sans façon, "The distance between us" [public art installation in Birmingham, 2005]


Wednesday, September 07, 2011

Everything We Think Can in Principle Be Thought By Someone Else: A Plea for Open, Collective Scholarship

by EILEEN JOY

*special note: the black-and-white photos duplicated here were taken by Lena Herzog, and you can see more of them HERE.

As part of a collective essay [with Jeffrey, Karl, and Mary Kate] for an issue of Literature Compass on "E-Medieval: Teaching, Research, and the Net," co-edited by Orietta da Rold and Elaine Treharne, for which Karl, Jeffrey, and Mary Kate have already shared drafts of their sections -- "Two Proposals for Increasing Permanence, Exposure, and Humiliation," "The Darker Side of Blogging", and "Thinking Aloud: Process, Product, and Becoming an Academic," respectively -- I offer here a draft-in-progress for my own ruminations [which echo, to a certain extent, Mary Kate's piece] upon blogging as a valuable tool for experimenting with processural forms of scholarship -- forms, moreover, that better highlight the fact that there has never been such a thing as a solitary or "individual" work of scholarship, nor a solitary scholar, although our work as scholars has often felt, and often been represented, as such.

Before leaping into this, let me also say that that is precisely what I am also doing here: leaping. When we share drafts of work here [work that is often headed to so-called publication in more conventional forms: the edited essay volume, the dictionary or encyclopedia, the monograph, the journal article, etc.], as opposed to writing posts on any number of academic topics not intended for publication beyond the blog, we may have worked on those drafts in the quiet of our studies, maybe also presented them in other forums [such as conferences], shared them with others individually for feedback, etc., and then opened them up here to further comments and suggestions for revision. In this particular case, and as an experiment [for me], I am composing this draft directly on the Blogger post template and although I will, of course, edit what I have written for grammar, form, and sense before I hit the "publish post" button, this is in all senses of the term, a true "first draft," written around 2:00 pm CST on Tuesday, Sep. 6th, while listening to Thievery Corporation, drinking my second press of coffee, with my 4 cats and 2 dogs lying on various pieces of furniture around me on a beautifully sunny and cool day in Cincinnati, this week's issue of The New Yorker [5 Sep. 2011] lying open next to my laptop [and you'll see why below]. By my best estimate of my typical drafting process, I imagine this post will be done within 4 or so hours, at which point I will pour myself a glass of wine and move on to finishing another writing chore begun a few weeks ago [an interview on the post/human with Kris Coffield of Fractured Politics], but set aside continuously as I attended to copy-editing the next issue of postmedieval on New Critical Modes and also prepping a senior-level Chaucer class I have not taught since 2003 [!], not to mention a gadjillion other small chores [drafting a tenure letter, working on a grant application, working on 3 essays promised by, um, before now, getting Kalamazoo 2012 paperwork in order, preparing for Speculative Medievalisms in NYC next week, etc.]. Comments are most enthusiastically requested, especially as this really is so first-drafty that by the time I get to the end, I'm sure I'll feel hopelessly mired in more way than one! *UPDATE on Wednesday, Sep. 7th: my drafting stalled about midway through what you will read below around 5:00 p.m. yesterday, so I moved on to other things, mainly frivolous, and returned to the draft today around noon, finishing around 8:30 p.m.

 Everything We Think Can in Principle Be Thought By Someone Else: A Plea for Open, Collective Scholarship 

At the end of my working day, I am almost always depressed. Mine is not a straight path like an engineer's, it's not A to B. I make a very curly road just by the restrictions of goals and materials. . . . Everything we think can in principle be thought by someone else. The real ideas, as evolution shows, come about by chance. Reality is very creative.--Theo Jansen, creator of the Strandbeests

Although it often feels otherwise, we do not think alone. We never have. Every second of every day, there is a virtual crowd inside of our head, multiple voices, all vying for attention, and even as babies we come into this world carrying the histories of previous generations and their experiences inside intricate chains of nucleic acids that inhabit every cell of our bodies. I've long ago given up on the idea of a unified, autonomous "self" [thank you, Derrida, Foucault, Francesco Varela, Andy Clark, and also Katherine Hayles], but every day, our particular and unique minds touch reality and become real, to paraphrase the political philosopher George Kateb ["The Idea of Individual Infinitude," The Hedgehog Review 7.2 (2005): 42–54, at 49], while at the same time that "reality" represents, to cadge from Timothy Morton, an inescapable "mesh": "a complex situation or series of events in which a person is entangled; a concatenation of constraining or restricting forces or circumstances; a snare" [Oxford English Dictionary]. I agree with Morton that "everything is interconnected" and therefore "there is no definite background and . . . no definite foreground" [The Ecological Thought, p. 28]. But as Morton also asks,
If there is no background and therefore no foreground, then where are we? We orient ourselves according to backgrounds against which we stand out. There is a word for a state without a foreground-background distinction: madness. [The Ecological Thought, p. 30]
The fact of the matter is, in order to guard against this "madness," we imagine all sorts of background-foreground distinctions all of the time: we need them, and they are necessary, even consoling, fictions. A life has to be livable, after all. I feel the same way about love: I know I'm making this up as I go along with a lot of props from others in history who have also been making things up as they go along. The trick is not to stop believing in individual lives, or in love, or even persons, but rather, to generously expand our conceptions of what counts as a life, what counts as loveable, what counts as a person. The ultimate aim is to work toward increasing, as much as is in our power, the general well-being of as many inhabitants [animate, inanimate, whathaveyou] of this world as possible. Or as Pablo Neruda once put it, much more eloquently than I ever could, "I don't know who you are. I love you. I don't give away thorns, and I don't sell them" [Love Sonnet LXXVIII].

Take the Dutch artist Theo Jansen who makes, or engineers, kinetic sculptures called "strandbeesten": the term "beest" is important here because, for Jansen, these are living creatures or "animals." Jansen is the subject of an article in this week's New Yorker, "The March of the Strandbeests" [5 Sep. 2011: 54-61], and for over 21 years now, Jansen, 63 years old, has devoted himself to making these "beests," primarily out of PVC tubing and other materials, such as recycled plastic bottles and nylon zip strips. The beests are wind-powered, enabling them to walk, for example, along the beach [go HERE for videos of Jansen's sculptures in motion; I find myself watching these videos over and over again, they are so beautiful and mesmerizing]. According to the author of the New Yorker piece, Ian Frazier, Jansen is "secretly a landscape artist" and his strandbeests are just "decoys to get us to notice the dunes, sea, and sky" [p. 61], and it's true that when Jansen first started making these "machines" -- "skeletons," as Jansen puts it, that are "able to walk on the wind" -- that he engineered them to push the sand around and thereby help bolster the threatened, eroding dunes of the Holland coastline.

