Didst thou ever see a white bear? cried my father, turning his head round to Trim, who stood at the back of his chair:——No, an' please your honor, replied the corporal.——But thou could'st discourse about one, Trim, said my father, in case of need?——How is it possible, brother, quoth my uncle Toby, if the corporal never saw one?——'Tis the fact I want, said my father—and the possibility of it, is as follows.
(Sterne, The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy V:xlii.
)

Friday, April 1, 2011

For Credit: Ready, Aim, Fire that Canon! (DEADLINE EXTENDED)

UPDATE (4/2):  After wallowing all this past week in the profoundly revisionist canon, we return on Monday to the world of white upper-class men.  The Bard is one of those canonical poems that has not survived.   One consequence of the end of The Canon is that when it disappeared it took with it the sense that there was a single, linear anglophone literary tradition that the educated person should be familiar with.  So long as readers shared a general knowledge of important key works and events of literary history, the Bard was a fairly accessible poem--it drew on a common body of familiar knowledge.  As readers increasingly have to rely on footnotes to make sense of its dense allusive weave, it ceases to be readable (in the way that say, Collier's poem is).

[The Bard is not the only significant poem to drop out of view in this way and for this reason.  Samuel Johnson's Vanity of Human Wishes, for example, remains in the Longman anthology of C18 Lit, but I suspect I am one of the few English instructors in the U.S. who has attempted to teach it.  There are a few egregious typos in the Longman version of the poem that have remained through three different editions.  If the text were widely taught by those who order the anthology, the errors would have been caught and corrected before the most recent edition was published].

The blog responses thus far to the changing canon have discussed what is gained as the canon changes.  What about what gets lost?  Or can we willingly part with The Bard?

Original post:

We spoke in class today (3/30) of "The Canon."

In fact, there are two canons.   "The Canon" consists of the white upper- and middle-class men who have been regarded as significant literary figures, and therefore been widely republished, anthologized and taught throughout the C20.  "The Canon Wars" were fought in literature departments through the 1970s and 1980s in an attempt to expand The Canon to include women, non-white writers, and working-class experience, but they had the effect of exploding the notion of a Canon altogether.  The conflicting views of history, authenticity, literary value, and inclusivity that brought the Canon Wars about made it virtually impossible for scholars to agree on a revised broader list of works that every educated person ought to read.

But the idea of a Canon didn't disappear altogether.  After all, syllabi get written, important literary and cultural topics get taught, textbooks and anthologies get cobbled together to accommodate those needs...and inevitably some works emerge as being more helpful in those processes and others.  The list of texts that turn up fairly consistently in these ways have come to be known as "The Revised Canon."  It it a humbler and much more supple entity than the old Canon, with NO pretensions of being universally used and loved--but it does reflect the state of current college-level teaching.  It is under continuous revision, as particular texts get sufficient scholarly intention to make their way into textbooks, and others cease to be of interest and so get dropped.

The Revisionist Canon does not treat equally all of the authors neglected by the original Canon.  Ann Yearsley and Mary Leapor are considered part of the "Revisionist Canon."  There is either a scholarly biography or a scholarly edition of their works available, they have been the subjects of numerous essays in peer-reviewed journals, and their poems have made their way from specialized anthologies of women's writing to mainstream teaching collections like the Norton and Longman anthologies of C18 Lit.  Robert Dodsley has not fared as well.  There are books about him but he's been treated more as a key figure of cultural history for his printing and bookselling activities with Alexander Pope.  Dodsley's poetry has received little scholarly attention.

Stephen Duck and Mary Collier have seen their literary fortunes exactly reversed.  As the observations in class today might have predicted, Duck rode his literary talents to fame and prosperity, earning a college degree and a patronage appointment under Queen Anne.  Mary Collier remained a washerwoman all her life.  Duck has never quite been forgotten--he remained of interest as a minor literary curiosity throughout the C19 and C20.  Collier had to wait for the feminist scholars of the 1970s to rescue her from literary oblivion.  Since her rediscovery, however, Duck has become largely a footnote to her "Women's Labour."  It is difficult to find a complete edition of his poem (the one available in your poetry anthology is a rare exception), while Collier's poem appears widely.  And no one reads Duck anymore as a significant figure in his own right--to the extent that he gets read, it's to better understand Collier's poem.

One last case in point: Phillis Wheatley.  I don't have to make a point of including her in this course, because she is an author that most of you have already encountered and read elsewhere.  Forty years ago, her name would have meant nothing to you.

