New Books in Literary Studies show

New Books in Literary Studies

Summary: Discussions with Literary Scholars about their New Books

Join Now to Subscribe to this Podcast
  • Visit Website
  • RSS
  • Artist: New Books Network
  • Copyright: Copyright © New Books Network 2011

Podcasts:

 Erin Khue Ninh, "Ingratitude: The Debt-Bound Daughter in Asian American Literature" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:02:06

Erin Khue NinhView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Asian American Studies] Erin Khuê Ninh is the author of Ingratitude: The Debt-Bound Daughter in Asian American Literature (New York University Press, 2011), which in 2013, won the Literary Studies Book Award from the Association for Asian American Studies. Ingratitude investigates the figure of the daughter in Asian American literature, which has lately been dismissed as a figure that downplays political and historical conflict by fulfilling model minority achievement. Ninh responds to this view by seeing the immigrant family as a form of capitalist enterprise, and thus the Asian American daughter as a locus of conflicting power. Through literary analyses of texts by Jade Snow Wong, Maxine Hong Kingston, Evelyn Lau and others, Ninh explores the figure of the Asian American daughter as a debtor, whose obligation to the parents are always designated to fail, and whose rebellion comes in the form of sexual freedom and through the act of writing itself.

 Jill Talbot, "Metawritings: Toward a Theory of Nonfiction" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:50:06

Jill TalbotView on AmazonWe all know the commonplace that we shouldn't judge a book by its cover. After reading Metawritings: Toward a Theory of Nonfiction (University of Iowa Press, 2012), I'm inclined to extend this wisdom to titles. Though accurate, Metawritings doesn't capture the storytelling power that editor Jill Talbot gathers in this collection of essays and interviews by thirteen fiction and nonfiction writers. In it, you'll find a piece by Robin Hemley that opens, "It's my first full day in Prague, and I desperately want to find someone to pickpocket me." Or this one by Sarah Blackman that begins, "Once a person has been a girl, it's hard to write about the subject." You'll find a pithy investigation into dating and a poignant account of a son reckoning with an estranged, ageing father. You'll find writers in pursuit of Janis Joplin and going on blind dates, writers wrestling with the soul-crushing ugliness of Las Vegas and exploring the exotic dangers of Adventure Island. You'll discover whether or not there's a dog at the end of the world. And yet Talbot's title does do import work, because it alerts us to the artistic and even existential investigations that drive these pieces. "Metawriting" is writing that reflects on its own nature as writing, that calls attention to itself as an artificial creation. Metawriting makes the writer's often invisible hand visible. You might think of Tristram Shandy in his Life and Opinions, constantly belaboring the fact that he can't get on with the telling of his life, or Hamlet, waxing about the nature of players and playing, in the play that bears his name. Here, however, the genre is nonfiction, so the pieces in Metawritings strike at questions that involve us all. What's a fact? What's a lie? What's at stake if I don't know or can't tell the difference? Who is this person that, most days, I think of as me? And how do all those ways I present myself to others, whether I'm face-to-face or on Facebook, capture who I am? To say it in a more "meta-" manner, just how do we go about making selves out of ourselves?

 Julia H. Lee, "Interracial Encounters: Reciprocal Representations in African and Asian American Literatures, 1896-1937" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:04:27

Julia H. LeeView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Asian American Studies] Julia H. Lee is the author of Interracial Encounters: Reciprocal Representations in African and Asian American Literatures, 1896-1937 (New York University Press, 2011). Dr. Lee is an Assistant Professor in the department of Asian American Studies at the University of California, Irvine. Interracial Encounters investigates the overlapping of African American and Asian American literature. By focusing on the diverse attitudes that blacks and Asian Americans had towards each other, Dr. Lee pushes against dominant conceptions of these groups as either totally cooperative or as totally antagonistic. Lee also explores how American nationalism was produced through this comparison, and shows how Afro-Asian representations allowed readers and writers to consider alliances outside of the American nation-state.

