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Essay
By Invitation
New Directions for Thing Theory in Literary Studies: A Forum

Fields move forward and stay vibrant through the work of the newest scholars; ideas stay alive as they take shape in the hands and words of critics who put familiar theories into conversation with new texts and questions. This forum on new directions for thing theory in literary studies showcases these scholars and their approaches, gathering short essays on a range of topics.

When we circulated a call for papers in 2021, we asked for essays that would illuminate the current state of object-based study in literature: What literary works should we look to for new perspectives on materiality? Which methods hold promise today? What stories, in other words, does Thing Theory have left to tell?

We are pleased to feature new work by five scholars, all currently PhD candidates in American Studies and English. Cutting across historical period, literary genre, topic, approach, and field, their essays suggest that centering things remains a generative enterprise—one that allows us to trace little known histories, but also to confront the matter missing from our archives and the feelings that move us when we read but can be hard to locate. Crucially, things also become ciphers for everyday crises, the small and steady unfolding of disaster that we experience more frequently and more painfully as climate change and a global pandemic rage on.

The work featured here does not dispense with the foundations of thing theory or literary studies in the interest of being contemporary; rather, it pushes and stretches familiar methods in new directions. In particular, these essays explore the intersections of thing theory with critical race studies, the environmental humanities, and critical food studies.

Claire Bunschoten (UNC Chapel Hill) discusses the resonant absence of vanilla in the short stories of the early nineteenth-century writer Eliza Leslie. Vanilla, in Bunschoten’s work, reveals itself as a thing, arrested in the transatlantic commercial flows and social life of early America. Aaron Burstein (University of Illinois) reads the class hierarchies in William Dean Howells’s The Rise of Silas Lapham (1885) by attending to the novel’s treatment of collecting and curation. Michael Doss (University of Delaware) takes us into the 21st century in an exploration of the object world of Rachel Kushner’s The Flamethrowers (2013). Kushner’s objects, Doss contends, necessitate an approach that brings thing theory together with affect studies—a way of reading the politically charged feeling that resides in literary objects. Molly MacVeagh (Cornell University) considers depictions of quotidian labor in two recent novels of climate apocalypse, Claire Vaye Watkins’ Gold Fame Citrus (2015) and Louise Erdrich’s Future Home of the Living God (2017). MacVeagh argues for the theoretical importance of “food work” as a concept that draws upon thing theory and ecocriticism. Grace Bernadette McGowan (Boston University) shows how objects in Toni Morrison’s fiction and Robin Coste Lewis’s poetry point toward a form of Black classicism. The texts’ classical references and allusions, McGowan reveals, reclaim and subvert the classical tradition by reveling in the relays between people and things. [1]


 

Notes

[1] The editors wish to thank Aaron Bisson for his help editing and formatting these essays, as well as Victoria Zurita and Max Fennell-Chametzky for their support with layout and publishing.

 

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Colloquy

Thing Theory in Literary Studies

That things capture our imagination is hardly news. As Andrew Cole wrote in a 2016 issue of October, "materialism is as old as the hills." Cole claims that new approaches to studying things allow us to find similarities where we have too often found difference, and that this method dates back at least to Hegel and Marx. The study of matter has proceeded under a number of names: dialectical materialism, material culture studies, and, more recently, vibrant materialism, and object-oriented ontology. The scope of such studies has likewise been expansive, ranging from the sub-atomic to the galactic, from Lucretius to Latour.

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Nevertheless, "thing theory," a term that loosely bundles together a range of approaches to studying material culture, began to gain critical traction in literature departments in the early 2000s. It gave many literary scholars a new way of looking at old things. For some this included tracing the material histories of objects within books (Elaine Freedgood and John Plotz) or tracing the history of the book as material object (Leah Price and Peter Stallybrass). For others, it meant pondering the ways that language and narrative reorganize subject-object relations in the minds of readers (Bill Brown and Allan Hepburn). Not simply a way of tracking the fate of snuffboxes, stamp collections, and kaleidoscopes, thing theory allowed scholars to consider what our relationships to these items reveal.

By now, thing theory may seem to name an academic trend long past, but the expansion of object studies and various post-humanisms across disciplines suggests that it remains as relevant as ever. Many of the most urgent problems of the twenty-first century reveal an entanglement between humans and things. Climate change, biotechnology, intellectual property, drought and famine, even terrorism and war can hardly be discussed without addressing such entanglement. Recent work in affect theory, animal studies, and the environmental humanities (to name just a few contemporary approaches) shares a commitment to thinking of the human subject alongside the object world. This commitment produces deeply interdisciplinary work. Reading the objects in literature and the object of literature has always involved attention to modes of production, consumption, and perception. Earlier work in thing theory and literary studies borrowed methods from anthropology, archeology, and art history; now these disciplines are borrowing back. Anthropologists such as Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing (The Mushroom at the End of the World, 2015) and Kristin Peterson (Speculative Markets, 2014), art historians like Caroline A. Jones (The Global Work of Art, 2017) and Jennifer Roberts (Transporting Visions, 2014) and media archeologists like Johanna Drucker (Graphesis, 2014) and John Durham Peters (The Marvelous Clouds, 2015) provide rigorous accounts of materiality; they also attend to the narrative, meaning-making capacities of that materiality.

This Colloquy highlights innovative work situated at the intersection of literary and material culture studies. Weaving together insights from different periods and different disciplines, the scholars whose work is presented here study the particularity of things in order to address larger concerns. Literary things can make human desires, narrative forms, historical contexts, and patterns of circulation legible. New methods and approaches may be taking shape; the thing endures. But as scholars of the Anthropocene have made clear, just how long some of our most precious objects can endure still depends upon human stewardship or disregard. Thinking about the agency of things alongside our own has raised a series of ontological concerns that cross disciplinary boundaries. But literature, which can interrogate things as they are and as they might be, has the capacity to point in new directions. Many questions animate the conversation assembled here: what does it mean to "read" an object across disciplinary perspectives?  How do literary movements (i.e. realism, postmodernism) and literary periods (i.e. Victorian, twentieth-century) stage things differently? Does thing theory entail close or surface reading: what is its relationship to post-critical methods and the descriptive turn? Can thing theory grant us access to narratives of exclusion, marginalization, and subjugation that might otherwise remain invisible? Is there an ethical or political danger in dissolving the subject-object divide? Where can the thing lead us today? What stories does it have left to tell? 

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