But this description of Jansen's "creatures" also belies so much of what Jansen himself says about his work that is not included in the New Yorker article -- that as it progressed, he realized he was making a "new kind of life" [some might call it "passive robotics"] and that his work also represented "research into the roots of life." Of his first prototypes, now decrepit and stowed away in a barn, he refers to them as being in their "catacombs," and he has also invented creative titles for the "eras" of evolutionary development his beests have gone through: the Gluton Period (1990-91) for the earliest period when his beests were held together with tape, the Chorda Epoch (1991-93), and so on. Of his ongoing work in making the creatures, he says, "they give me . . . a place in the world and a way of living, and I give them life, so we both need each other. In fact, I couldn't live without them anymore. I think that's what you call symbiosis." Jansen also hopes that the beesten will outlive him: "What I'm doing now is training these animals to survive on their own. . . . It's a thought which makes me quiet -- when I die, I will be living for some time on. Of course this is a utopian thought. It's a fairy tale, something to look forward to, [but] with a lot of roots in reality as well, because some things, um, succeed" [quoted in the documentary Strandbeesten, dir. Alexander Schlichter, 2008].

Why dwell here on Jansen and his strandbeesten? Other than to point to him and his work as having gorgeously expanded the store of the world's beautiful "creatures," and even having rescued the lowly-yet-ubiquitous PVC pipe from its status as a supposedly inanimate object and transformed it into a protein-like building block of new life forms [note to Jane Bennett: "thing-power" never had it so good!]? While trying to think my way through how I might compose this piece on the value of open and collective forms of scholarship, enabled especially by blogging and social media such as Facebook and Google+, Theo Jansen and his creatures were much on my mind, and for very divergent reasons, all of which I think are worth describing here.

First, Jansen is a great example of what we think of as a kind of solitary genius, even an heroic artist, who clearly likes to work alone [his website indicates he is not interested in taking on any interns] and who has dedicated over a third of his life to creating what he appears to believe [with some hedging] is a sort of new "species," but he doesn't really work alone, actually. He works with very particular materials -- materials, moreover, that Jansen explains "dictate to me what to do" and "[m]aybe that is why the Strandbeests appear to be alive, and charm us. The Strandbeests themselves have let me make them" [Frazier, "The March of the Strandbeests," p. 58]. Whether engineer-sculptors working with PVC pipes or medievalists working with manuscripts and other artifacts from the past, as well as with texts and language, and even when we are supposedly alone in our studies, we are always connected to and even acted upon by intricately-networked assemblages of actors and actants, persons [virtually enclosed in texts, but also our supervisors, mentors, peers, colleague friends, imaginary interlocutors, etc.], objects, locations and even atmospheres, and our agency as "authors" is much more distributed [and even passive] than we might like to believe. Control is an illusion, as is objectivity, or even clear-sightedness. And creativity may even depend on this state of affairs, since it may be that the world brings ideas to us more so than that we bring ideas to the world. In this sense, scholarship would partly be about preparing ourselves, not to generate ideas, but to receive them.

This is just to say that if we think keeping our scholarly work primarily out of public sight [except for the occasional conference presentation] until its penultimate moment of publication in a conventional venue such as the academic journal or book, at which point quite a few years of our lives [mainly spent in the solitude of studies and libraries or other semi-private spaces where we could manage a foothold] may have been devoted to that work whose "arrival" in print may even occur long after we have moved on to other projects, then we risk working too much in the dark, apart from the world which has bequeathed to us our objects and methods of study and reflection [I might also add here that this traditional way of doing things also keeps our work sequestered within the academy, and does not allow us to reach a more broadly public audience, which, in my mind, is a real perversion of the term "humanities"]. We also do our work largely apart from the very peers whom we hope will welcome and even love it when it is "finished." Yes, for the kind of work we do, quiet is required, even long stretches of solitude [because this is when ideas often arrive to us that could never have arrived any other way and also because it's hard to translate medieval Latin when people are milling all around you], but you've got to get outside every now then. And maybe also reflect on the fact that even the supposed inside/outside divide is primarily an illusion.

Take Jansen [again], for example. He claims he likes to work alone, but he works primarily outside--his "workshop" is on a hill in the suburb of Ypenburg, near Delft, and he conducts most of his tests on the beach where strangers and friends, some of whom jump in as assistants, can watch Jansen experiment with his creatures. Jansen also allowed a documentary filmmaker, Alexander Schlichter, to follow him around, filming him at his work, for over ten years [you can see the film itself HERE]. In addition, Jansen maintains a website [www.strandbeest.com] detailing the history of his work and engineering schemes and also including a live webcam that allows you to watch him in his "studio." Although a highly idiosyncratic character, and by his own definition, an obsessive, his work is completely open in the sense that all of its phases, even including the missteps and mistakes he makes along the way, is shared with the public: those close at home and also those far away, the accidental passer-by as well as the friend, family member, journalist, filmmaker, and those he has never met nor knows anything about [like me]. In a very real sense, a sort of community has developed around Jansen's work and in various, small ways, likely impinges upon that work while also broadening its scope of impact.

What, in the final analysis, might be the ultimate value of Jansen's work, I ask myself: that he succeeds in releasing what he calls "herds" of beests upon the Dutch coastline who will outlive him [and us], or that he has bequeathed to us the visible products of a certain stretch of "working time" -- 21 years as of this writing -- in which he has labored, in the open [both in the sense of working outside but also by sharing his work-in-progress online], on his creatures? For me, the ultimate value is something enabled through both of these things: neither just the creatures themselves [product] nor only the windows upon Jansen's labors over time [process], but rather, an entrance through both of these things entangled with each other to a more ecological vision of the world and our work in it, one in which, well, frankly, everything matters, every last little thing, even the mistakes and the trash [indeed, Jensen speaks as lovingly of the individual PVC tubes as he does about the creatures that emerge from them]. World and work are not separate, just as our articles and books could never really be separated from all of the forces [persons, objects, writings, places, etc.] that give rise to them, yet one of the most enduring images of the scholar is the Nietzschean overman who emerges from the solitude of his study with the monograph triumphantly held aloft in one hand, as if it had just sprung from his forehead. And there are rewards for that, of course. It's just that . . . it's such a terrible lie, not to mention a waste of missed opportunities for a more capacious intellectual fraternity.