 Jeremy Dauber, "The Worlds of Sholem Aleichem: The Remarkable Life and Afterlife of the Man Who Created Tevye" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:43:40

Jeremy DauberView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Jewish Studies] The first comprehensive biography of famed Yiddish novelist, story writer and playwright Sholem Aleichem, Jeremy Dauber's welcome new book The Worlds of Sholem Aleichem: The Remarkable Life and Afterlife of the Man Who Created Tevye (Schocken, 2013) offers readers an encounter with the great Yiddish author himself. Dauber writes in the rhythm of the language of Sholem Aleichem – Mr. How Do You Do – brilliantly structuring the book as a drama, with an overture, five acts, and an epilogue in ten scenes. He assumes the voice of a theater impresario, talking to his audience, just as the author Sholem Aleichem did, narrating his stories and reading them to the crowds whom he loved to entertain. The author Sholem Aleichem, most famous for his Tevye stories that became Fiddler on the Roof, was no Tevye, but rather a sophisticated and educated cosmopolitan businessman and writer.  He possessed immense curiosity about every man, a unique ear for interesting stories, and the ability to connect with his audience; these talents ultimately united his life with Tevye's. Although he could very well write in Russian and Hebrew, ultimately he chose Yiddish, the most natural language of the people whom he loved, to tell his universal stories of tradition confronting modernity and the struggles of people to deal with change. Read this engaging and very well written book to learn more about Sholem Aleichem and fall in love with this man and his writings.

 Jonathan D. Wells, "Women Writers and Journalists in the Nineteenth-Century South" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:02:34

Jonathan D. WellsView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in American Studies] It's getting harder and harder to trailblaze in the field of American Studies. More and more, writers have to follow paths created by others, imposing new interpretations on old ones in never-ending cycles of revision. But Jonathan Daniel Wells did find something new: Women Writers and Journalists in the Nineteenth-Century South (Cambridge UP, 2011; paperback, 2013) is the first to focus in on women journalists, both black and white, in the nineteenth-century American South. The South had a vital periodical marketplace where curious women could engage with politics, belles lettres, science, diplomacy, and other allegedly unfeminine subjects. Examining evidence from both writers and readers, Wells's book asks questions about literary culture, celebrity, the limits of dissent, and North-South differences that readers will find refreshing and engaging.

 Greg Hainge, "Noise Matters: Towards an Ontology of Noise" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:40:10

Greg HaingeView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Critical Theory] What is noise? In his new book Noise Matters: Towards an Ontology of Noise (Bloomsbury Academic, 2013), Greg Hainge, Reader in French at University of Queensland, Australia, explores this question. The book is written within the tradition of critical theory and is at once playful and punning, as well as suffused with challenging and perceptive analysis. The core position of the book is that we need to move beyond the dichotomous understanding of noise that sees it as either something to be removed or rejected, an unnecessary distraction from a core signal, or something that should be celebrated, but in celebration co-opted into being something that isn't noise. For Hainge we need a new understanding of noise, an understanding that seeks to celebrate noise through a range of engagements with cultural and theoretical phenomena. Noise is not just about sound, but figures in all forms of communication. The book takes on the accepted readings of work in music, such as John Cage's 4'33", literature, such as Sartre's Nausea, as well as photography and film. These new approaches, mediated by the concern with noise, will be of interest to a range of readers from across the humanities, as well as for specialists in film and music theory and aesthetics. The project of founding on ontology of noise is also a contribution to the growing field of noise studies, which is the kind of interdisciplinary academic area that is emerging within the noisy world of the contemporary academy.