So here's the question--a refinement of the attendance question you had today.  What should warrant the inclusion of a working-class writer in the Revisionist Canon?
  • His or her class consciousness (and what exactly does that mean in the C18 context)?
  • The literary power of his or her work for readers today, independent of the author's class?
  • The interesting backstory to the author's life?
  • The degree of critical and literary attention the author got in the C18?
  • The degree to which the presence of the author helps to sustain a balance of texts depicting a range of C18 life experience?
  • ???
Post your thoughts (or respond collegially to a classmate's ideas) here.

Deadline: Monday (4/4), 1pm.

10 comments:

Sara said...

This observation doesn't really answer a specific question, but rather poses a slightly different one. Do we feel that we have to include working-class literature into the "Revised Canon" simply to fill a quota?

I do think that the inclusion of a variety of literary genres is important because I don't think one specific authorship or type of text should be revered over another. However, what if some works are included not based on merit, or whether or not that poem/book are intellectually stimulating, but because an anthology needed a few extra works to make up their working-class section? I'm not saying that I believe this happens all of the time, but I think it just adds to the skepticism of having a literary "canon" at all, because people may value certain works differently depending on what they deem as important.

JRD said...

There are many possible reasons to include a working-class writer in the revisionist canon. Of the suggestions presented, I think that the writer's class consciousness and literary merit (both past and present) are the most important reasons. In response to Sara's question, I don't necessarily think that there is/should be a quota for working-class literature, but if the purpose of a revised canon is to include texts that didn't fit the typical mold of white, male, aristocratic writing, then perhaps there is a necessity to actively seek out texts from other cultures and sub-cultures, such as the working-class. In this sense, it does become of some importance that the writer is considering his/her class status.

Past and present literary merit is also quite important. There are many texts currently in the (revised?) canon which are there almost solely based on their literary merit or popularity at the time (Uncle Tom's Cabin immediately comes to mind). However, I think that the way texts are received today may be of utmost importance as well. I don't want to bring back any nightmares of English 301 for anybody, but the cultural materialist school of thought seems to provide a useful example of the changing reception of texts. The basic argument of cultural materialism--as I understand it--is to analyze texts themselves and also the way that texts are used politically. If certain Shakespeare texts are anthologized more often than others, and the ones that are taught include mostly conservative undertones, then cultural materialists would question what messages those texts are sending to the readers of today. In this sense, including texts from working-class writers with certain conservative or liberal messages could have a profound--if subconscious--effect on readers of our generation and beyond. I'm not saying that I fully believe in this school of thought, but I think it is fair to say that it provides decent reasoning for including texts from cultures such as the working-class, and also good criteria for doing so.

BenScott said...

I think several of the criteria listed are important when deciding whether or not a working-class writer should be included in the Revisionist Canon. I think class consciousness plays a role because it lets a reader hear from a writer whose voice may have been silenced for many years after their work was initially published. As I mentioned in my last post for this unit, I don’t think the author’s individual backstory is necessary (although in some cases it may be helpful, like in a case where the text is personal) in understanding a text, and I don’t think that their backstory should determine their inclusion in the Canon. But I do think that the criteria of class consciousness helps to include voices which otherwise might not be seen as significant.
I also think that the literary power of his/her work today is important; if work is resonating with a lot of readers, then that’s probably a reason to at least begin looking at it more closely. Also, a writer from a lower class doesn’t need to write about lower class issues, just as a writer from the upper class doesn’t need to always write about upper class issues. A text can have literary significance because of the history it includes or the emotion it evokes, and these things don’t have to be connected to a particular class or a particular person. Thus, I also don’t think that the attention that an author got in there time period should carry too much weight when considering Canon inclusion. Many great authors (such as Herman Melville) were largely unknown in their lifetimes, but in following years were considered great. I think future generations have the luxury of perspective and can see in some ways how an author’s work relates to his/her time period better than critics living during that period. Conversely, just because an 18c author got a lot of attention this isn’t a reason by itself to include them in the Canon. As the prompt mentions, there are forgotten authors who were at one time Canonized. I also think it’s important to sustain a balance of texts which depict a range of experience, but I don’t think that authors should be excluded from the Canon just because there are already too many in a certain category. However, I’m not sure how to decide (or how it is decided) which authors get excluded if there are already too many in, say, the working class category.

smab said...

I think Sara has a good point about idea of quota-filling. Personally I approve of the idea of expanding or revising what is considered to be canonical in literature--I am all for giving the spotlight to writers who weren't old white men--but I can imagine that the drive for publishers or anthology builders existing just to appease certain groups to make them feel included or important. I hear this kind of argument when people discuss affirmative action and the "problem" of how universities admit students of specific ethnic minorities to fill a quota, without regards to the academic merit of these applicants.

