麻豆社madou

Abstract

In this seminar I鈥檒l talk about my book,鈥The New Modernist Novel: Criticism and the Task of Reading. I'll do so鈥痓y sketching out a little of the role modernist literature has played in the history of academic close reading. First, I'll follow some shifts in Edmund Wilson鈥檚 use of the term 鈥渞eader,鈥 which gained in complexity from the 1920s to the 1940s, and I鈥檒l suggest that for other critics besides Wilson, too, modernist writing prompted new kinds of reading. But in the academy in the 1950s and early 1960s, ways of reading modernist writing also needed to lead to successful teaching and criticism. In this context, some authors and their work and some strategies of close reading seemed more valuable than others. I鈥檓 interested in how Djuna Barnes, Mina Loy, and others weren鈥檛 among those valued highly, and instead were pulled back to recognition in the 1970s onwards and especially in the 1990s. I鈥檒l close the talk by reading Loy鈥檚 novel鈥Insel鈥痑gainst the grain of some mid-century tendencies in reading, in order to suggest that close reading can be site of change in the discipline.

Bio

Elizabeth Pender has published in鈥Critical Quarterly鈥痑苍诲鈥Modernism/modernity, and with Cathryn Setz, co-edited the essay collection鈥Shattered Objects: Djuna Barnes鈥檚 Modernism鈥(Penn State UP, 2019).鈥The New Modernist Novel: Criticism and the Task of Reading鈥痺as published in 2024 with Edinburgh University Press.

Event details

  • Calendar icon
    Date

    Wednesday 16 July

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    Time

    3:00pm to 4:30pm

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    Place

    Robert Webster 335

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    Enquiries

    For more information, contact Sean Pryor.