 Elizabeth Winder, "Pain, Parties, Work: Sylvia Plath in New York, Summer 1953" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:34:17

Elizabeth WinderView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Biography] It is a struggle sometimes in biography to find new ways to write about subjects about whom many biographies have been written. This is particularly pronounced in the case of iconic figures of the 20th century (think: Marilyn Monroe, Jacqueline Onassis, Elvis Presley, F. Scott Fitzgerald), and an area in which the partial life biography can play an interesting role. Whereas biographers have more traditionally opted for what we call "cradle-to-grave" narratives, the partial life biography instead offers a slice of a life- a particular period that is explored in-depth. Such is the case with Elizabeth Winder's Pain, Parties, Work: Sylvia Plath in New York, Summer 1953 (Harper, 2013). Plath's is a story most everyone knows, and yet her time working in New York as an intern in Mademoiselle has not previously been studied outside of the context of all that came after, which is surprising because it's an interesting period but also because her experiences then formed the basis for what she would later write in The Bell Jar. The summer is of not just biographical interest, but literary significance as well. There is about Pain, Parties, Work an inevitable sense of clouds brewing- the summer will end, Plath will return home, and she will attempt suicide by taking pills and crawling under her mother's house- but there's also a sensation of joy: the joy of young women alone in a big city, experimenting with boys and clothes and make-up and work. Pain, Parties, Work is bolstered by the fact that Winder was able to secure interviews with many of Plath's fellow interns, voices that have been notably absent in many of the earlier accounts and which lend an immediacy to a  well-known story. The interviews with these women do much to flesh out the concrete details of the experience as well as Plath's unique struggles within it. The Plath we have here is young and eager, fond of make-up and boys, and already displaying a rare gift for words. The clouds are on the horizon, yes- we all know that- but, in the meantime, the city and the thrill of discovery provide an intoxicating distraction. Summer is a time in which anything can happen. Reading Winder's narrative and meeting Plath in this context, one feels that keenly: the excitement of a girl in the city, the hope and heat of New York, an electricity in the air.

 Annette Kolodny, "In Search of First Contact: The Vikings of Vinland, the Peoples of the Dawnland, and the Anglo-American Anxiety of Discovery" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:01:46

Annette KolodnyView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Native American Studies] We all know the song. "In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue…" And now, thankfully, we all know the controversy; celebrating a perpetrator of genocide might say a few unpleasant things about the country doing the celebrating. But there is something that most Americans don't know: Europeans had visited the continent at least half a millennium before Columbus. Remembered  in two medieval tales known as the "Vinland sagas," and in 1960 corroborated by a major archaeological discovery, Indigenous people–most likely the ancestors of today's Wabanaki Confederacy, among others–encountered Norse Viking sailors sometime around 1,000 CE. This used to be common knowledge in the United States. In fact, at moments of heightened xenophobia, Anglo-Americans even celebrated America's "Norse ancestry," considering it a far purer lineage than the Italian Columbus. Such debates are just one of the collected national anxieties Annette Kolodny traces in her masterful new book, In Search of First Contact: The Vikings of Vinland, the Peoples of the Dawnland, and the Angl0-American Anxiety of Discovery (Duke University Press, 2012). Combining her unparalleled expertise in literary criticism, close collaboration with Mi'kmaq, Passamaquody and Penobscot communities, and the consultation of innumerable sources, Kolodny deepens our understanding of the "Vinland sagas" and explores what's at stake in national origin stories in a colonial world.

 Sarah Churchwell, "Careless People: Murder, Mayhem and the Invention of The Great Gatsby" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:44:02

Sarah ChurchwellView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Biography] One phenomenon of movies made of classic novels is that the movie often says a lot more about the time of its making than about the time of  the novel. And so Baz Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby is more a depiction of a 2012 idea of the 1920s than a realistic depiction of the '20s themselves. But what of the '20s? These years are, today, so coated in mythology that they're hard to imagine as a real time in which real people lived. The myths surrounding Fitzgerald and his novel are equally entrenched, but Sarah Churchwell's Careless People: Murder, Mayhem and the Invention of the Great Gatsby (Virago, 2013) goes a long way towards peeling back the layers that have accrued around all of this- the author, the novel and the time- to, in her words, "throw into relief aspects of the novel we no longer see." Here, the world of the '20s- a world that so often seems impossibly ephemeral- assumes solidity through small details: hem lengths, traffic signals, the brightness of the lights. Churchwell's aim may, at first, seem nebulous- to capture what was in the air whilst Fitzgerald was writing the book, the atmosphere, the mood- but, in the end, it yields a surprisingly concrete portrayal of the writing process (a notoriously nebulous thing) and the origins of a masterpiece. Careless People isn't the life of an individual. Rather, it's the early life of a work- a strand of biography that continues to provide fresh ways of considering classic works, the people who wrote them, the times from which they sprung, what they might have meant then and what they might mean now.