Which isn't to say our work is not unique, or not individual. Like Jansen, we, too, must be a bit singularly and even peculiarly obsessive or we likely wouldn't do the sort of work we do. Just to be a writer and a humanities scholar, in my mind, requires some obsession, which literally means to lay siege to a place: what I'm saying is, we often go "all out," and beyond the point of necessity; we dig deep holes. After all, the actual compensation for being a scholar in the humanities today is not even remotely equivalent to the compensation offered a doctor, a scientist, a banker, a lawyer, and so on, so we work on our scholarship, I would argue, primarily because we desire to do so and because we wish for some sort of permanence in this place we call the humanities, and the university. Yes, we have some carrots, like securing a tenure-track job and then gaining tenure and promotion, and the longer-term benefits that come with that, but much of our production as scholars is often way above and beyond what is required for those professional benchmarks and compensations. Plus, unlike a heart surgeon, who has to direct her attention and labor primarily to, um, heart surgery, we have more freedom in choosing the objects and methods of our labors: in other words, our work is deeply personal and even idiosyncratic in direct relation to our individual quirks and desires [which is not to say there are not quirky and highly idiosyncratic heart surgeons--someone had to invent the electric heart, for example--it's just that, in the humanities, choosing one's particular and supposedly heretofore uncharted niche is almost an obligation]. In this way, we really are all alone, or rather, we're singular, even while we remain attached to so much else.

I suppose this is all a somewhat digressive way of making a plea, as my title indicates, for more open forms of scholarship, in which we retain the practical and liveable notion [if even largely fictive] that there is such a thing as an individual and individual work [which might, on certain dull and frustrating days, sustain us with the idea that we have something unique to contribute to larger, important conversations], but also recognize, and maybe perform better, the ways in which our work is always enmeshed with others [human, inhuman, etc.] who enable, in some degree, our every thought. Blogging has become, in my mind, an excellent venue for doing just that and for making more visible the ways in which we always think, not in opposition to, but with and for each other.

It has been said more than once, and in various places, that while writing on academic blogs may serve the purpose of airing certain nascent and half-baked ideas and having more casual conversations about our profession and work [and occasionally about the ways in which our professional and personal lives impinge upon each other], that it is not, nevertheless, the place to do "real" or "serious" scholarship, which is supposedly better reserved for venues that incorporate "strong" forms of anonymous critique and peer review and the oversight of more formal interlocutors, such as dissertation supervisors, experts within your more narrowly circumscribed ambit of research, departmental colleagues, and so on and so forth. But all scholarship, whether articulated as a a still barely digested idea on a blog or presented in tentative digest form at a conference or represented as a more fully fleshed-out argument in a scholarly journal, is real scholarship--if, by scholarship, we mean the continual practice of the craft of intellectual research, reflection and writing in the company of like-minded artisans, in order to communicate our work to both specialist and non-specialist audiences, and with the hope that a life devoted to reading, reflection, and writing might have some effect on what I call, the way things turn out. At the very least, if nothing ever changes because of a scholar's work, something of beauty has been added to the world, some jewel-like artifact of a mind seeking a path through the thicket of books and history, a remainder for a future archive.

But because I also don't ever personally bank on the future [or that dreaded thing some call "posterity," and in which print culture is, to a certain extent, heavily invested], I think that academic blogs have played a critical function in creating scholarly communities that would not otherwise exist in a profession in which, traditionally, travel to conferences has afforded the only real opportunities for sharing work with like-minded scholars in one's field. And how many conferences can most of us go to in a year? Typically, one or two. It can feel excruciatingly lonely working on one's dissertation or one's first article or one's first book and the advice that is sometimes received, to show the work more publicly only when it is beyond reproach, in my mind, creates a climate of anxiety and dread that is unnecessary. It also seems to fly in the face of one of the purposes of a university: to air and discuss and debate ideas in a free, open-air agora, unencumbered by capitalist and other special or proprietary interests, where experimentation, even when it leads to failure, should be encouraged and prized. I'm not saying this is reality; I'm saying this is the ideal we should try not to lose sight of.

I am also trying to say: we need to learn better how to live in the scholarly NOW, and blogs have certainly increased the opportunities for doing that. It takes some extra work, of course, to spend part of each day reading and commenting on blogs and maybe also contributing substantive posts to a weblog now and again, but the payoff is that the small burst of conversation that might occur in the last thirty minutes of a conference session has now been extended beyond the conference itself, maybe even for months on end. With traditional academic publishing, one might wait years, from the conception of a work to its completion and then publication in a traditional print venue, before one "hears" or "sees" any kind of reaction to one's work, and there might be no reaction at all, at least, not one that is palpably articulated, whether in a review or an email. Every field has its superstars, of course, whose impact is fairly measurable and whose work visibly shakes up the contours of a field, but if everyone measured their success by this standard, we'd have one hell of a disgruntled professoriate [and let's face it, even the so-called superstars did not necessarily sit down one day and say to themselves, "I am aiming for stardom!" -- more likely, like all of us, they wanted to do smart, original work]. Cultural Studies of the Modern Middle Ages, edited by me, Myra Seaman, Kimberly Bell, and Mary Ramsey, and published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2007, received zero reviews. Zero. In the four years since it was published in 2007, I have never once received one comment from anyone in the field, either by email or in person, regarding whether or not the book had any sort of impact. I've seen citations of it in a few books here and there. The fact of the matter is, I know people have read the book and likely been affected by it, in any number of ways, and I don't and never have dwelled on its "reception," but my larger point is: in our profession, you could sit around forever waiting to hear what the impact of your article or book might be, or you could engage in a different sort of professional life altogether: one where the process of thinking and writing alongside others in the "open" -- Outside, where anyone might wander by and offer a provocation or new path to further thought, and where you can also count on your closest colleagues and peers to drop in and lend a hand -- might lead to a thickening of the possibilities of our intellectual affiliations as well as to our general well-being.

I guess what I'm also saying here is that there may be more value in thinking and "working through" our scholarship online, in an environment that promotes and invites democratic, catholic, and convivial support, as well as the accidental tourist and silent voyuer, than there is in the traditional "finished product": the article, the book, whathaveyou, that may land with a thud and nothing else [nothing that can be visibly measured, anyway, which is why teachers and scholars often content themselves with the adage that their real success always lies in a future out of their reach]. At the very least, blogs provide a space for the sustenance of those of us who spend many hours alone in our studies and who may wish for a greater "company" during these times--"company," moreover, that also often serves as an important aid in the critical review of our work. And for what it's worth, academic blogs also often provide voluble appreciation of "finished products" that otherwise would go unnoticed, since the communities invested in blogs are typically invested as well in assessing and celebrating their affiliates' individual "products," whatever they might be. I would also add here that academic blogs aid in the quicker, more open dissemination of ideas to a broader range of people and also allow everyone a rare glimpse of intellectuals "at work," which means that blogs serve an important mentorship function in the field as well, while also demystifying scholarly study.

