Peer Reviewed Articles

Formalism at the End Times: A Modest Account

At fourteen years old, I took a job as a cashier at a Christian bookstore. The owners were Christian fundamentalist-lite, whereas I was coerced by my parents to attend a…

Furnishing the Novel, Feeding the Soul: Aimee Bender’s The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake

Dickens sees human beings with the most intense vividness, but he sees them always in private life, as ‘characters’, not as functional members of society; that is to say, he…

Beyond Desire: Blackness and Form

Twenty-eight fat televisions are stacked into a pyramid of sorts in the corner. In the darkened room, each screen plays the same short excerpt of Nina Simone’s 1964 performance of…

The Sight of Life

1. Look It’s unreasonably hot for an English summer. Moving through the humid chambers of the Victoria and Albert Museum feels like trudging through a steamed treacle pudding, an Edwardian…

Transformation and Generation: Preliminary Notes on the Poetics of the Memphis Sanitation Strike

From February to April of 1968, Memphis was a focal point of civil rights action, largely due to its nationally prominent sanitation strike. Labor tactics in Memphis insisted on connecting…

On Philosophical Imagination and Literary Form

Philosophy and literature: an old sibling rivalry. What more is there to say? Certainly not that form is what distinguishes literature from philosophy. If anything, form yokes philosophy and literature…

Good for Nothing: Lorrie Moore’s Maternal Aesthetic and the Return to Form

In Lorrie Moore’s masterpiece of climate fiction, A Gate at the Stairs (2009), the college-matriculating protagonist Tassie describes her mother’s love as “useless,” because she fails to prevent her son from dying…

Introduction: Formalism Unbound

In the decades after the Agrarians drifted from Vanderbilt to points north and established New Criticism as the dominant interpretive method across the United States, formalism came to be understood…

“Now can you see the monument?” Some notes on reading for “form”

Notes on (poets and critics) reading for form The question that concerns me most in thinking about “new” or “old” formalisms, formalism now, is what counts as reading for “form”…

Free Trade Comedy: Slapstick Toggling in Global Supply Chains

We should note from the outset that slapstick is named not after the genre from which it originally derives but from that genre’s defining prop. Although most often associated with…