 Stacy Alaimo, "Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:49:53

Stacy AlaimoView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Critical Theory] In her book, Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self (Indiana University Press, 2010), Stacy Alaimo approaches the concepts of "science, environment, and self" in an extremely novel and inventive way. The central concept in Alaimo's work is that of "trans-corporeality" which she describes as a way of theorizing the relationship between humanity and the world at large as not being clearly delineated and separate, but as fluid. As this relates specifically to nature and the environment, Alaimo's intention is for the reader to reimagine questions of environmental ethics and environmental practices as not isolated issues but rather deeply personal as the environment and our material selves are bound up with one another in a deeply intimate manner. I found Alaimo's central approach with "trans-corporeality," theorizing the human as being "already in the world," extremely refreshing when compared to the idea of human agency in postmodern studies. In this way, Alaimo provides an alternate framework for conceiving of human agency, and thus an "out" of sorts, a release, from the bounds of postmodernism's isolated and castrated human agent. Alaimo calls this novel direction, "New Materialisms." With this concept, Alaimo offers new insights into feminist thought and theory. Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self is sure to appeal to many students and scholars of literary studies and critical theory.

 Ned Stuckey-French, "The American Essay in the American Century" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:53:02

Ned Stuckey-FrenchView on AmazonClio, Erato, Polyhymnia–among the nine muses of Greek mythology, there's no muse for the essay.  And that's not only because the essay doesn't appear, in name, until Montaigne publishes his first book of them in 1580.  No, one gets the feeling that, even if Homer had composed essays about the wine-dark sea or rosy-fingered dawn, this literary genre, so often associated with five-paragraph structures and freshmen composition courses, still wouldn't have a goddess representing it on Mount Parnassus.  The essay, unlike the epic or the love poem, is just too pedestrian, too workaday and uninspired to find a place among the timeless arts. That doesn't stop Ned Stuckey-French from championing of the essay.  In fact, for Stuckey-French, the middling nature of the essay is one of its very virtues.  In his study The American Essay in the American Century (University of Missouri Press, 2011), he gives us a vision of the essay as a genre that's as plucky and adaptable as the American spirit itself, showing us how writers and readers reinvented it at the beginning of the twentieth century for a new nation, one teeming with Ford motorcars and weekly magazines and a growing middleclass, eager for writing that spoke to its fears and desires.  Stuckey-French shows us how and why the essay, that creation of a Renaissance French aristocrat, becomes an American essay, a democratic genre, able to take the pulse of our bustling nation. And if this social history of the essay weren't enough, Stuckey-French has also published, with his co-editor Carl Klaus, an anthology of Essayists on the Essay (University of Iowa Press, 2012), a collection of writing that begins with Montaigne and takes us right up to the present, where the essay is once again adapting to a new world, one of web browsers and blogs, smartphones and video.  And yet the essay lives on, undaunted, ready to take up the challenges of our new century.

 Beth H. Piatote, "Domestic Subjects: Gender, Citizenship, and Law in Native American Literature" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:56:51

Beth H. PiatoteView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Native American Studies] The suspension of the so-called "Indian Wars" did not signal colonialism's end, only a different battlefield. "The calvary man was supplanted–or, rather, supplemented–by the field matron, the Hotchkiss by the transit, and the prison by the school," writes Beth H. Piatote. "A turn to the domestic front, even as the last shots at Wounded Knee echoed in America's collective ear, marked not the end of conquest but rather its renewal." Yet the domestic space was not only a target of invasion; it was also a site of resistance, a fertile ground for Native authors to define what counted as love, home, and kin in an era of coercive assimilation. In Domestic Subjects: Gender, Citizenship, and Law in Native American Literature (Yale University Press, 2013), Piatote brilliantly reads the work of late nineteenth century writers like Pauline Johnson, S. Alice Callahan, D'arcy McNickle and others as a contest over settler domestication. Piatote offers an eloquent exploration of incredible courage and literary acumen, with resonance in our own political moment.