Similar to Theo Jansen, there's a bit of magical realism at play in our work. We labor most of our lives at a form of writing that isn't likely to live much beyond our time and which may not even serve a distinct practical purpose, but is beautiful and intricate and thought-provoking, nevertheless. We make things, and we hope that others will appreciate them, be moved and affected by them, perhaps even think differently as a result, and we also believe that what we make is somehow "alive": words last, we tell ourselves, and keep "talking" long after we're gone. But thanks to global warming, giant asteroid belts, the threat of viral pandemics, the continued production of nuclear arms, terrorism, and the like, I gave up on the "hereafter" a long time ago. Jansen may find some hope in imagining his creatures living on after him, but consider this: when he first decided to build them as a means for dealing with the dune erosion problem on the Holland coast, he decided he would devote one year to the project, and that was 21 years ago. Thanks to the generosity of Dutch government subsidies for artists, among other benefactors, Jansen has been with his creatures every day since 1990, indicating to me that this is one hell of a grand love affair, one in which Jansen seeks a more immediate relation than could be served by posterity. In relation to Jansen and his beests, but also to the ways in which some of us are invested in sharing our work, in all of it stages, on blogs and other online social media, I am reminded of something Cary Howie wrote in his book Claustrophilia: The Erotics of Enclosure:

Our dealings with the world . . . are ultimately fumblings, necessary and beautiful, toward an immediacy that is im-mediate, in the strongest sense: not beyond mediation but inside it. [p. 9]
We can only get so close to each other [there is always mediation], but what plying our scholarship more publicly on blogs can do for us, at the very least, is to get us deeper into the relations --scholarly and otherwise -- that always already inhere between us and our work, and between each other [even when those relations might not be so comfortable]. It can help us to see better that when we say we belong to a "field" -- like medieval studies -- that we share that field with others who work, not necessarily behind closed doors, but out in the open alongside us. In this scenario, intellectual property is communal, and I can't tell where your ideas end and mine begin. To paraphrase Jansen, that's what I call a beautiful symbiosis.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Thinking Aloud: Process, Product, and Becoming an Academic

by Mary Kate Hurley

Having spent a restful holiday in New York after the excitement of earthquakes and hurricanes last week, I'm pleased to share the draft of my contribution to our group reflection for Literature Compass. I'm very eager for comments -- it's a bit ramble-y at present.

------

In her essay “Responding to Student Writing,” Nancy Sommers lays out a useful paradigm for thinking about the reasons we teach students to write in the humanities (particularly in English literature courses), and moreover, how we should effect such goals in our comments on student writing: “We need to show our students how to seek, in the possibility of revision, the dissonances of discovery—to show them through our comments why new choices would positively change their texts, and thus to show them the potential for development implicit in their own writing.” (1) Her argument proceeds from a somewhat basic mistake most teachers of composition make in their commenting: by not creating a hierarchy of concerns (ranking concepts and ideas first, stylistic and mechanical execution second), teachers mistake product for process.

This basic confusion—between product and process—is the topic I want to take up, however briefly, in this essay. In many ways, I think this is the very tension that blogs can productively foreground. By highlighting the process of thinking, rather than the product of having had thought, a blog might be able to foster truly dynamic academic conversations while also helping to shape the kinds of academic minds most capable of taking part in them.

As Karl points out in his piece, blogging is one way to conduct—in his case, for good rather than ill—your education in public. This education is largely similar to—but far more public than—the classroom experience in graduate school. The best seminars I have participated in have been equally influenced by the students and the professors in the room. Such seminars have indelibly changed my approach to research, writing, and teaching. Whether it was Prof. Cliff Siskin’s injunction to “zoom out” rather than in on literary studies in my masters seminar of Fall 2004 or the spirited discussions of temporality and Bruno Latour’s We Have Never Been Modern under the guidance of Prof. Carolyn Dinshaw in a Fall 2007 seminar on Time, these moments of exploration continue to shape my career and echo in my solitary writing ventures. Just as life-changing (a melodramatic description, but apt), however, is the memory of my fellow students in these classes -- of the presentations given and questions posed by the students in Dinshaw’s class, of the work of a colleague who continues in her studies to “zoom out,”and from that view see more possibility than I ever dreamed existed. A professor once told a group of us in a session on professionalization that as much as we want to meet the famous profs who attend conferences, the real relationships that matter are the ones we form horizontally, with the graduate students and early professors who will be our colleagues for the next forty years.

But once my classroom time ended, these conversations and productive leaps of critical imagination also fell away. That isn’t to say they didn’t exist anymore—my interactions with colleagues were just as generative as they had ever been. But with coursework over, thinking became a profoundly solitary activity. Books are pleasant enough interlocutors, but their ability to talk back is often curtailed by time or circumstance. It is hardly surprising that this is the very moment I chose to begin blogging. I began because I knew how hard studying for exams would be without public accountability at the intermediary stages of reading. I stayed because (despite my own growing anxiety over what is and is not “blog material”) I believe that such conversations are the best reason to be an academic and the most forceful argument as to why academics can make a difference in the world as a whole.

The distinction I found in my ABD life that had not seemed so clear cut as an MA or MPhil was the distinction between thinking and having had thought – or, to borrow Summers’ terms, between process and product. There is, in my experience, an overwhelming emphasis within graduate school on not being caught thinking. Conference papers seem to be the exception, in part because in so many venues they are so fleeting. However, when it comes to virtually every other task of graduate school, the emphasis is overwhelmingly on presenting oneself as “having had thought.” Articles must be meticulously researched, polished, and perfected before attempting to place them. Dissertations are the long, slow work of years. Only when finished (or substantially finished) should a dissertation be aired publicly.

I should be clear: I do not necessarily disagree with either of these principles. Scholarly works should be polished: articles and books are the currency of the academic endeavor. They determine job placement and tenure results. They ought to be “done” before they are submitted, even if they are rarely so finished once readers’ reports come back. Even as I type these words, however, I also recognize that I am focusing overwhelming on the product: despite the clarity with which I know that both dissertations and articles come from somewhere, I focus solely on results. I simultaneously obscure the process by which such products came into being. In the mystic ether that constitutes academic creation, the space in which we reflect on our writing as a practice is severely limited. We all know we have to write dissertations to get a Ph.D. We all know we have to write articles to get (and keep) a job. The question that needs to be asked, however, is how we learn to produce such things.