But considering the working class writers of the later C18, I wonder if it's so important that a poet or writer be fluent in Greek and Latin and armed with lots of money and an impeccable pedigree. We are studying the writings of a specific time period and it seems foolish to be relegated to the upper class producers of literature. A clear picture of the state of writing cannot be formed without considering the larger scope of writers involved. The working-class writer lead an un-luxurious lifestyle, would have had to be very hard-working and efficient to survive, and had much less time to sit down and pen a poem. So I look at a piece by Mary Collier as something a little more precious than something Thomas Gray created, because for a work by a washerwoman like Collier to make it past the confines of class, gender and time warrants at the very least some serious attention by today's readers.

lexijoma1 said...

I guess I am not exactly sure what is meant by class conciousness as pertaining to the 18th century. But I would guess it would mean not only how one is situated within the class system but how much they are aware of the intracacies of that sytem and how much they are aware of the effects of the divisions of class and the problems they create for society.
Of the reasons listed I think class conciousness and literary powers are among the most signifcant of the reasons for an author to be included in the canon because both of these are timeless aspects and are both very relevant today. However if you are like me and like to look at literature as a lens with which we look at a particular time I find that the last two reasons listed can be seen as equally important. How much attention a particualr author recieved at the time of his/her publishing is historically significant and this knowlege can help provide a clearer lens with which to look at not only the period itself but the other literature of the time. I think this is true as weel of the idea of sustaining a balance. by widening the scope to include a more diverse group of authors we will get a clearer view still. However I think it is important that these two ideas go hand in hand. It would be a travesty to misrepresent the amount of attention say women authors recieved at the time because it could scew the understanding of the period.

interesting backstory is nice but to me unimportant.

MollySheehan said...

I would agree with Sara's response to the blog post. If works are included in a canon merely to fill a "working class literature" quota, how can we as readers truly be expected to value said works? I believe that in order to be included in the Revisionist Canon, a text must have garnered some popularity and readership in its original literary era, as well as having some connection to the issues and values present in modern society. Just as Sara said, a variety of literary genres and works are important, but variety needs to be validated.

Matthew Jones said...

The answer to this question is dependent upon one's definition of a literary canon, which is largely based on its purpose. So what is a literary canon's principal function? This of course varies from person to person. Every reader has a philosophy of reading. It's simply the reason you read, the primary goal of your reading. I enjoy a great story. And I also prefer informative and thought-provoking material. But when it comes to my literary studies, I place these qualities as secondary. My overall reason for studying literature is to acquire an understanding of historical context, in order to apply it to my analysis of contemporary society. Since this is the pivotal point of my literary philosophy, I prefer a variety of texts from a given era. I'm willing to sacrifice intellectually stimulating texts for those of less intrigue, if my overall purpose is fulfilled. So I'm content with quotas and the relegation of certain prestigious texts. Its varies from person to person. Someone who is less bent on historical context, and more for direct intellectual engagement, would hold a contrary opinion.

Kellz said...

I love what Molly and Sara had to say about this discussion topic. Although, I agree that works within the literature realm should be validated in some way shape or form. I believe that the inclusion of the "working class literature" served a beneficial purpose during the CI18. If nothing else, it certainly added an element of discourse in which it offered a different perspective (especially of the elite). Thus, writers from all social classes were possibly granted the opportunity to voice what they couldn't before through the outlet of the print culture. Perhaps the "working class literature" just paved the way for writers everywhere to make their opinions or original ideas known.

Soooooth said...

I don't think that there should be stringent criteria for what is included in the Revisionist Canon. I agree with Sara's argument that the canon shouldn't be based on meeting some arbitrary quota to satisfy revisionists. Working-class literature definitely has merit and deserves consideration beyond simply demonstrating class consciousness. While, I do believe it is important for a writer to understand what influence's their writing as well as how their social standing might affect them, it is not enough to warrant including a text in the canon because of these things. Rather, I believe the second criteria is most essential to placing working-class literature in the canon. Texts that still affect readers today clearly demonstrate their value beyond the time they were written. This criteria does not favor one class's writing over another, and allows for any text irrespective of class to be considered.

the black bear said...

I would comment that there probably should be not just one qualification for including a work in any sort of grouping/canon/category. I think the value of work, and in this case the value of that work as greater than others, should exhibit multiple attributes that qualify it for such distinction. The ability of the work to function in this regard gives it the significance and value we find in a canon.

Having said this, I'm not sure I qualify myself entirely in order to give an authoritative perspective on the process to evaluate effectively a literary work for this project. But one aspect I might begin with would be to look for the perspective taken by author and the context with which they spin it. Most people can offer up some sort of creative idea I think, but the larger challenge may be to relate this perspective to elements identifiable in their own life, though also with regard to the world surrounding them as well. The preference would be for the author to do so accurately and without over-emphasizing one side or the other. I think a consciousness of what elements other texts included in the canon as well may bring to the group a better representation of the achievements of the period and thereby a greater education of those accomplishments as well.