 Eric Hayot, "On Literary Worlds" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:22:00

Eric HayotView on AmazonEric Hayot's new book is a bold, ambitious, and inspiring call for revising the way we think about, practice, and teach literary history. Pt. I of On Literary Worlds (Oxford University Press, 2012) offers a critical evaluation of the notion of "worlds" in literary studies and beyond, offering a language for describing and comparing individual aesthetic works and their modes of worldedness. Pt. II proposes a way of thinking about the history of modern literature and categorizing its modes that makes the study of the non-West not just relevant, but absolutely necessary. At the same time it both contextualizes the history of ideas of the world in early modernity, and asks us to re-think our notions of what "context" is and how we access it. Pt. III of the book takes us into the institutional contexts of literary studies, showing how some basic assumptions about how to periodize literature dominate and constrict the discipline, A final set of appendixes in Pt. IV of the book offer myriad extensions of and ways forward from the project outlined in the previous chapters. The insights here are relevant and useful for scholars working in a wide range of disciplines, and as a historian I found Eric's insights on how we might innovate our characterizations of textual worlds and temporal modes particularly enlightening. In the course of our conversation, we also talked about how these ideas have transformed Eric's teaching. For his syllabus on "Comparative Cosmologies," see this link. Eric Hayot is a contributor to Public Books.

 Michael Gordin, "The Pseudoscience Wars: Immanuel Velikovsky and the Birth of the Modern Fringe" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:00:05

Michael GordinView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in Science Fiction and Fantasy] When I agreed to host New Books and Science Fiction and Fantasy there were a number of authors I hoped to interview, including Michael Gordin. This might come as a surprise to listeners, because Michael is neither a science-fiction nor a fantasy author. He is, rather, a prominent historian of science at Princeton University. But his work intersects with the subject-matter of this podcast in a number of ways. Five Days in August: How World War II Became a Nuclear War asked us to consider what might have been had Tokyo refused to surrender and the US had continued to drop atomic bombs on Japan. Mike will soon start co-teaching a class on invented languages which includes a unit on Klingon. And the main subject of this interview, The Pseudoscience Wars:  Immanuel Velikovsky and the Birth of the Modern Fringe (University of Chicago Press, 2012), touches on both the history of science fiction, key themes within the genre, and where much of its source material comes from. Indeed, while this channel will continue to focus on new books within the SF and Fantasy genres, it will also interview scholars and practitioners whose expertise illuminates and enhances our understanding of those genres. I hope this interview does so for its listeners. For those of you interested in a different take on The Pseudoscience Wars, you should check out Michael's forthcoming interview on the New Books in Science, Technology, and Society channel.

 Cosima Bruno, "Between the Lines: Yang Lian’s Poetry through Translation" | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 0:55:36

Cosima BrunoView on Amazon[Cross-posted from New Books in East Asian Studies] Cosima Bruno's new book asks us to consider a deceptively simple question: what is the relationship between a poem and its translation? In the course of Between the Lines: Yang Lian's Poetry through Translation (Brill, 2012), Bruno helps us imagine what an answer to that question might look like while guiding us through the sounds and spaces of contemporary Chinese poet Yang Lian. Between the Lines proposes an innovative way to read a poem through and with its translations, using a "triangular comparative analysis" that juxtaposes the original poem with a number of its translations to identify shifts in the lines of the poem that serve as landmarks in the conceptual and textual world of the poet. Bruno uses this translation-focused methodology of reading to reveal fascinating dimensions of time, space, and subjectivity in Yang Lian's work, and to guide our attention to the performative importance of rhythm, blank space, punctuation, and sound in his verse. Readers who are interested in Chinese poetry will find much to absorb and transport them in these pages, and readers interested in the theory and practice of translation will find a clear articulation of a set of methodological tools that could potentially bear fruit when rendering texts across many different genres and languages. Enjoy!

Comments

Login or signup comment.