Dissertation seminars, the venerable Medieval Guild, and more recently an article workshop have created a “safe” space for that kind of work in my time as a graduate student at Columbia. However, seeing multiple drafts of a document—the movement from unstructured reflection to drafty attempt at argument to polished chapter, article, or even book—is something that we can only rarely encounter. The feature I find most important about blogs is not necessarily their potential as collaborative or utopian spaces, although these are certainly important. Rather, I think blogs can offer a space where scholars can come together to share the central work of the academic endeavor: the lively, productive, and messy process of thinking, rather than the often (but not always) finished relics of having had thought.

And so I return to Sommers’ explicit interest in the process/product dichotomy. Although I have not always had the internal courage to share my own process of thinking, a key component of my graduate education has been the flexibility and liveliness with which my co-bloggers approach their scholarly work. Watching their process unfold—on the blog, at conferences, in articles, and in books—has helped me to learn about the process by which scholarly artifacts are created. Taking what I’ve always thought of as our blog “motto” to heart—to see things in the middle, rather than looking down on them from above or up at them from below, or from left to right or right to left (2)—I find it pushes me to take more academic risks than are always prudent for a potential job candidate. I didn’t and don’t always take those risks as a graduate student—anxiety about what my advisors would think, whether my ideas would be “safe” (I’ll admit that I don’t quite know what that term means), or whether I would regret blogging my thoughts about conferences or books often curtailed my ability and willingness to share.

But I’m reminded of what my undergraduate thesis advisor once told me: “be generous.” I’m grateful that Jeffrey, Eileen, and Karl are all willing to be so generous with their own time, thoughts, and writing. Because demystifying the academic endeavor—whether with a blog or the careful guidance of advisors—is vital to the process of becoming that every graduate student undertakes as he or she moves from student to colleague.

------
Footnotes:

(1): Nancy Sommers, “Responding to Student Writing” in Teaching Composition: Background Readings ed. T.R. Johnson (Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005) 391-2.

(2): Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus. I’ll admit I haven’t tracked down the reference here – because for me, it’s just in the upper right hand corner of the screen.

Beatrice Michaelis, (Dis-)Artikulationen von Begehren

by J J Cohen

Last week I blogged about the shambolic heap that sprouted where my desk used to reside. Today I'll point you towards one of those items, Beatrice Michaelis' intriguing new book (Dis-)Artikulationen von Begehren: Schweigeeffekte in wissenschaftlichen und literarischen Texten ["(Dis-)Articulations of Desire: Silence Effects in Scientific and Literary Texts"], just out from De Gruyter. My feeble German skills will be severely tested by this volume, but even a quick skim shows that it is a remarkably well researched queer project that anyone studying medieval sexualities and queer theory in any time period will want to read.

I'm grateful to Beatrice (whom I had the pleasure of meeting in Berlin) for sending me a copy, and for believing me adequate to the task of reading it. Herzlichen Dank! Look, the book is already having its effect.

Sunday, September 04, 2011

The Darker Side of Blogging

by J J Cohen

As Karl revealed yesterday, the ITM bloggers are co-composing a piece for a forthcoming issue of Literature Compass called "E-medieval: Teaching, Research, and the Net."

Below is the draft of my contribution, which I offer with some trepidation. It contains some information that longtime readers of the blog will already know, but constitutes the first time I've spoken of any details here (other than two or three buried references in prior posts). Let me know what you think.

---------------
I have long been an advocate of blogging and other forms of social media for academics at all career points. My message in this piece will therefore surprise some readers: blogs and other internet forums require vast amounts of unrewarded labor, expose you to what is worst in your fellow humans, and destroy your equanimity. Turn off your computer now and walk away.

Well, not really. Yet having in the past focused upon what is positive about this digital era, I here want to explore the darker side of the Net. Blogging offers challenges that can be dispiriting. Publishing material for conversation rather than admiration requires vulnerability, a commitment (as Karl has written) to one’s own self-pedagogy. There are other dangers: angering a colleague, alienating a potential employer, exposing more of yourself than intended, attracting unwanted attention. What follows is a personal account of a few blog-related difficulties, phenomena that have sometimes caused me to be weary and wary about e-life … but not enough to give up on social media for scholars. As Karl has already made clear, the good far outweighs the dark.

Cyberspace is the realm where we purchase books, shoes, and snake oil; download salacious images; skim the news and ogle celebrity hijinks; research Anglo-Norman loanwords, dogs ready to be adopted, or plane schedules; and share works of art and scholarship, among many other things. The internet is also a snark factory. The Grouse and the Cavil are among its most frequently encountered fauna – along with the Whinge, the Quibble and the Peeve. Read the comments to any unmoderated site, from online newspapers to Amazon product pages, and you'll be lectured in succinct and vivid language about what's wrong with the government, the tax code, the weather, contemporary music, service at restaurants, France, liberals, books with big words, and polar bears – typically under headings having little to do with such subjects. I gave up reading the comments to NPR articles when a news item on the aurora borealis became an impassioned exchange on birth certificates and the presidency. Although tone is easy to misread, especially when emotion binds us to a subject, these interchanges often fail to rise beyond the level of snipe: no conversation or true debate, both of which require patient listening. Few minds are likely changed as a result of vitriolic comments. Persuasion requires trust, imperturbability, doggedness. Very often electronic pronouncements seem drive-by. Something negative is posted on impulse, and the author doesn't check back to view the consequences of the published words. Internet forums can create the effect of impulsive, loud and lonely shouts in rooms so large the walls cannot be discerned. Such spaces do not in general stage communalizing events.

Moderation may assist in keeping comment threads on topic and tone civil enough to inhibit shouting. So can systems such as the banning of anonymity and user-rated ranking of remarks, where highly rated submissions appear first in the thread. Crowd sourcing does work. Katherine Rowe spearheaded an open peer review process for the special issue of Shakespeare Quarterly that she guest edited on "Shakespeare and New Media" (6.3 [2010]). The forthcoming issue of postmedieval on "Becoming-Media" (ed. Jen Boyle and Martin K. Foys, 3.2) created a lively website for its experiment in open review, one that stressed accountability through public identity as part of its comment process. Double blind peer review has long been held to be the gold standard for scholarly publishing, but these experiments in new media have demonstrated viable alternatives, options that may in fact increase the critical depth of the published piece and magnify its impact. The downside of such publishing events is that they do require a significant commitment of time, a resource in rather short supply among most academics. When my docket is crammed with tenure letters, article reviews, and books to evaluate for publication, reading and then commenting upon more essays can seem another chore, no matter how good those essays are. That doesn't mean I won't do it, of course. I believe strongly in such projects. Yet in the end I often cannot carve out the time required to give the serious, insightful feedback such crowdsourcing demands, and fall prey to diffusion of responsibility. The internet is a great multiplier of work. I won't say uncompensated labor, because there are rewards involved -- mainly intangible, but rewards all the same. Still, commenting on blogs and contributing to open peer review isn't a kind of work much visible to the professional reward system. It is mostly a selfless endeavor. No wonder some people are rather irritable by the time they find themselves typing comments in an electronic forum. It’s too bad polar bears, wordy academics, and France must bear the brunt of their irascibility.

Even as I am composing this essay, I see that someone has been posting dismissive comments on the Facebook page we maintain for the blog In the Middle. We used the page to disseminate to those who had “liked” us there a publication announcement about Karl Steel's new book How to Make a Human. The volume has just appeared in print, and we linked to the publisher’s website so that ITM's 564 fans could follow it from their newsfeed if they wished. One of these fans quickly posted a dismissive response, apparently without having followed the link. When challenged by Eileen Joy to think more deeply about the project before reacting negatively, he downloaded and skimmed a PDF of excerpts from the book made available by the publisher. He quickly posted another comment, complaining that How to Make a Human had ignored the work of historians. Karl then replied, pointing out that the reader's objection was in fact patently untrue: all he had to do was consult the bibliography, included in the PDF. The original commenter seemed taken aback, apparently not realizing that the book's author happens to be one of the ITM co-bloggers.

Three things deserve notice within this interchange. First, the commenter reacted just as internet culture encourages us to respond: with brevity, derision, and declarative confidence. The comment had little to do with the actual content of the monograph; it was a condemnation of the project based upon quick reading of the publisher's blurb. To engage deeply with the substance of Karl’s argument would ideally require reading an entire book, and that's a slow process; the internet does not like slow. Second, the author of How to Make a Human was able to add his voice swiftly, much to the surprise of the commentator. Karl thus prevented the thread from becoming a lament about how historians are always neglected and about how the work Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and Jacques Derrida is outmoded and deserves disparaging: observations that may or may not be true but have little to do with the volume itself. Last, one way of looking at what unfolded is to appreciate the rapid curtailing of what could have blossomed into a dyspeptic exchange marked by increasing passion and diminishing readability (that is, a normal comment thread on many news sites and blogs). Yet it is also clear from the start an imbalance of power obtains in such a situation. Only the four authors of In the Middle can send out links to the many people who have fanned the Facebook page, just as (invited guest posts aside), we are the only four who can publish on the blog's main page. Everyone else’s words appear in the comments section, which are moderated by us. When Eileen Joy, Karl Steel, Mary Kate Hurley and I post on the ITM FB wall, we are identified with an icon and name that makes it seem like the blog itself is speaking, no matter which one of us is commenting. We therefore sign our names or initials as well, but it can make it seem like we are ganging up on those we disagree with when visually the ITM icons are so numerous in the thread.

And, in all honesty, sometimes we are ganging up. We share an ethos as bloggers -- that is why we blog together -- and so we typically possess a consensus about many value-laden topics. That is not to say that we do not disagree with each other; we do. But we stress respectful dissent and considered dialogue. None of us has much tolerance for quick dismissiveness and drive-by snark. As a result of this impatience, some readers believe that ITM fosters a feel-good acceptance and discourages critique. I don’t think so, but I will freely admit that our values are liberal and patent. Perhaps these shared principles also makes the blog seem clubby. Personally, I think our communal values are what made both natural and predictable our lobbying to have the Medieval Academy of America move its annual meeting from Arizona to protest that state's racist immigration law. They also explain why we tend to focus on the young in the field: graduate students, those publishing first books, those whose work is not yet well known. We are medievalists who share an ethical and utopian commitment to futurity.

I don't ever want In the Middle to seem an exclusive domain. Yet I have been told that I react too strongly against the culture of internet negativity. Perhaps I do, partly because I find it insidious and unappealing, whether in cyberspace or on the conference circuit. Nor do I exempt myself from extraneous negativity’s lure: there have been remarks I’ve published on ITM that I wish I had never composed. I’ve been snarky about books and essays whose authors have found my comments and been upset by them; knowing how a callous word can cause emotion duress has made me more careful in what I post. ITM has also attracted its occasional trolls. We've all had our nasty or gatekeeping comments. A scolding tone comes too easily in some responses, even when the comment comes from a friend or former student. Worse can be the sly civility of comments that begin with "I am confused by ..." and "I am worried about ..." Sometimes the words that follow are well meant and advance dialogue, but at others they can be mere concern trolling. But in the end my reaction to such phenomena is the same: I roll my eyes, tune out, move on. Having a 14 year old son is good training. And I should emphasize that 98% of the blog comments I read at ITM and elsewhere in the medieval blogosphere are thoughtful, civil, and often brilliant. The nergling ones have a way of residing in the memory longer than is their due. I also realize the irony of having just spent a long while being negative about the internet culture of negativity.

I also admit that having had an internet stalker profoundly shaped my response to electronic interaction, forcing me to sharpen my beliefs about what works on a blog to foster lively, useful, effective and intellectually bracing community. Without going too deeply into a history that still awakens uncomfortable feelings, I will simply acknowledge that the darkest side of blogging was having an impassioned reader fixated upon my life and work. This person’s deeds were unlikely to have been a rational choice, yet his contempt and rage were not easy to bear. His actions extended to more than immoderate blog comments (though the daily chore of rejecting those was disagreeable enough). I found it uncomfortable to explain the situation to those who had been contacted by him. I learned that when you are the object of someone's rage, it is difficult not to think that you are somehow causing that animus to explode. His attention came and went in unpredictable cycles: long stretches of quiet, then a sudden explosion of comments and email. When he could no longer post at ITM because of our moderation policy he eventually started a blog of his own. Even though its mission was to critique “In the Middle,” that seemed perfectly fine. Although I never read his blog, free speech means that one can and should operate such spaces if one is so inclined, a place where those who wish to form a different kind of community may do so.


I lost some friends because of these difficulties, especially when I could not convince some whom I trusted and who knew this person that a problem existed that was worth being concerned about. It now seems self-dramatizing to write all of this down, mainly because nothing “real” came of the threats other than unwanted contact. Yet when someone is sending email that involves your family, that makes it clear he has researched property records and knows the acreage your house was built upon, you tend to worry about the crossing of lines. I also wonder if in now revisiting these episodes from the past, I will trigger another outbreak. I realize that if my objective is to ensure that something so unpleasant never unfolds again, silence is my best strategy. Yet I have always felt that remaining taciturn makes it seem as if the events never happened. It also leaves me alone with them. The stalking occurred, and it changed my relation to the internet.

Although sharing some personal information is an essential part of blogging, I am certainly more guarded than I used to be. ITM has become more of a quarantined, professional space as a result (see the reflections here). I even thought seriously about ending my blogging career all together. Yet it is difficult for me to imagine returning to scholarship conducted the old fashioned way. Blogs and other forms of e-exchange are so much a part of my critical practice that I can’t happily return to more solitary modes. Blogging's darker side is in the end wholly eclipsed by its more luminous gifts … and, this essay being done, those are the ones that I return to contemplating.

[photos: atop a dormant volcano, Tower Hill, Victoria, Australia]

Saturday, September 03, 2011

Two Proposals for Increasing Permanence, Exposure, and Humiliation

Sin Will Find You Out by KARL STEEL

In February, we here were asked by Literature Compass to write a reflective piece for a special issue on "E-medieval: Teaching, Research, and the Net." It's due in a couple of weeks, which means we're writing now.

Given who we are, and what we're writing, it'd be foolish not to share our material here in the hopes the soliciting comments in advance of submitting our article. Caveat: my only claim to authority is being online frequently. Which is to say: I'm not claiming authority. My sense, too, is that I'm not writing for an audience of internet sophisticates. Sophisticates, yes, certainly, but perhaps not about blogging. What I'm saying may be old hat to you but a chapeau entirely nouveau to others, I hope.

With that, here's a draft of my piece:
Five years ago, Jeffrey asked me to join Eileen and him online for, as I remember, “a few weeks,” just until they could get themselves out from under some work. They never let me go, and I don't expect they ever will. In my intermittent blogging at ITM since then, I conducted my medieval education in public, to repurpose, on a humbler scale, Hegel's infamous jibe against Schelling. On the blog, I've exposed myself and my academic faults permanently, and here, in this small piece, I'm offering a pair of proposals to encourage others to do the same.

What I've done online is permanent in that even deleted blog posts will endure in the Wayback Machine or some future technology, so I should expect that what I say will continue to be said somewhere by one of my prior, but uncannily persisting, iterations. If you're online, the same goes for you, already.

This permanence alone counters the charge that “blogging is just a platform,” no different, for example, than delivering a conference paper. For obvious reasons, the public of both ITM and academic conferences may be largely the same, and a post's comments, at their best, work like a conference q&a. Blogging, though, frees us from the temporal limits of a conference schedule, and from the requirement that presenter, audience, and interlocutors occupy the same room for the duration of their conversation. This is an obvious point, worth repeating.
In this regard, whatever the charges of elitism that might be laid against ITM for, say, its particular (and in modern academia, anomalous) core of writers (mostly tenured or close to it), or even for its theoretically esoteric bent (most recently, a tendency towards object-oriented ontologies), ITM is a great deal more public and perhaps even more democratic than the traditional conference of our peers. Anyone with access to the Internet and equipped with the knowledge of how to use it can read anything we have written. For better or worse, anyone can let us know what they think, whenever they like. And even the apparent failures at ITM, suffered by all us—-laboriously composed posts that elicited nothing but silence—-still might attract some attention. No failure of this sort is permanent. The same can't be said for a couple of my Sunday-morning Kalamazoo papers, swallowed by empty rooms at the end of their alloted 20 minutes.

Obviously, I'm advocating for more blogging. Or, perhaps just as well, permanent conference web pages that include as many conference papers as presenters are willing to have posted, with space provided for comments or at least email addresses. If needed, slight increases in registration fees could pay for web hosting. These spaces would constitute an archive whose contents, by design, continued to change. Then the conference need never finish (and, one hopes, session-jumping might cease, because we know we could read any paper we missed). If a paper posted in this way finally achieved print, then that could be noted online, which might potentially land journals more readers than they might have otherwise received.

For good reason, some will object to this proposal. I hope that publishers will realize that work published online does not steal from but rather intensifies interest in the printed, (presumably) more refined developments of the same arguments. What success my book will have will be, I imagine, largely due to the interest built by the blog.
Permanence of course presents other, more serious problems. The bad readings, inept translations, bibliographic omissions, and erroneous corrections of senior scholars—-all the academic sins that we always think ourselves to be committing—-will embarrass us forever. Graduate students, who have no business saying anything to anyone but their dissertation chairs, will ruin their careers. Junior scholars will be expelled, sans tenure, into the kinds of work they hoped never to do, or into no work at all. Bloggers will find themselves tethered perpetually to a reading, for example, on the Yvain of “de Troyes.” And we should all tremble to know that talking about anyone online inevitably summons them: Pierre Haidu, James Simpson, Sylvia Huot, Patricia Ingham, and many others have dropped by ITM, to complain, to encourage us, to join in. That can be scary.

I want to acknowledge this anxiety, in the sense of both marking its existence and affirming its validity; and then I want to push past it. Speaking from my experience of moving from being a graduate student to an assistant professor to a book-published assistant professor, all while blogging, I can say that writing online for a public of medievalists, senior and otherwise, has given me a community, saving me, when I needed it most, from the savage loneliness that I understand afflicts most graduate students. Perhaps as importantly, blogging gave my scholarship a confidence, playfulness, and inventiveness that I doubt I could have found any other way. I have exposed myself to humiliation; I've probably been humiliated in ways I barely understand; and when I scavenge my early posts for material for current projects, I keep my eyes half-shut over fear of what I'll find.

Yet isn't this true for any scholar who keeps working? If it's a problem, it's a more general one. If we're doing it right, shouldn't we always be a little embarrassed over what we once thought or wrote? We have to publish, anyhow, so embarrassment will find us out if we live long enough in the profession. We should always know ourselves exposed, to other scholars, even to the public, and, I hope, to our future selves. This is a problem, but the only way to avoid it is not to exist at all.

My vote's for existence, and as much of it as possible. With the proviso that I speak from a position of (so far) success, which itself provides a kind of false après-coup justification, I can recommend my path to all junior medievalists. At the same time, I should also acknowledge that it's hard to keep a blog going. ITM's nearly six-year existence is a rarity amid other medieval blogs, which have generally proven to be far more effervescent.

With that in mind, I offer another proposal to save individual or temporary affiliations of students the trouble of maintaining their own blog when they ought to be finishing their dissertations: graduate programs should run blogs open to the contributions of their students. Surely faculty or a research assistant could supervise such a project on a rotating basis. Even if such a blog were open only to an audience of their peers and departmental faculty, students would come to know more about the work of their fellows; they would build a richer community of scholarship among themselves (and perhaps with other graduate students at other institutions, if a kind of “consortium” of these semi-private blogs were set up); and they would learn to write for a public rather than (only) for a seminar leader. This may be the most important skill in helping young medievalists realize what we're told is the most important professional transition, that from being students to being confident colleagues. We just need to tell ourselves, and our students, that only exposure will dull the fear of being read. And we, someone's big other, need to tell them, too, that the fear never goes away, so we, and they, might as well write.
(image from Heath Brandon under a Creative Commons 2.0 Generic license)

Friday, September 02, 2011

Speculative September in NYC

by EILEEN JOY

Speculative Medievalisms 2: A Laboratory-Atelier, to be held at the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center at The Graduate Center, CUNY on Friday, September 16th, is only TWO WEEKS away and we now have full details on all of the Speculative Realist- and Object Oriented Ontology-related events that will be happening in New York City leading up to and just after our event, which we like to think of as a serendipitous collision, or mash-up, or drive-by encounter, between the premodernist and more modernist wings, or arms, or legs, or hives, of the SR/OOO crowd. Follow the link below for all of the details about what will be happening in NYC from Sep. 8th through Sep. 17th (which includes a one-night course at The Public School of New York from me on "Toward a Speculative Realist Literary Criticism" as well as events at The New School and elsewhere featuring the likes of Graham Harman, Jane Bennett, Levi Bryant, Timothy Morton, and other SR/OOO luminaries), and don't forget as well that, if you plan to attend Speculative Medievalisms 2, you need to pre-register in advance (and you can follow the link above for directions on that):

Speculative September NYC

Thursday, September 01, 2011

The Misery of the Early Modernists?

by J J Cohen

Among the many activities to keep me busy at Kalamazoo 2012 is a presentation for a roundtable on teaching the canon sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee of the Medieval Academy. The event has been organized by Elizaveta Strakhov, and I sent her the following abstract yesterday. Warning: it paints its argument in VERY broad strokes.
Taking as a point of departure two recent collections of essays in early modern studies (ShakesQueer and Ecocritical Shakespeare), I will speak about what it means for medievalists in English Departments to have no figure comparable to William Shakespeare exerting an inexorable authorial gravity -- a pull that can be productive (creating the commonality that may foster community), but can also be a black hole (triggering compression and attendant squabbling over shrinking territory). Though Chaucer looms large in medieval studies, he never dominated the field so thoroughly as Shakespeare does the Early Modern. Medievalists have always been working in a non-canonical discipline requiring work in multiple languages, so that often our work has more in common with scholars who work in (say) literature of the Americas or postcolonial studies than those whose fields have tended to roam an "English only" ambit. It is possible, however, that an implicit canon does exert its lingering effects: Latin theological works that long after D. W. Robertson continue to ground medieval meanings in Christian meanings while ignoring more secular possibilities.
I posted this abstract on Google+. Soon afterwards, Roland Greene was kind enough to comment and direct me towards his provocative essay "Misplaced Horizons in Literary Studies," where he describes the "in Shakespeare" problem:
consider what it means to examine social, historical, and intellectual issues entirely within literature, as though the empirical world has been reduced to a perspective within a literary horizon. 

I pose the problem this way because in my main field, which is early modern English, Romance, and transatlantic literatures, it's not uncommon to find projects that treat some hyper-canonical author, such as Shakespeare or Cervantes, not as a participant in the wide-ranging discourses of the period but as a horizon itself.

When I was talking to a friend about this a few days ago, I called it the "in Shakespeare" problem. Suppose I'm conceiving a new book on sixteenth-century aesthetics, or political or scientific thought, or knowledge of the Americas. I can treat Shakespeare as one voice among many, including non-literary writers as well as people who not only write but do things; this way, I can attend to what literature makes possible that other discourses and enterprises cannot. Or I can install my hyper-canonical figure as the project's horizon: political thought in Shakespeare.  

Somehow we've made an industry in which literary critics are rewarded for conceiving their work in this latter way. No one objects to the foreshortening of ambitions, or to the cynicism involved in pretending to consider real-world issues within the safety zone of a canonical figure.
Greene offers some cogent explanations for why this problem should be so enduring: longstanding and unspoken tradition; the professional reward system; publishing houses that demand a titular Shax citation because more books are thereby sold. I'd also add to the list the academic pressure of teaching Shakespeare unceasingly. Controversy unfailingly always erupts whenever an English department abandons its Shakespeare requirement, but as departments that never had such requirements have long known, students love and demand these courses, required or not. Shakespeare classes invariably fill, regardless of curricular mandates. That means that Early Modernists in English Departments (which are certainly the largest employers of literary Early Modernists) must teach a great deal of Shakespeare, creating some ambivalence about his works, but also ensuring that Shakespeare is always on the scholar's mind, for good or ill.

The problem with this circumscribed-in-advance horizon, writes Greene, is twofold:
To follow the "in Shakespeare" model of criticism is to make two kinds of mistake: a methodological one, in which the critic attempts by sleight of hand to seem to be addressing topics of wide interest without leaving the zone of canonical literary works—and ends up creating a project that doesn't matter to anyone except a dwindling population of professional readers; and an ethical one, in which he or she evades the responsibility to take literature seriously, which means (against some people's expectations) not treating it as the scene of everything important.
The medievalist version of this problem would be an exclusive focus upon literary documents as if they were revelatory of all that is important within an age. That dwindled perspective is a difficult one for even a medievalist trained in a literature department to inhabit, since what counts as literary and artistic is more of a problem than a given, and medieval studies is ideally thoroughly interdisciplinary; but such literary overreaching isn't an impossible approach, of course. Offhand, I can't think of many medieval studies books with overinflated titles to compare to, say, Shakespeare: The Invention of the Human, but there must be some. And there are projects that claim too much for their perhaps too rarefied texts to support. Still, without a Shakespeare to exert such ineluctable magnetic pull over the field, I wonder if medievalists in literature programs struggle with the same problems of canonicity, predetermined horizon, and terrain. What do you think?